BlackPast.org sponsored in part by Lilly.com BlackPast.org sponsored in part by Lilly.com
Donate to BlackPast.org


BlackPast.org Blog

Blackpast.org in the Classroom/ border=

With Pride: The LGBTQ Page.

Major Office Holders

BlackPast by the numbers

Advertise with BlackPast.org

Advertise with BlackPast.org

BlackPast.org's Barack Obama Page

Robert Fikes's Corner

Clarence's Hollywood Blog

BlackPast.org Author's Corner

Please use this link to access all the books that have been written by BlackPast.org contributors. We urge you to support them by purchasing their publications. Also, any purchase of books on this list though Amazon.com, or of anything else the company sells, helps support BlackPast.org.  Give BIG on May 15, 2013  Explore the BlackPast in the Classroom

Dixon, George "Little Chocolate" (1870-1909)

Image Ownership: Public Domain
George Dixon, also known as “Little Chocolate,” was born on July 29, 1870 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Standing only 5’ 3 ½” and weighing no more than 118 pounds over the bulk of his career, “Little Chocolate” was described as long armed and skinny legged, swift of hand and foot, and possessing an ideal fighting temperament and great stamina. Ring magazine founder and editor, Nat Fleischer, described him as a marvel of cleverness, yet indicated that he could slug with the best of them. Fleischer rated him as the # 1 bantamweight of all time.

Dixon became the first black man to win a world championship when he captured the bantamweight title just shy of his 20th birthday by defeating Nunc Wallace of England in 18 rounds on June 27, 1890. Only 13 months later he knocked out Abe Willis of Australia to garner the featherweight crown. He held that title for the next six years, finally losing it by decision to Solly Smith on October 4, 1897. He regained it on November 11, 1898 by defeating Dave Sullivan, but then lost it for good when Terry McGovern knocked him out on January 9, 1900.

George Dixon retired from boxing in 1906 with an overall record of 63 wins, 29 losses, and 48 draws. Many claim that hundreds of his fights that took place in dance halls and theatres throughout the country were never recorded.  Some credit Dixon with founding the so-called “black school” of pugilism which included such greats as Joe Walcott, Joe Gans, Sam Langford, and Jack Johnson. Dixon introduced Walcott to his manager Tom O’Rourke, and the two fighters became associates enabling Walcott to learn under Dixon. Gans was a good friend of Dixon and also studied under him, and eventually provided some instruction to a young Sam Langford, while history’s first black heavyweight champion, Jack Johnson, served as a sparring partner for Walcott early in his own career.

When Dixon died penniless in 1909 at the age of 38, his manager, Tom O’Rourke, had a tombstone made up with the words “Here rests the gamest pugilist who ever lived.”

Sources:
John D. McCallum, The Encyclopedia of World Boxing Champions (Radner, Pennsylvania; Chilton Book Co. 1975); http://coxscorner.tripod.com/Dixon.html; www.cyberboxingzone.com and www.boxrec.com

Contributor:

Independent Historian

Entry Categories:

Copyright 2007-2011 - BlackPast.org v2.0 | blackpast@blackpast.org | Your donations help us to grow. | We welcome your suggestions. | Mission Statement

BlackPast.org is an independent non-profit corporation 501(c)(3). It has no affiliation with the University of Washington. BlackPast.org is supported in part by a grant from Humanities Washington, a state-wide non-profit organization supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the state of Washington, and contributions from individuals and foundations.