A Year of Hope for Joplin and Johnson
In 1910, the boxer Jack Johnson and the musician Scott Joplin embodied a new sense of possibility for African-Americans
- By Michael Walsh
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
That tide of hope was just starting to rise in 1910, as early-arriving black migrants discovered opportunities previously denied them. Sports and entertainment long existed on the margins of polite society, where they provided immigrants—often marginalized and despised—a means of clawing their way toward the American dream. Now, it seemed, African-Americans might tread the same path.
The first all-black musical on Broadway, Clorindy; or, the Origin of the Cakewalk, had been a sensation in 1898, and its composer, Will Marion Cook, would have another triumph five years later with In Dahomey. Although largely forgotten today, Cook, an African-American from Washington, D.C., was a pioneer: he had been educated at Oberlin College and in Berlin, where he studied violin at the Hochschule für Musik; he then worked with Antonin Dvorak at the National Conservatory of Music in New York City.
After Clorindy’s opening-night triumph at the Casino Theatre at West 39th Street and Broadway, Cook recalled: “I was so delirious that I drank a glass of water, thought it wine and got glorious drunk. Negroes at last were on Broadway, and there to stay....We were artists and we were going a long way. We had the world on a string tied to a runnin’ red-geared wagon on a down-hill pull.”
True, the ride would be rough—at the height of a Manhattan race riot on August 15, 1900, whites had singled out black entertainers—but by 1910 it at least seemed underway. “For a moment it indeed looked like African-Americans were arriving on Broadway in numbers as large as Jews, and that’s very important,” says historian Lewis. “It led to some aspiration, in terms of poetry and music, that could indeed soften the relations between the races.”
Sports were not so different, especially boxing, where the races mingled relatively freely. Peter Jackson, a black native of St. Croix, fought leading black contenders such as Joe Jeannette and Sam McVey, both contemporaries of Jack Johnson, and fought Gentleman Jim Corbett to a 61-round draw in 1891. Even though blacks and whites met in the ring, the heavyweight title was considered sacrosanct, a symbol of white superiority. Thus Johnson’s demolition of Tommy Burns in 1908 stunned the sporting world, which shunned him as the legitimate champ. Since Jeffries had retired undefeated, the only way Johnson could place his title beyond dispute was to beat Jeffries in the ring.
“With the rise of modern heavyweight champions, race was at the center of nearly every important heavyweight drama,” David Remnick, a Muhammad Ali biographer, wrote in the London Guardian’s Observer Sport Monthly in 2003. “First came John L. Sullivan, who refused to cross the color line and face a black challenger. Then came Jim Jeffries, who swore he would retire ‘when there are no white men left to fight’....Jeffries seemed to have the support of all of white America,” including, Remnick noted, the press, led by celebrated newspaperman and novelist Jack London, an occasional boxing correspondent for the New York Herald. The editors of Collier’s magazine wrote that “Jeffries would surely win because...the white man, after all, has thirty centuries of traditions behind him—all the supreme efforts, the inventions and the conquests, and whether he knows it or not, Bunker Hill and Thermopylae and Hastings and Agincourt.”
At first glance, it seems that the two men are dancing. Johnson, tall, broad-shouldered and bullet-headed, keeps his opponent at arm’s length, his gloves open. Jeffries charges, Johnson retreats, as agile as the young Ali (when he fought under his given name, Cassius Clay), swatting away punches as if they were butterflies. “He was catching punches,” says boxing historian Bert Sugar. “Jack Johnson was perhaps the greatest defensive heavyweight of all time.”
The Johnson-Jeffries fight was of such intense interest that it was filmed to be shown in movie theaters worldwide. Three years before the federal income tax was levied, promoter Tex Rickard paid each fighter $50,000 (worth about $1.16 million in 2010) for the film rights, to go with a signing bonus of $10,000 apiece; the winner would also take two-thirds of the purse of $101,000.
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Comments (7)
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Posted by Missouri car dealership on November 18,2012 | 01:47 AM
The Article mentions a unnamed Black Constable killed in Mounds Illinois July 1910. A lawman was killed in this place at that time. Here are the facts:
His name was Wesley Davis
He was a deputy Sherriff
A contemporary article mentions the incident in which he was killed-but does not give his skin color. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Davis&GSfn=W&GSbyrel=in&GSdy=1910&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=44041425&
Posted by T.Fazzini on July 7,2010 | 10:46 AM
jack johnson's fight was in Reno, checkout the brilliant Ken Burns documentary Unforgiveable Blackness for the life story of Jack Johnson
Posted by john radford on June 15,2010 | 03:51 PM
The video of this fight is available on YouTube- just search for Johnson vs Jeffries fight.
Posted by Heather on June 9,2010 | 04:32 PM
Ms. de Dufour,
The fight between Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries most definitely took place in Reno, Nevada. Perhaps you were thinking of the 1897 exhibition fights between Jeffries and Jim Corbett that were held in Carson City, Nevada.
Posted by Lyn Garrity, Associate Editor on June 2,2010 | 01:47 PM
A remarkable article - brought home the realities of racism and how deeply embedded they are. I was surprised to read of Jack London's view of things - I would have expected something different, given his commitments to the underdog. Thanks for making this available.
Posted by Tom on May 26,2010 | 09:23 AM
The Johnson-Jeffries fight occurred in Carson City, NV NOT Reno, NV. Please check your facts.
Posted by Karyn de Dufour on May 25,2010 | 11:57 AM