Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sailor Tom Sharkey

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Sailor Tom Sharkey

    This is not my work, but a copy and pasted piece I recently found. Enjoy and discuss.

    “There was hardly a week that I was not in a fight,” Sailor Tom Sharkey(born Dundalk 1873, died 1953 San Francisco.

    Sharkey, Thomas Joseph (‘Tom’; ‘Sailor’) (1873–1953), bare-knuckle heavyweight boxer, was born 26 November 1873 in Mill St., Dundalk, Co. Louth, son of James Sharkey, labourer, and Margaret Sharkey (née Kelly). Little is known of his early life except that he spent a decade at sea (hence the nickname), surviving hurricanes and typhoons, four shipwrecks, and a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights. Sharkey's professional boxing career began in Honolulu, Hawaii, on St Patrick's day (17 March), 1893. According to his fight record, he went on to win his first twenty professional fights by knockout over the next three years. He drew with ‘Gentleman Jim’ Corbett in a four-round contest on 24 June 1896, and in August of the same year he fought an exhibition bout of three one-minute rounds against the great John L. Sullivan. On 2 December he fought Bob Fitzsimmons in a match advertised as a heavyweight championship of the world contest for the vacant title. Fitzsimmons knocked Sharkey to the canvas with a punch that was judged by the referee of the contest, wild-west lawman Wyatt Earp, to be a foul blow. Sharkey was thus declared the winner, but his victory was the subject of some controversy as it was alleged in some quarters that Earp had been bribed, either by Sharkey's camp or by a major ******** syndicate. Sharkey's winner's purse was held up by a court order obtained by Fitzsimmons, but the judge eventually ruled in Sharkey's favour. The rumours persisted, however, and public sympathy remained strongly with Fitzsimmons. It would not be the last controversial decision of the Louth man's career.

    Sharkey's ‘title’, such as it was, was forfeited when the ‘retired’ champion, Jim Corbett, decided to return to the ring. Returning to Ireland in the summer of 1897, Sharkey fought in Belfast, Warrenpoint, and his home town of Dundalk. In June of the same year he reputedly went berserk in the ring during a bout with rival Peter Maher. The police had to intervene and the contest was officially declared a draw. In May 1898 Jim Jeffries, who was to be world champion from 1899 until his retirement in 1905, became the first man to defeat Sharkey in thirty-seven professional fights, when he got the decision in a twenty-round bout, with both men taking heavy punishment. More controversy followed on 22 November, when Sharkey defeated Corbett in sensational fashion in New York as one of Corbett's seconds, Jim McVey, entered the ring during the contest. Depending on which account one cares to believe, McVey was either in the pay of Sharkey's camp or intervened to prevent an even more comprehensive victory by the Irishman. In 1899 Jeffries gave him his promised shot at the world title in a $25,000 winner-take-all bout at Coney Island, New York. Sharkey lost in twenty-five rounds in a fight that is still regarded as being one of the greatest – and toughest – title matches of all time. After his first defeat by Jeffries he had vowed to beat him or die trying. In an epic encounter he finished the fight with a broken nose, two cracked ribs, and a left ear swollen to the size of a g****fruit. The fight was also the first boxing contest to be filmed under artificial lights, and the heat of the lights reputedly burned both men bald-headed. Sharkey won six fights in a row by knockout after that defeat, but it was the beginning of the end for him as the years of heavy punishment began to take their toll. A defeat to Gus Ruhlin, and another in a rematch with Fitzsimmons, were the end of the big time. He quit the ring in June 1902 after being knocked out in the eleventh round of another fight with Ruhlin. He had fought a mere four times in the previous two years, and apart from the occasional exhibition match it was the end of his boxing career.

    Sharkey was undoubtedly one of the toughest competitors ever seen in professional boxing, and is regarded by many commentators as unfortunate not to have been world champion at some stage. Thirty-seven knockouts in fifty-four bouts gave him a knockout rate of almost 70 per cent. It was his misfortune to have been around in a ‘golden era’ when many of boxing's all-time greats were also in their prime. His major rivals – Corbett, Fitzsimmons and Jeffries – were all legends and held the world title between them for thirteen years (1892–1905). He was never in any sense a stylish boxer, but his ability to take punishment was legendary, and resulted in a spectacular cauliflower ear given to him in an earlier fight with Ruhlin. Sharkey's aggression and intensity astonished many observers, and his punching was often wild and erratic, leaving himself wide open to a counterpunch. He was just 5 ft 8.5 in. (1.74 m) in height; during his career he weighed between 172 and 205 lbs (78–93 kg), and he had a large tattoo of a ship and a star on his chest. Thrifty by nature, he had accumulated a fortune of some $100,000 by the time he retired from boxing, and for a while he ran a saloon, had a fine home in Brooklyn, New York, and a stable of trotting horses. Trouble with the authorities and some bad investments meant that he fell on hard times, and in the 1920s and 1930s he and Jeffries, who became a great friend, made a living on the vaudeville circuit, reenacting their famous fight on the stage. Moving to live on Jeffries' ranch in California, Sharkey spent the last two decades of his life working as a night watchman and security guard at various race tracks in the area. He died 17 April 1953 in San Francisco, just a month after Jeffries. In 1959 Ring ****zine, widely regarded as the bible of boxing, inducted him into its boxing Hall of Fame; but perhaps the greatest tribute paid to him is the fact that ‘the Boston Gob’, Jack Sharkey (real name Joseph Paul Zukauskas), who won the world heavyweight title in 1932, took his boxing name from the two boxers he most admired, Jack Dempsey and Tom Sharkey. Jeffries always regarded him as his toughest-ever opponent, and among heavyweight boxing's ‘nearly’ men he has a good claim to be considered the best – and the toughest – of them all.



    #2
    Originally posted by JAB5239 View Post
    This is not my work, but a copy and pasted piece I recently found. Enjoy and discuss.

    “There was hardly a week that I was not in a fight,” Sailor Tom Sharkey(born Dundalk 1873, died 1953 San Francisco.

    Sharkey, Thomas Joseph (‘Tom’; ‘Sailor’) (1873–1953), bare-knuckle heavyweight boxer, was born 26 November 1873 in Mill St., Dundalk, Co. Louth, son of James Sharkey, labourer, and Margaret Sharkey (née Kelly). Little is known of his early life except that he spent a decade at sea (hence the nickname), surviving hurricanes and typhoons, four shipwrecks, and a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights. Sharkey's professional boxing career began in Honolulu, Hawaii, on St Patrick's day (17 March), 1893. According to his fight record, he went on to win his first twenty professional fights by knockout over the next three years. He drew with ‘Gentleman Jim’ Corbett in a four-round contest on 24 June 1896, and in August of the same year he fought an exhibition bout of three one-minute rounds against the great John L. Sullivan. On 2 December he fought Bob Fitzsimmons in a match advertised as a heavyweight championship of the world contest for the vacant title. Fitzsimmons knocked Sharkey to the canvas with a punch that was judged by the referee of the contest, wild-west lawman Wyatt Earp, to be a foul blow. Sharkey was thus declared the winner, but his victory was the subject of some controversy as it was alleged in some quarters that Earp had been bribed, either by Sharkey's camp or by a major ******** syndicate. Sharkey's winner's purse was held up by a court order obtained by Fitzsimmons, but the judge eventually ruled in Sharkey's favour. The rumours persisted, however, and public sympathy remained strongly with Fitzsimmons. It would not be the last controversial decision of the Louth man's career.

    Sharkey's ‘title’, such as it was, was forfeited when the ‘retired’ champion, Jim Corbett, decided to return to the ring. Returning to Ireland in the summer of 1897, Sharkey fought in Belfast, Warrenpoint, and his home town of Dundalk. In June of the same year he reputedly went berserk in the ring during a bout with rival Peter Maher. The police had to intervene and the contest was officially declared a draw. In May 1898 Jim Jeffries, who was to be world champion from 1899 until his retirement in 1905, became the first man to defeat Sharkey in thirty-seven professional fights, when he got the decision in a twenty-round bout, with both men taking heavy punishment. More controversy followed on 22 November, when Sharkey defeated Corbett in sensational fashion in New York as one of Corbett's seconds, Jim McVey, entered the ring during the contest. Depending on which account one cares to believe, McVey was either in the pay of Sharkey's camp or intervened to prevent an even more comprehensive victory by the Irishman. In 1899 Jeffries gave him his promised shot at the world title in a $25,000 winner-take-all bout at Coney Island, New York. Sharkey lost in twenty-five rounds in a fight that is still regarded as being one of the greatest – and toughest – title matches of all time. After his first defeat by Jeffries he had vowed to beat him or die trying. In an epic encounter he finished the fight with a broken nose, two cracked ribs, and a left ear swollen to the size of a g****fruit. The fight was also the first boxing contest to be filmed under artificial lights, and the heat of the lights reputedly burned both men bald-headed. Sharkey won six fights in a row by knockout after that defeat, but it was the beginning of the end for him as the years of heavy punishment began to take their toll. A defeat to Gus Ruhlin, and another in a rematch with Fitzsimmons, were the end of the big time. He quit the ring in June 1902 after being knocked out in the eleventh round of another fight with Ruhlin. He had fought a mere four times in the previous two years, and apart from the occasional exhibition match it was the end of his boxing career.

    Sharkey was undoubtedly one of the toughest competitors ever seen in professional boxing, and is regarded by many commentators as unfortunate not to have been world champion at some stage. Thirty-seven knockouts in fifty-four bouts gave him a knockout rate of almost 70 per cent. It was his misfortune to have been around in a ‘golden era’ when many of boxing's all-time greats were also in their prime. His major rivals – Corbett, Fitzsimmons and Jeffries – were all legends and held the world title between them for thirteen years (1892–1905). He was never in any sense a stylish boxer, but his ability to take punishment was legendary, and resulted in a spectacular cauliflower ear given to him in an earlier fight with Ruhlin. Sharkey's aggression and intensity astonished many observers, and his punching was often wild and erratic, leaving himself wide open to a counterpunch. He was just 5 ft 8.5 in. (1.74 m) in height; during his career he weighed between 172 and 205 lbs (78–93 kg), and he had a large tattoo of a ship and a star on his chest. Thrifty by nature, he had accumulated a fortune of some $100,000 by the time he retired from boxing, and for a while he ran a saloon, had a fine home in Brooklyn, New York, and a stable of trotting horses. Trouble with the authorities and some bad investments meant that he fell on hard times, and in the 1920s and 1930s he and Jeffries, who became a great friend, made a living on the vaudeville circuit, reenacting their famous fight on the stage. Moving to live on Jeffries' ranch in California, Sharkey spent the last two decades of his life working as a night watchman and security guard at various race tracks in the area. He died 17 April 1953 in San Francisco, just a month after Jeffries. In 1959 Ring ****zine, widely regarded as the bible of boxing, inducted him into its boxing Hall of Fame; but perhaps the greatest tribute paid to him is the fact that ‘the Boston Gob’, Jack Sharkey (real name Joseph Paul Zukauskas), who won the world heavyweight title in 1932, took his boxing name from the two boxers he most admired, Jack Dempsey and Tom Sharkey. Jeffries always regarded him as his toughest-ever opponent, and among heavyweight boxing's ‘nearly’ men he has a good claim to be considered the best – and the toughest – of them all.


    Couple of things Jab, Sharkey had lost 2 fights before he fought Jeffries. He was ko'd in his 7th fight by black fighter George Washington and as far as I know never fought another. Sharkey also lost his fight with Reddy Gallagher and had a couple of draws and a no contest Thanks for posting this. " I Fought Them All," by Sharkey's Grandaughter ? Is a good read and fairly objective.
    Last edited by Ivich; 02-23-2023, 11:29 AM.
    JAB5239 JAB5239 likes this.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by JAB5239 View Post
      This is not my work, but a copy and pasted piece I recently found. Enjoy and discuss.

      “There was hardly a week that I was not in a fight,” Sailor Tom Sharkey(born Dundalk 1873, died 1953 San Francisco.

      Sharkey, Thomas Joseph (‘Tom’; ‘Sailor’) (1873–1953), bare-knuckle heavyweight boxer, was born 26 November 1873 in Mill St., Dundalk, Co. Louth, son of James Sharkey, labourer, and Margaret Sharkey (née Kelly). Little is known of his early life except that he spent a decade at sea (hence the nickname), surviving hurricanes and typhoons, four shipwrecks, and a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights. Sharkey's professional boxing career began in Honolulu, Hawaii, on St Patrick's day (17 March), 1893. According to his fight record, he went on to win his first twenty professional fights by knockout over the next three years. He drew with ‘Gentleman Jim’ Corbett in a four-round contest on 24 June 1896, and in August of the same year he fought an exhibition bout of three one-minute rounds against the great John L. Sullivan. On 2 December he fought Bob Fitzsimmons in a match advertised as a heavyweight championship of the world contest for the vacant title. Fitzsimmons knocked Sharkey to the canvas with a punch that was judged by the referee of the contest, wild-west lawman Wyatt Earp, to be a foul blow. Sharkey was thus declared the winner, but his victory was the subject of some controversy as it was alleged in some quarters that Earp had been bribed, either by Sharkey's camp or by a major ******** syndicate. Sharkey's winner's purse was held up by a court order obtained by Fitzsimmons, but the judge eventually ruled in Sharkey's favour. The rumours persisted, however, and public sympathy remained strongly with Fitzsimmons. It would not be the last controversial decision of the Louth man's career.

      Sharkey's ‘title’, such as it was, was forfeited when the ‘retired’ champion, Jim Corbett, decided to return to the ring. Returning to Ireland in the summer of 1897, Sharkey fought in Belfast, Warrenpoint, and his home town of Dundalk. In June of the same year he reputedly went berserk in the ring during a bout with rival Peter Maher. The police had to intervene and the contest was officially declared a draw. In May 1898 Jim Jeffries, who was to be world champion from 1899 until his retirement in 1905, became the first man to defeat Sharkey in thirty-seven professional fights, when he got the decision in a twenty-round bout, with both men taking heavy punishment. More controversy followed on 22 November, when Sharkey defeated Corbett in sensational fashion in New York as one of Corbett's seconds, Jim McVey, entered the ring during the contest. Depending on which account one cares to believe, McVey was either in the pay of Sharkey's camp or intervened to prevent an even more comprehensive victory by the Irishman. In 1899 Jeffries gave him his promised shot at the world title in a $25,000 winner-take-all bout at Coney Island, New York. Sharkey lost in twenty-five rounds in a fight that is still regarded as being one of the greatest – and toughest – title matches of all time. After his first defeat by Jeffries he had vowed to beat him or die trying. In an epic encounter he finished the fight with a broken nose, two cracked ribs, and a left ear swollen to the size of a g****fruit. The fight was also the first boxing contest to be filmed under artificial lights, and the heat of the lights reputedly burned both men bald-headed. Sharkey won six fights in a row by knockout after that defeat, but it was the beginning of the end for him as the years of heavy punishment began to take their toll. A defeat to Gus Ruhlin, and another in a rematch with Fitzsimmons, were the end of the big time. He quit the ring in June 1902 after being knocked out in the eleventh round of another fight with Ruhlin. He had fought a mere four times in the previous two years, and apart from the occasional exhibition match it was the end of his boxing career.

      Sharkey was undoubtedly one of the toughest competitors ever seen in professional boxing, and is regarded by many commentators as unfortunate not to have been world champion at some stage. Thirty-seven knockouts in fifty-four bouts gave him a knockout rate of almost 70 per cent. It was his misfortune to have been around in a ‘golden era’ when many of boxing's all-time greats were also in their prime. His major rivals – Corbett, Fitzsimmons and Jeffries – were all legends and held the world title between them for thirteen years (1892–1905). He was never in any sense a stylish boxer, but his ability to take punishment was legendary, and resulted in a spectacular cauliflower ear given to him in an earlier fight with Ruhlin. Sharkey's aggression and intensity astonished many observers, and his punching was often wild and erratic, leaving himself wide open to a counterpunch. He was just 5 ft 8.5 in. (1.74 m) in height; during his career he weighed between 172 and 205 lbs (78–93 kg), and he had a large tattoo of a ship and a star on his chest. Thrifty by nature, he had accumulated a fortune of some $100,000 by the time he retired from boxing, and for a while he ran a saloon, had a fine home in Brooklyn, New York, and a stable of trotting horses. Trouble with the authorities and some bad investments meant that he fell on hard times, and in the 1920s and 1930s he and Jeffries, who became a great friend, made a living on the vaudeville circuit, reenacting their famous fight on the stage. Moving to live on Jeffries' ranch in California, Sharkey spent the last two decades of his life working as a night watchman and security guard at various race tracks in the area. He died 17 April 1953 in San Francisco, just a month after Jeffries. In 1959 Ring ****zine, widely regarded as the bible of boxing, inducted him into its boxing Hall of Fame; but perhaps the greatest tribute paid to him is the fact that ‘the Boston Gob’, Jack Sharkey (real name Joseph Paul Zukauskas), who won the world heavyweight title in 1932, took his boxing name from the two boxers he most admired, Jack Dempsey and Tom Sharkey. Jeffries always regarded him as his toughest-ever opponent, and among heavyweight boxing's ‘nearly’ men he has a good claim to be considered the best – and the toughest – of them all.


      A Rocky Marciano type of fighter, with a lot of power, a good chin, and great stamina. Described as wild swinging but fast he was something in his time. He would have been ring ****zine rated #1 or # 2 when Jeffries beat him. He was in his prime and beat or got the better of Choysnki, McCoy, Corbett, and Ruhlin. He also beat a very good Goddard who at the time was 32-4 and fought and beat some of the guys John L Sullivan beat and did not fight!

      Sharkey sparred with Sullivan and may consider him the uncrowned champion as Corbett status was unclear. Sharkey had two fights billed for the world championship. One of them is the infamous DQ win over Fitzsimmons the other being Goddard who he Ko'd in six.
      Last edited by Dr. Z; 02-23-2023, 09:04 AM.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Dr. Z View Post

        A Rocky Marciano type of fighter, with a lot of power, a good chin, and great stamina. Described as wild swinging but fast he was something in his time. He would have been ring ****zine rated #1 or # 2 when Jeffries beat him. He was in his prime and beat or got the better of Choysnki, McCoy, Corbett, and Ruhlin. He also beat a very good Goddard who at the time was 32-4 and fought and beat some of the guys John L Sullivan beat and did not fight!

        Sharkey sparred with Sullivan and may consider him the uncrowned champion as Corbett status was unclear. Sharkey had two fights billed for the world championship. One of them is the infamous DQ win over Fitzsimmons the other being Goddard who he Ko'd in six.
        Goddard was one week off of 40years old when he fought Sharkey! lol

        "!In the 6th round of an uneventful fight, Sharkey landed a roundhouse right on Goddard's jaw and then tackled him to the boards where Goddard's head struck hard. Referee McArthur had to restrain Sharkey from fouling the Australian as he lay on top of him.[Billed as being for the heavyweight championship of the world]" Ruhlin stopped Sharkey in 2 subsequent fights.
        Last edited by Ivich; 02-23-2023, 11:46 AM.

        Comment


          #5
          A genuine legend in his time and those familiar with combat sports still today. Certainly one of the very best of his era - And thanks for posting!

          An interesting sidebar to a chapter mentioned briefly in the piece; on November 11, 1895, World’s Heavyweight Champion James J. Corbett was undecided about how long he was going to box and defend his title. On November 4 he had boxed an exhibition with one of the top contenders Steve O'Donnell in Memphis, Tennessee and decided to let the younger contenders have a go at the title as he was preparing for a national tour with his newest stage show called "A Navel Cadet ".

          On November 11, 1895, Ireland's Peter Maher knocked out fellow contender Steve O'Donnell in a single round at Maspeth, NY and claimed Corbett's "vacant" world title.
          Prior to the match Corbett himself had said that he would "award the title to the winner", so goes the story.

          However, 3 months later on February 21 of the following year, 1896, Ruby Robert Fitzsimmons KO'd Maher in Mexico on a sandbar along the Rio Grade, technically in the Mexican state of Coahuila de Zaragoza, but just outside of Langtry Texas, the home of the infamous Judge Roy Bean; in what was a finish fight with no scheduled rounds. Bean and his partners had squeezed $15,000 from the citizens of El Paso to stage the fight and the two heavyweights agreed to the deal.
          While the contest was billed as being for the "World title" won by Maher, that claim was not widely taken seriously, and Champion Corbett would reverse his position on retiment very quickly, and immediately rescinded his retirement upon hearing that Fitzsimmons, whom he disliked very much, had knocked out his friend Peter Maher, forcing Fitz to wait for a shot at the Actual title, still securely held by the still active Corbett; until Fitzsimmons KO'd Corbett in an upset in March of 1897, directly after Fitzsimmons' DQ "loss" to flat on his back Tom Sharkey.

          Had Corbett not reversed his decision to go into his very lucrative stage acting career full time (Corbett would become the highest paid actor in the entire world following his ring career), then Tom Sharkey would have been in line himself with a claim to the world title, having "beaten" Fitz just after Fitz beat Maher.

          Suffice to Say that Corbett, Fitzsimmons, Sharkey, Maher and O'Donnell were all living at the top of a very fine heavyweight class at this time, and one that would be well sorted out in the years that followed by one James J. Jeffries.​

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by JAB5239 View Post
            This is not my work, but a copy and pasted piece I recently found. Enjoy and discuss.

            “There was hardly a week that I was not in a fight,” Sailor Tom Sharkey(born Dundalk 1873, died 1953 San Francisco.

            Sharkey, Thomas Joseph (‘Tom’; ‘Sailor’) (1873–1953), bare-knuckle heavyweight boxer, was born 26 November 1873 in Mill St., Dundalk, Co. Louth, son of James Sharkey, labourer, and Margaret Sharkey (née Kelly). Little is known of his early life except that he spent a decade at sea (hence the nickname), surviving hurricanes and typhoons, four shipwrecks, and a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights. Sharkey's professional boxing career began in Honolulu, Hawaii, on St Patrick's day (17 March), 1893. According to his fight record, he went on to win his first twenty professional fights by knockout over the next three years. He drew with ‘Gentleman Jim’ Corbett in a four-round contest on 24 June 1896, and in August of the same year he fought an exhibition bout of three one-minute rounds against the great John L. Sullivan. On 2 December he fought Bob Fitzsimmons in a match advertised as a heavyweight championship of the world contest for the vacant title. Fitzsimmons knocked Sharkey to the canvas with a punch that was judged by the referee of the contest, wild-west lawman Wyatt Earp, to be a foul blow. Sharkey was thus declared the winner, but his victory was the subject of some controversy as it was alleged in some quarters that Earp had been bribed, either by Sharkey's camp or by a major ******** syndicate. Sharkey's winner's purse was held up by a court order obtained by Fitzsimmons, but the judge eventually ruled in Sharkey's favour. The rumours persisted, however, and public sympathy remained strongly with Fitzsimmons. It would not be the last controversial decision of the Louth man's career.

            Sharkey's ‘title’, such as it was, was forfeited when the ‘retired’ champion, Jim Corbett, decided to return to the ring. Returning to Ireland in the summer of 1897, Sharkey fought in Belfast, Warrenpoint, and his home town of Dundalk. In June of the same year he reputedly went berserk in the ring during a bout with rival Peter Maher. The police had to intervene and the contest was officially declared a draw. In May 1898 Jim Jeffries, who was to be world champion from 1899 until his retirement in 1905, became the first man to defeat Sharkey in thirty-seven professional fights, when he got the decision in a twenty-round bout, with both men taking heavy punishment. More controversy followed on 22 November, when Sharkey defeated Corbett in sensational fashion in New York as one of Corbett's seconds, Jim McVey, entered the ring during the contest. Depending on which account one cares to believe, McVey was either in the pay of Sharkey's camp or intervened to prevent an even more comprehensive victory by the Irishman. In 1899 Jeffries gave him his promised shot at the world title in a $25,000 winner-take-all bout at Coney Island, New York. Sharkey lost in twenty-five rounds in a fight that is still regarded as being one of the greatest – and toughest – title matches of all time. After his first defeat by Jeffries he had vowed to beat him or die trying. In an epic encounter he finished the fight with a broken nose, two cracked ribs, and a left ear swollen to the size of a g****fruit. The fight was also the first boxing contest to be filmed under artificial lights, and the heat of the lights reputedly burned both men bald-headed. Sharkey won six fights in a row by knockout after that defeat, but it was the beginning of the end for him as the years of heavy punishment began to take their toll. A defeat to Gus Ruhlin, and another in a rematch with Fitzsimmons, were the end of the big time. He quit the ring in June 1902 after being knocked out in the eleventh round of another fight with Ruhlin. He had fought a mere four times in the previous two years, and apart from the occasional exhibition match it was the end of his boxing career.

            Sharkey was undoubtedly one of the toughest competitors ever seen in professional boxing, and is regarded by many commentators as unfortunate not to have been world champion at some stage. Thirty-seven knockouts in fifty-four bouts gave him a knockout rate of almost 70 per cent. It was his misfortune to have been around in a ‘golden era’ when many of boxing's all-time greats were also in their prime. His major rivals – Corbett, Fitzsimmons and Jeffries – were all legends and held the world title between them for thirteen years (1892–1905). He was never in any sense a stylish boxer, but his ability to take punishment was legendary, and resulted in a spectacular cauliflower ear given to him in an earlier fight with Ruhlin. Sharkey's aggression and intensity astonished many observers, and his punching was often wild and erratic, leaving himself wide open to a counterpunch. He was just 5 ft 8.5 in. (1.74 m) in height; during his career he weighed between 172 and 205 lbs (78–93 kg), and he had a large tattoo of a ship and a star on his chest. Thrifty by nature, he had accumulated a fortune of some $100,000 by the time he retired from boxing, and for a while he ran a saloon, had a fine home in Brooklyn, New York, and a stable of trotting horses. Trouble with the authorities and some bad investments meant that he fell on hard times, and in the 1920s and 1930s he and Jeffries, who became a great friend, made a living on the vaudeville circuit, reenacting their famous fight on the stage. Moving to live on Jeffries' ranch in California, Sharkey spent the last two decades of his life working as a night watchman and security guard at various race tracks in the area. He died 17 April 1953 in San Francisco, just a month after Jeffries. In 1959 Ring ****zine, widely regarded as the bible of boxing, inducted him into its boxing Hall of Fame; but perhaps the greatest tribute paid to him is the fact that ‘the Boston Gob’, Jack Sharkey (real name Joseph Paul Zukauskas), who won the world heavyweight title in 1932, took his boxing name from the two boxers he most admired, Jack Dempsey and Tom Sharkey. Jeffries always regarded him as his toughest-ever opponent, and among heavyweight boxing's ‘nearly’ men he has a good claim to be considered the best – and the toughest – of them all.


            Sounds more like a promotional piece than history.

            So he joined the sea at the age of ten. Not unheard of but an exception. In those ten years, between the age of ten to 20, he had "a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights." Maybe, but sounds overstated.

            Also ten years at sea and he suffered multiple ship wrecks? Again ship wrecks happened but again they were an exception not common (except in Hollywood movies.) He's got four under his belt? Without a war no less.

            A guy (child) like that gets a bad reputation as a 'Jona' -- after four shipwreck other sailors would not want him on-board their ships. Jonas' were bad luck because the sea spit them back. A man (child) who the sea spits back is very unwelcomed on-board by other sailors, whom were very superstitious.

            I don't like the narrative -- it sounds like it wasn't actually researched but instead a collection of stories that were created around his nickname 'sailor' and probably grew with each big fight.

            No doubt he may have spent time at sea. He did hail from San Francisco but the back story: hurricanes, typoons, shipwrecks, and multiple bareknuckle fights, seems just a touch too romantic, too perfect.

            A sailor surviving multiple shipwreck is kind of like, how every cut-man in boxing somehow is remembered (or at least introduced) as being 'legendary.' The reputation grows with the passing years, and claims of ship wrecks always adds to a sailor's legacy. And Sharkey being a champion fighter deserves at least four.

            Also why would one bother to differentiate between a hurricane and a typhoon? A sailor telling his stories isn't going to differentiate what hemiphere he was in when the storm hit. He would tell his story using the term assoicated with his region.

            Finally, the resume mistakes, the author makes later on, also says sloppy research. I think the whole sea thing looks more like a retelling of the stories that surrounded him when he fought and not actually his experiences at sea.

            I just don't think much of biographies.

            P.S. What's with the fights being 'no holds barred' fights? Sailors functioned under a code of conduct. (Even pirates did.) They would have not have had no holds barred fights. Those would have been drunken brawls not arranged fights.

            A good capatin may very well let his crew work out their animosities with eachother with some fists-a-cuffs but no good capatin would let his crew have 'no hold barred' fights on his ship. It would discredit his authority and turn his crew into a gang.

            P.S.S. Jab don't get me wrong. I am glad you posted the article. I am glad I read it. Let's share all the info we find, we can only learn. So keep on posting. I'll keep being a doubter.
            Last edited by Willie Pep 229; 02-23-2023, 01:37 PM.
            Bundana Bundana likes this.

            Comment


              #7
              Sharkey was in shipwrecks . The man also had a deceased twin brother who died when he was young. He has an interesting back story outside of boxing and was viewed as a true savage or a fighter.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Willie Pep 229 View Post

                Sounds more like a promotional piece than history.

                So he joined the sea at the age of ten. Not unheard of but an exception. In those ten years, between the age of ten to 20, he had "a succession of unofficial no-holds-barred fights." Maybe, but sounds overstated.

                Also ten years at sea and he suffered multiple ship wrecks? Again ship wrecks happened but again they were an exception not common (except in Hollywood movies.) He's got four under his belt? Without a war no less.

                A guy (child) like that gets a bad reputation as a 'Jona' -- after four shipwreck other sailors would not want him on-board their ships. Jonas' were bad luck because the sea spit them back. A man (child) who the sea spits back is very unwelcomed on-board by other sailors, whom were very superstitious.

                I don't like the narrative -- it sounds like it wasn't actually researched but instead a collection of stories that were created around his nickname 'sailor' and probably grew with each big fight.

                No doubt he may have spent time at sea. He did hail from San Francisco but the back story: hurricanes, typoons, shipwrecks, and multiple bareknuckle fights, seems just a touch too romantic, too perfect.

                A sailor surviving multiple shipwreck is kind of like, how every cut-man in boxing somehow is remembered (or at least introduced) as being 'legendary.' The reputation grows with the passing years, and claims of ship wrecks always adds to a sailor's legacy. And Sharkey being a champion fighter deserves at least four.

                Also why would one bother to differentiate between a hurricane and a typhoon? A sailor telling his stories isn't going to differentiate what hemiphere he was in when the storm hit. He would tell his story using the term assoicated with his region.

                Finally, the resume mistakes, the author makes later on, also says sloppy research. I think the whole sea thing looks more like a retelling of the stories that surrounded him when he fought and not actually his experiences at sea.

                I just don't think much of biographies.

                P.S. What's with the fights being 'no holds barred' fights? Sailors functioned under a code of conduct. (Even pirates did.) They would have not have had no holds barred fights. Those would have been drunken brawls not arranged fights.

                A good capatin may very well let his crew work out their animosities with eachother with some fists-a-cuffs but no good capatin would let his crew have 'no hold barred' fights on his ship. It would discredit his authority and turn his crew into a gang.

                P.S.S. Jab don't get me wrong. I am glad you posted the article. I am glad I read it. Let's share all the info we find, we can only learn. So keep on posting. I'll keep being a doubter.
                "no holds barred" is just another way of saying rough-n-tumble isn't it?

                It does follow the theme of plausible but unlikely all the the same but I think there's more plausibility here than you're giving credit.


                Willie Pep 229 Willie Pep 229 likes this.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by HawkHogan View Post

                  "no holds barred" is just another way of saying rough-n-tumble isn't it?

                  It does follow the theme of plausible but unlikely all the the same but I think there's more plausibility here than you're giving credit.

                  That he learned to fight as a sailor I certainly can accept.

                  I guess I just found the story to be filled with exaggerations. One ship wreck would have worked me better.

                  And yea, the writer just may have been bad at what he does and didn't respect what the phrase 'no-hold-barred' means. I'll call him a casual!
                  MoonCheese Marchegiano likes this.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Dr. Z View Post
                    Sharkey was in shipwrecks . The man also had a deceased twin brother who died when he was young. He has an interesting back story outside of boxing and was viewed as a true savage or a fighter.
                    Sharkey did not have a twin brother.His siblings were as follows Richard born in1864,Mary born in1865 , James born in1868,
                    Elizabeth ,born in1870.Tom himself born in 1873,Rose born in 1875,Owne born in JUNE 1877 ,but died the following summer.Nine months after his death,another son was born Patrick but he lived only a few months.John their tenth child was born in1880.
                    Sharkey claimed he had a twin brother who was killed by a runaway horse,when he was about 8 years old.Local newspapers of the time show nothing about this and its believed to be a tale Sharkey made up.
                    Sharkey said he was ship wrecked once,by the time the Sporting Chronicle had finished with the story it was 4 times and he had saved the
                    lives of 3 shipmates. Sport History says Sharkey was 12 when he first went to sea Ring scribe Jersey Jones said he was 10.
                    Sharkey;s Father James said Tom left school at 13 and went to work on a ship called ,The Irish Girl as a cook.

                    Source Moira Sharkey
                    Sharkey liked to tell tall tales and did not attempt to correct others who embellished on his past.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X
                    TOP