Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out

Jack JOHNSON

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Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out

ONE OF THE MOST FAMOUS AND CONTROVERSIAL FIGURES IN BOXING: FIRST EDITION OF JACK JOHNSON-IN THE RING-AND OUT, WARMLY INSCRIBED BY JOHNSON TO NAT FLEISCHER, OWNER OF RING MAGAZINE

JOHNSON, Jack. Jack Johnson—In the Ring—and Out. With Introductory Articles by "Tad," Ed. W. Smith, Damon Runyon, and Mrs. Jack Johnson. Chicago: National Sports Publishing, 1927. Octavo, original red cloth, original dust jacket.

First edition, presentation/association copy, of Johnson’s racy autobiography, illustrated with 16 drawings and photographs, inscribed to the owner of Ring magazine, “To My Pal Nat. From Former Champion Jack Johnson.”

When Jack Johnson defeated Canadian Tommy Burns in 1908 to become the world's first African-American heavyweight champion, the white-dominated boxing community immediately set out to find a legitimate white contender for the heavyweight title. The media of the time called it a search for "The Great White Hope." By refusing to fight other black fighters, Johnson found himself in a division so weak that former champion Jim Jeffries had actually retired unchallenged (Jeffries was later persuaded to come out of retirement to fight Johnson, only to throw in the towel in the 15th round, inciting a wave of race riots). Johnson's comportment outside the ring brought him as much notoriety and fame as his actions inside it. He owned his own jazz band, which performed in his own Chicago nightclub. He drove a flashy yellow sports car and flaunted gold teeth (once described by Jack London as his "golden smile"). It was seven years before the talented and self-assured champion would taste defeat. Johnson lost his title in 1915 to Jess Willard, the largest man ever to venture into the sport. The recipient of this copy was undoubtedly Nat Fleischer, founder of Ring Magazine, who said of Johnson, "In all-around ability he was tops. After years devoted to the study of heavyweight fighters, I have no hesitation in naming Jack Johnson as the greatest of them all. He possessed every asset" (Durant, 58).

Book and inscription fine, moderate edge-wear to original dust jacket. A very desirable inscribed copy with superb boxing association.

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