Last April, Arizona Senator John McCain and Long Island GOP Representative Pete King asked the first African-American President in United States history to grant the original black Heavyweight Champion of the World a posthumous pardon for his racially motivated 1913 conviction for violation of the Mann Act.
The lawmakers' request was inspired by Ken Burns’ documentary Unforgivable Blackness on boxing legend Jack Johnson.
“For more than thirteen years, Jack Johnson was the most famous and notorious African-American on earth,” said Burns of the pugilist who completed his career with 89 wins and a measly 2 losses and was inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954.
“This was a man who Muhammad Ali emulated,” Burns continued. “But Muhammad Ali did his fighting in a decade dedicated to civil rights. Jack Johnson did it in a decade in which more African Americans were lynched than at any other time.”
Despite the fact that both houses of Congress passed their resolution urging a pardon for Johnson this summer, the lawmakers said they have not yet heard a response from our Commander in Chief.
“Regrettably, we have not received a response from you or any member of your administration,” McCain and King wrote in a letter sent to President Obama this past week.
The congressmen added in their letter that they were confident that Obama “will be more than eager” to issue Johnson a pardon and “right this wrong and erase an act of racism that sent an American citizen to prison.”
The White House has not issued a public response to date and McCain acknowledged that he hasn’t spoken to Obama specifically about the issue.
“The president’s been very, very busy,” said McCain, a former amateur boxer, in a telephone interview with the Associated Press. “The conversations that I’ve been having with him have been on Afghanistan. Hopefully, this letter will be a kind of reminder that it’s important to get it done. But, I’m not critical of the president yet. We’ll give him some time.”
Johnson, an impenetrable defensive wizard in the ring who scholar Molefi Kete Asante nominated one of the 100 Greatest African Americans in history, was a bigoted Klansman's most-mortifying nightmare.
The third child and first son of former slaves, the “Galveston Giant” carelessly dismissed conventions regarding the social and economic statuses of blacks in American society of his time.
He banged white women, drove expensive cars, and donned flamboyant clothing that would have made a modern pimp blush.
Despite obviously being the most dominant boxer in the world in his day, the Texas native was prevented from fighting for the world heavyweight championship.
In that era of rampant bigotry, the title was so respected and coveted that whites prohibited blacks from competing for the crown.
Realizing how "yellow" many whites were, Johnson stalked Canadian champion Tommy Burns around the globe and he incessantly and maliciously mocked the Canuck whenever he spoke to the press.
His calculated taunts eventually worked, and Burns agreed to scrap the “subhuman ape.”
On December 26, 1908, in front of over 20,000 spectators in Sydney, Australia, Johnson punished Burns for fourteen rounds before the fuzz charged the ring and halted the bloody massacre.
Subsequently, the referee called the fight and Johnson was awarded the heavyweight title via TKO.
In the aftermath of Johnson’s violent victory, racial animosity reached a fever pitch, and socialist Jack London spearheaded the search for a “Great White Hope” who could defeat the black titlist and return the belt to the “superior” Caucasian race.
In 1910, formerly undefeated heavyweight champion James J. Jeffries came out of retirement and, despite intentionally sidestepping Johnson when active, said “I am going into this fight for the sole purpose of proving that a white man is better than a Negro.”
As loud chants of “kill the nigger” reverberated through the entirely honky crowd, Johnson beat Jeffries like he was Nathan Bedford Forrest.
Then, Jeffries flunkies started waving the "white flag."
The outcome of the “Fight of the Century,” which earned Johnson $225,000, triggered race riots across the United States.
Coming to the apparent realization that no man, not black, white, or maroon, could take Johnson in a fair donnybrook, racist authority figures fingered Johnson for being in alleged violation of the Mann Act by “transporting women across state lines for immoral purposes.”
After going on the lam for a year in Mexico to avoid an unfair prosecution, Johnson returned to the U.S. and surrendered to Federal agents to face the bogus, race-fueled charge.
Johnson, an Andy Dufresne-like character who modified a wrench and patented the improvements he made while incarcerated, was hauled off to the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas to serve his undeserved one-year sentence behind bars.
Upon being released from the pen, Johnson attempted to jumpstart his suspended boxing career.
Unfortunately, Johnson had lost some of his famed speed and timing when he was incarcerated in the Sunflower State and he was unable to recapture the brilliance that made him a pugilistic icon.
King rightly contends that Johnson was unjustly persecuted because of his race.
He has also stated that black Americans were robbed of a hero and an athletic marvel because of the deplorably unjust sentence the courts imposed.
"At the time, the heavyweight champion of the world was the leading figure in sports," said King. "Unfortunately for Jack Johnson, he was not allowed to have the luxury of enjoying his prominence, of enjoying the fact that he was the greatest athlete in the country."
McCain, who lost the historic 2008 presidential election to Obama, predicted that his former political foe would still pardon the legend that once fought while a ringside band played “All Coons Look Alike to Me.”
“It will be an expression, in some ways, that we have come a long way” said the Vietnam War hero.
Jack Johnson was a tremendous warrior who faced unimaginable obstacles to become one of the supreme champions in boxing history.
If indeed “we have come a long way,” Johnson’s invaluable contributions to our country will be nationally recognized and his unethical and erroneous conviction will be expunged.
Keywords: Boxing
