Larry Gains

Lawrence Samuel "Larry" Gains (12 December 1900 – 26 July 1983) was a Black Canadian heavyweight boxer who was champion of Canada and the British Empire. One of the top heavyweights of his era, he was denied the opportunity to become World Champion due to the bar on black boxers competing for the title.

Larry Gains
Statistics
Nickname(s)Larrupin' Larry
Weight(s)Heavyweight
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Reach77 in (196 cm)
NationalityCanadian
Born(1900-12-12)12 December 1900
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died26 July 1983(1983-07-26) (aged 82)
Cologne, Germany
Boxing record
Total fights143
Wins115
Wins by KO61
Losses22
Draws5

Biography

Gains was born on Sumach Street in the Cabbagetown neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada on 12 December 1900.[1] He took up boxing at around the age of twenty, after being asked to act as a sparring partner by Charlie Clay, and boxed out of Toronto's Praestamus Club, an organisation for Black boxers.[2][3][4]

Professional career

After a successful amateur career, Gains made the decision to go professional, travelling to Britain on a cattle ship and making his professional début in London as "The Toronto Terror" in June 1923.[5][6] Many of his early fights were in France (where he befriended Morley Callahan and Ernest Hemingway who at the time were working as newspaper reporters) and Germany, where he beat Max Schmeling in 1925. On Feb.28, 1927 he became Canadian Heavyweight Champion when he stopped Horace "Soldier" Jones in 5 rounds at Toronto. He later defended it against two of the biggest names in Canadian boxing at the time, Jack Renault and Charlie Belanger.[7][8] He settled in Leicester, England in 1930, where many of his fights over the next few years were held.[9] Noted primarily as a slick boxer he KO'd Phil Scott in front of 30,000 spectators at Leicester Tigers' Welford Road ground in 1931, taking the British Empire title, although the colour bar was still in place.[10] The colour bar was lifted in 1932, and he cemented his hold on the title with a victory over white South African Donald McCorkindale at the Royal Albert Hall,[8] the fight ending in an unpopular points decision for Gains, with Gains' trainer Jack Goodwin collapsing and dying during the fight.[11] Gains was the second black fighter to fight at the Royal Albert Hall, as Len Johnson was the first black fighter due to his contest with Adolf Pott being first.[12][13][14][15] He went on to beat Primo Carnera in front of 70,000 people at White City, London in May that year (a British record attendance for a boxing match), despite Carnera having an advantage of 60 pounds in weight and a four inches in height.[8][16] He lost the British Empire title in 1934 to Len Harvey, and failed to regain it later that year, defeated by Jack Petersen in front of a crowd of 64,000 at White City.[17]

World coloured heavyweight champion

Gains was considered one of the top heavyweights of his era, but was denied the opportunity to fight for the British Championship and the World Championship due to the rules against black boxers competing for the titles, instead competing for the 'Coloured Heavyweight Championship of the World', a title that he won in 1928 and 1935.[7][18][19] His income from boxing dwindled after 1934 and in 1937 he was declared bankrupt.[20] In December 1938 he defeated Welsh champion George James on points.[21] In 1939, with the advent of World War II, Gains joined the British Army as a physical training instructor.[8] He served as a Sergeant Major in the Pioneer Corps in the Middle East.[22] His last fight was a defeat to Jack London in June 1942, held to raise funds for the RAF Benevolent Fund.[23]

Gains retired from boxing at the age of forty.[9] He had 143 professional fights, winning 115 and drawing 5, most of his defeats coming in the latter years of his career. Gains stated that during his career he won around US$500,000, much of which was lost through gambling.[8][24]

Later life

After boxing, Gains had a succession of low-paid jobs. In 1950 he was working as a labourer in Shoeburyness, Essex.[25] In 1953 he was jailed for three months for stealing £222 12/5 from a British Legion club where he worked as a steward.[9][26] He pleaded guilty and stated that he would repay the money.[27] He successfully appealed against the sentence and was discharged conditionally after a "well known sporting gentleman" repaid the money along with the court costs.[28] Gains went on to be the singer/drummer in a hotel band.[29] In the early 1960s Gains was living on Tooting Broadway and working as a "salvage collection merchant".[2] Gains later worked in car sales and as a boxing trainer in Morden, near London.[8]

With his wife Lisa, he had four children, Betty, Harold, Anne and John.[1] Gains' autobiography, The Impossible Dream, was published in 1976, the title a reference to his dream of becoming World Champion. Max Schmeling contributed a foreword. Gains died in July 1983 from a heart attack while visiting relatives in Cologne, Germany.[30]

Legacy & Honors

In 2020 award-winning author Mark Allen Baker published the first comprehensive account of The World Colored Heavyweight Championship, 1876-1937, with McFarland & Company, a leading independent publisher of academic & nonfiction books. This history traces the advent and demise of the Championship, the stories of the talented professional athletes who won it, and the demarcation of the color line both in and out of the ring.

For decades the World Colored Heavyweight Championship was a useful tool to combat racial oppression-the existence of the title a leverage mechanism, or tool, used as a technique to counter a social element, “drawing the color line.”

In 2015, Gains was posthumously inducted into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.[31]

Notable bouts

Result Opponent Type Rd., Time Date Location Notes[32]
Loss Jack London KO 2 (10) 1942-06-06 Caird Hall, Dundee
Loss Jack London KO 3 (10) 1941-05-28 New St James Hall, Newcastle, Tyne and Wear
Loss Jack London KO 4 (10) 1941-01-25 The Stadium, Liverpool
Loss Tommy Farr TKO 6 (10) 1939-05-17 Ninian Park, Cardiff
Loss Len Harvey TKO 13 (15) 1939-03-16 Harringay Arena, Harringay, London For vacant Commonwealth (British Empire) Heavyweight Title.
NC Jack London NC 8 (10) 1936-10-19 Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Kensington, London
Loss Ben Foord PTS 12 1936-03-09 Granby Halls, Leicester, Leicestershire
Loss Ben Foord PTS 12 1935-11-25 Granby Halls, Leicester, Leicestershire
Win Obie Walker PTS 15 1935-07-20 Welford Road Stadium, Leicester, Leicestershire Won World "Colored" Heavyweight Title.
Loss Jack Petersen TKO 13 (15) 1934-09-10 White City Stadium, White City, London For Commonwealth (British Empire) Heavyweight Title.
Loss Len Harvey PTS 15 1934-02-08 Royal Albert Hall, Kensington, London Lost Commonwealth (British Empire) Heavyweight Title.
Win Jack London KO 2 (12) 1933-12-11 New St James Hall, Newcastle, Tyne and Wear
Loss Walter Neusel UD 10 1932-10-17 Salle Wagram, Paris
Win Primo Carnera PTS 10 1932-05-30 White City Stadium, White City, London
Win Phil Scott KO 2 (15) 1931-06-13 Tigers Rugby Football Ground, Leicester, Leicestershire Won Commonwealth (British Empire) Heavyweight Title.
Win George Godfrey DQ 3 1928-08-15 Maple Leaf Stadium, Toronto Won World "Colored" Heavyweight Title.
Draw Mike McTigue PTS 10 1928-08-15 CNE Coliseum, Toronto
Loss George Godfrey TKO 6 1926-11-08 Broadway Auditorium, Buffalo, New York For World "Colored" Heavyweight Title.
Win Dixie Kid KO 2 1926-04-12 Arena Gardens, Toronto
Win Max Schmeling TKO 2 (10) 1925-08-28 Kristallpalast, Cologne, Nordrhein-Westfalen
Loss Frank Moody TKO 5 1923-06-23 The Ring, Southwark, London

References

  1. Gains, Larry (1976) The Impossible Dream, Leisure Publications Ltd, 14 Fleet Street, London EC4
  2. "One-time Boxing Great Now Just Rag Collector", Leader-Post, 23 March 1963, p. 27. Retrieved 13 March 2012
  3. "Amateur Boxing Held at Toronto", Quebec Telegraph, 21 November 1921, p. 3. Retrieved 13 March 2012
  4. "Toronto Daily Star", 22 April 1922 "Superb Battling in Ontario Finals"
  5. Page, Joseph S. (2010) Primo Carnera: The Life and Career of the Heavyweight Boxing Champion, McFarland & Co Inc, ISBN 978-0786448104, p. 82
  6. "Larry Gains Won", The Gazette (Montreal), 13 April 1926, p. 17
  7. Andrews, David L. (2001) Michael Jordan, Inc.: Corporate Sport, Media Culture and Late Modern America, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791450253, p. 211
  8. Cope, Michael (1974) "The Man Who Broke Boxing's Color Bar", The Vancouver Sun, 2 March 1974, p. 18 (Weekend magazine). Retrieved 12 March 2012
  9. "Larry Gains, Old Boxer, Goes to Jail", Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 15 May 1953, p. 1. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  10. Fruman, Andrew "A Backward Glance-1931, The Year in Boxing: Larry Gains Wins Empire Title, Brown & Sanstol in Action", thecruelestsport.com. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  11. Cummings, A.C. (1932) "Gains Failed to Hold Early Lead", Calgary Daily Herald, 30 January 1932, p. 7. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  12. "Points For Johnson". The Sheffield Independent. 29 January 1932. p. 10. Retrieved 13 January 2021 via British Newspaper Archive.
  13. "Len Johnson Wins". The Derby Daily Telegraph. 29 January 1932. p. 10. Retrieved 30 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive.
  14. "Len Johnson's Fine Boxing". The Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 29 January 1932. p. 7. Retrieved 30 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive.
  15. "Match for Len Johnson". The Daily Herald. 23 January 1932. p. 15. Retrieved 30 December 2020 via British Newspaper Archive.
  16. "Larry Gains Beats Carnera on Points as 70,000 Look On", The Gazette (Montreal), 31 May 1932, p. 11
  17. "Empire Heavyweight Championship: Petersen Beats Gains", The Sydney Morning Herald, 12 September 1934, p. 22. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  18. Humber, William (2004) A Sporting Chance: Achievements of African-Canadian Athletes, Natural Heritage Books, ISBN 978-1896219998
  19. "Gains, Harvey Battle for Title", The Border Cities Star, 8 February 1934, p. 3. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  20. "Court Tribute to Larry Gains: Bankruptcy Examination Closed". Western Daily Press. 17 June 1937. Retrieved 20 September 2014 via British Newspaper Archive.
  21. "James Outpointed by Larry Gains", Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 13 December 1938, p. 11. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  22. Nickleson, Allan (1942) "Larry Gains Fighting His Biggest Battle", Calgary Herald, 16 September 1942, p. 15. Retrieved 13 March 2012
  23. "Larry Gains Beaten: Knocked Out in Second Round by Jack London", The Gazette (Montreal), 8 June 1942, p. 17. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  24. "Larry Gains, Bankrupt, Faces Inquiry", The Straits Times, 5 June 1937, p. 18
  25. "Larry Gains Just Reflects on Ring Career", Calgary Herald, 16 February 1950, p. 27. Retrieved 13 March 2012
  26. "Gains sentenced to term in jail", Leader-Post, 16 May 1953, p. 20. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  27. "Ex-Heavyweight Boxer Larry Gains Suffers First 'K.O.' in his Life", The Indian Express, 26 May 1953, p. 6. Retrieved 13 March 2012
  28. "Larry Gains Wins Sentence Appeal", Edmonton Journal, 16 July 1953, p. 18. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  29. "Ex-British Champ Freed", Baltimore Afro-American, 18 July 1953, p. 19. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  30. "Boxer Gains Dies at 83", Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 28 July 1983, p. 16-B. Retrieved 12 March 2012
  31. "Canada's Sports Hall of Fame". sportshall.ca. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  32. Larry Gains' Professional Boxing Record. BoxRec.com. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
Achievements
Preceded by
George Godfrey
World Colored Heavyweight Champion
15 August 1928 – Unknown
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
George Godfrey
Preceded by
Obie Walker
World Colored Heavyweight Champion
20 July 1935 – Unknown
Title defunct after
Joe Louis
wins World Heavyweight title
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