Biography of boxing henry armstrong
•
Henry Armstrong
An African American boxer, Henry Armstrong was the only professional boxer to hold world championship titles in three weight divisions simultaneously. In his boxing career from 1931 to 1945, Armstrong fought 181 bouts, won 151 matches, lost 21 fights, and scored 101 knockouts. After his retirement, he became an ordained minister and devoted han själv to underprivileged youth.
Henry Armstrong was born on December 12, 1912, in Columbus, Mississippi, with the birth name of Henry Jackson Jr. Named after his father, Henry was the eleventh child of fifteen, Henry Armstrong's father was a mixed race sharecropper, his mother was America Jackson. She was a full-blooded Iroquois Indian. Mrs. Jackson believed that one day, Henry would do great things and become a Minister.
At an early age, Henry's family moved to St. Louis in search for a better life for his family. Still young when his mother died, Henry was raised by his grandmother Henrietta Chatman along wi
•
Henry Armstrong: Boxing’s Super Champ
Henry Armstrong: Boxing’s Super Champ is the story of arguably the most incredible fighter in the history of boxing – told by one of the few surviving writers to have been around during Armstrong’s unique world championship reign.
When Henry had his arm raised on 17 August 1938, after winning a blood-spattered 15-round decision over Lou Ambers, he became the first boxer to simultaneously hold world titles at three different weights – and somehow he managed the feat in an era of just eight weight classes, with no ‘junior’ or ‘super’ divisions. He had entered Madison Square Garden as the reigning world feather and welterweight champion, and left with the world lightweight belt strapped around his waist.
Now in his 90s, veteran boxing journalist and author John Jarrett looks back on the life and career of this ring hero of his youth: a 5ft 5½in buzzsaw they nicknamed ‘Homicide Hank’.
In the 85 years that have passed since then
•