Friday, October 23, 2020

The Boxer Who Played Joe Louis--Three Times

One of Alabama's most famous sports figures is boxer Joe Louis, whose career ran from 1934 until 1951. Considered one of the all-time greats, Louis defended his heavyweight title in 25 consecutive contests and had the longest reign in heavyweight boxing history. His two fights against German Max Schmeling in the 1930's were spectacles of the first order. On June 19, 1936, Schmeling gave Louis his first professional loss when he knocked the "Brown Bomber" out in the 12th round. For the rematch on June 22, 1938, the pair met in Yankee Stadium before a crowd of more than 70,000. Louis defeated Schmeling in the first round. In 2010 an eight foot statue of Louis by Casey Downing, Jr., was erected on the Chambers County Courthouse lawn. Louis was born in Lafayette. 

Naturally, Hollywood brought Louis to the screen in at least three biopics. In 1938 Louis himself had starred in a fictionalized account of his life, Spirit of Youth. The second one was  The Joe Louis Story from United Artists and released on September 18, 1953. Louis was played in that film by a professional boxer, Coley Wallace. Ring of Passion, a made-for-TV movie with Bernie Casey as Louis, appeared in 1978. 

Wallace was born April 5, 1927 in Jacksonville, Florida; he died  January 30, 2005, of heart failure in Harlem, NY. At the time of his death he was married to Pearlie-May Wallace; she died in 2016. The couple had a daughter named Pat. 

As an amateur, Wallace was New York Daily News Golden Gloves heavyweight champion in 1948 and 1949. In the 1948 semi-final he defeated Rocky Marciano in a split decision, an outcome unpopular with the crowd. Wallace is believed to be the only fighter ever to defeat Marciano. You can find more highlights from his amateur career here

Wallace's first professional fight took place in April 1950 and his final one in April 1956. In that period he had 29 bouts, with 22 wins [16 by knockout] and seven losses [four by knockout]. His best known pro opponent was probably Ezzard Charles, who defeated Wallace by a knockout in December 1953. Charles held a world heavyweight title and in 1950 defeated his idol Joe Louis who was at the end of his career. Another opponent was Jimmy Bivins, who defeated Wallace by a knockout in September 1952. Bivins never had a title fight, but defeated eight of eleven world champions he faced. He lost to Joe Louis in an August 1951 bout. 

Thus Wallace was in the midst of his professional boxing career when he made this film. In the early 1950's he also worked as a bouncer at the Savoy Ballroom, a legendary music and dancing venue in Harlem that operated from 1926 until 1958. Wallace was a referee in two bouts in 1974 and a judge in several fights in the 1980's. 

Wallace had small roles as Joe Louis in two later films, the 1979 TV movie Marciano and Martin Scorsese's classic Raging Bull [1980] based on the life of boxer Jake LaMotta. In 1956 he starred in a non-boxing film, Carib Gold, along with Ethel Waters. It's also the first known film role of Cicely Tyson. 

The Joe Louis Story has been released on VHS and DVD, and is available on Amazon Prime and for free on YouTube. The boxer's mother, Marva Louis, is played by Hilda Simms in the movie. 

More comments are below. 



Joe Louis [1914-1981] in 1941 

Source: Wikipedia



Source: Wikipedia



Coley Wallace [1927-2005]

Source: BoxRec




On May 14, 1953, Joe Louis and Coley Wallace stand in front of a 1951 poster for what turned out to be the Alabama heavyweight's last fight. Marciano won in the eighth round. 

Source: A 2011 commentary on the film by Louie Shields



This issue of Look magazine 3 November 1953 included an article "Corey Wallace Plays Joe Louis" on pages 86-89. Five photographs by Wil Blanche show Wallace training at his New Jersey gym, etc. 

Source: WorthPoint




Source: Wikipedia





Marciano was first broadcast on the ABC-TV network on 21 October 1979





Frankie Manning and Coley Wallace at the dedication of a Savoy Ballroom plaque 26 May 2002





Wallace's grave in the Calverton Cemetery, Suffolk County, New York

Source: Find-A-Grave




Source: Wikipedia 







In this 1978 TV movie actor Bernie Casey portrays #Alabama native Joe Louis as he fights German Max Schmeling, losing the first fight 19 June 1936 but winning the rematch 22 June  1938 





An article about Louis by William Jerome appeared in the May-June 1937 issue of this magazine.








Thursday, October 22, 2020

Alabama History & Culture News: October 22 edition


Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!


The Witches review: A bland and neutered version of Roald Dahl's book
The action might have been transported to Alabama in 1968, but The Witches otherwise remains faithful to Dahl's novel. Following the death of his ...

Paranormal history in the Wiregrass
NEWTON, Ala. (WDHN) — Bill Sketoe is one of the 13 ghosts of Alabama. The story goes he was hung here before this bridge was built during the civil ...


The haunted history of Kinston's dancing, fiddling Grancer Harrison
There are few locations in the entire State of Alabama with a “ghost story” as well known as that of Grancer Harrison. Outside of the tiny Coffee County ...

Alabama Historical Commission Launches Historic Preservation Map Initiative of Historic ...
The AHC has been diligently working to convert the agency's paper files associated with Alabama's historic architectural resources into a web-based ...

New documentary focuses on blues music in Alabama Black Belt
(AP) — A new documentary about the blues tradition of Alabama's Black ... An announcement says the show traces the history of the region's African ...


Ballard House expansion to emphasize Birmingham's rich legacy and enhance nonprofit's mission
Renovations underway for Birmingham's Ballard House from Alabama NewsCenter on Vimeo. The story of the Ballard House is part of the historic fabric ..


Alabama's 200 years of history captured in new interactive map
A new, interactive map highlights thousands of historical structures and places in Alabama. The Alabama Historical Commission said its Historic ...


Fannie Flagg pens sequel to 'Fried Green Tomatoes'
But Alabama native Fannie Flagg is best known today as the author of ... And now, 33 years after the book's publication, Flagg, 76, has written the ...

Award-Winning Alabama Writer and Wife of LA Entertainment Lawyer Launches Acclaimed Thriller ...
"Books remain a primary resource for entertainment. As for the silver screen, it's the perfect time to reset, gather talent, and plan for future book-to-film ...

Author to talk Marquis de Lafayette book
The public is invited to a book talk by Dr. Lawrence Krumenaker, author of “Nine Days of Traveling: Lafayette's 1825 Alabama Tour, Today's Historical ...

CST at the post chapel. Burial will follow in Section 12A, grave 552 next to his late wife, Mary. Adkins, who lived in Opelika, received the Medal of Honor ...

New documentary focuses on blues music in Alabama Black Belt
Produced by One State Films and APT and director by Alabama filmmaker Robert Clem, the hourlong show traces the history of the region's African ...

DON NOBLE: Chilling true-crime story focuses on Alabama-born serial killer
John Douglas, back in the late '70s, was one of the very first FBI profilers and, with Mark Olshaker, has written nine previous books on the subject. Here ...

Book Review: Gwendolyn Patton 'My Race to Freedom'
One particular focus of Gwen's story is Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and what went on there as the civil rights movement of the 50s led to the ...

Pine Hill Cemetery, located on Armstrong St., is one of the many stops on the Spectral Investigators' haunted tours in Auburn, AL.


Shreve Memorial welcomes three authors in November
... serves as director of Historic Blakely State Park in Spanish Fort, Alabama. ... Fourteenth Colony is the first comprehensive history of the colony and ...


(WPMI) — Two police officers who were killed in the line of duty in Mobile in the early 1900s will finally receive grave markers, Mobile Police say.

The last known slave ship has spent 160 years under the Mobile River. Can it be preserved?
The Alabama Historical Commission is fielding proposals from maritime archaeologists as the task requires industrial-level diving skills. The commission ...


This Alabama musician's best song is actually a book
Huntsville author J.W. Fowler's debut novel digs into this idea. Titled “Free and Clear,” the book intertwines arcs of Ben Landry, a successful songwriter ...

Historic Society to host nighttime tour of Old Live Oak Cemetery
The Walking History Tour will feature historical figure buried in the historic ... Alabama's first Black Congressman, will be portrayed by Winston Williams; noted ... Though Hudson is not buried at Old Live Oak Cemetery, he will “make a ...


Artist Andrew LaMar Hopkins Reimagines the Antebellum History of Southern Port Cities
Born in Mobile, Alabama, in 1977, the artist traces his lineage to a major Creole family descended from Nicolas Baudin, a Frenchman who received a ...

... 33 Alabamians awarded the Medal of Honor, three of them were born in Leeds, Alabama. ... He is buried at Greenwood Cemetery in Montgomery.

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Alabama Photo of the Day: Amphitheater at Auburn University

In recent wanderings through Alabama Mosaic I came across this 1940's photograph of the amphitheater on Auburn University's campus. I seem to remember seeing a few events there in my time at Auburn during the 1970's.

The formal name of the facility is the Graves Centre and Amphitheatre. As noted below, the location has been used for various assemblies over the years. The Centre was a facility for agriculture and then fisheries conferences and the original 30 cottages housed guests.. Athletics the occupied the cottages for a while. When the cottages were torn down is unknown. The amphitheater is built of Belgian granite blocks from the streets of Montgomery. 

Also below is a link to the Change.org petition seeking to remove the name of Alabama governor David Bibb Graves from the facility. 

Apparently there s a plan for another amphitheater to be built at the school's Ag Heritage Park. 




The amphitheater about 1940 with two guest cottages in the background





A more recent photo of the amphitheater taken from a Change.org petition to remove the name of David Bibb Graves from the facility. 




These two images appear in Lengthening Shadows that contains information about Auburn University buildings up to the time of publication in 1977. 







David Bibb Graves [1873-1942]








Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Alabama's Organ Transplant Pioneer

Many of us in Alabama are aware of the organ transplant program at UAB School of Medicine and its success over the years. After all, about 400 organs are transplanted every year and more than 14,000 such operations have been performed since 1968. Some people may not know that one of the world's transplant pioneers was born in a small town in Shelby County. Let's investigate. 

A summary of James D. Hardy, Jr.'s career and accomplishments can be read below in the text from his historical marker in Calera. Luckily for us Dr. Hardy published an autobiography in 2002; the first chapter describes his years growing up in Calera. 

Hardy and twin brother Julian were born on May 14, 1918, at St. Vincent's Hospital in Birmingham. James was named after his paternal grandfather James D. Hardy, a native of Glasgow, Scotland. 

The family lived next to the Newala Lime Plant in Calera, owned by the elder James who had been in Alabama since at least 1882. In 1883 Hardy, his younger brother John and two other lime kiln owners formed the Alabama Lime Company. "Newala" is a pure type of limestone found in Shelby County; lime plants continue to operate there. 

At the time of the twins' birth, mother Julia taught Latin at the Girls' Technical Institute, now the University of Montevallo. A graduate of the University of Alabama and Columbia University in New York City, she eventually married an older widower, Fred Hardy, a University of Tennessee graduate who already had three children. 

Hardy's maternal grandfather Diggs Poyner was a Virginia Military Institute graduate who taught military topics at the University of Alabama during the Civil War. After the war he bought property in Mt Hebron, where Julia was born. 

After marriage the new couple and Fred's sons settled in what Hardy described as their drafty house that nonetheless provided "a home and a solid refuge." The 1930 U.S. Census notes they lived in Montevallo on state highway 25. Hardy claims the house was called "Newala" and reflected his parents' states of origins, New York and Alabama. 

In the first chapter of his memoir, Hardy paints his childhood and teen years with vivid details. His father was a stern disciplinarian with the twins, and his mother was too--with half-hearted switchings and shaming. He recalls his mother's home schooling of Julian and himself, since the family obviously valued education, and she was unhappy with the quality of local public schools. Hardy also mentions berry picking trips with her.

Many other memories are included: his first "ghost" sighting, jobs he had around the house, 4-H Club, Christmas foods and celebrations, his bout with pneumonia, their dogs and cows, and the Great Depression. In high school he played trombone and Julian played sax in a dance orchestra, the Bama Skippers. He includes a long section on the medical lessons he learned at home while growing up. 

The twins graduated from the University of Alabama on May 24, 1938, in a very hot football stadium. In early September James boarded a train in Birmingham for Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. Two fellow Alabamians in the school were waiting for him at the station.

Hardy left Alabama for medical training because the state only had a two-year medical program in Tuscaloosa at the time. He would have had to go elsewhere to complete his M.D. anyway. The four-year Medical College of Alabama did not open in Birmingham until September 1946.  

Hardy's historical marker notes he published over 500 articles in medical journals. You can see a list of most of them here. That marker is one of only nine in Shelby County. He was inducted into the Alabama Healthcare Hall of Fame in 1998. Hardy has an extensive Wikipedia page; the University of Mississippi Medical Center also has one 




Hardy's historical marker is in Calera





Side 1
James Daniel Hardy
May 14, 1918 – February 19, 2003



James Hardy and his twin brother, Julian, were born and reared in Newala, Alabama, 3 miles east of Montevallo. He attended the consolidated grammar school nearby which had 3 rooms for the 6 grades, then attended high school in Montevallo. James received his BA from the University of Alabama in 1938, and his MD in 1942 from the University of Pennsylvania, and continued there for his surgical residency and junior faculty experience. In 1951, he became Director of Surgical Research at the University of Tennessee in Memphis. Three years later he became the first chairman of the Department of Surgery at the new University of Mississippi Medical School in Jackson, serving in that capacity until his retirement in 1987.
As a surgeon, researcher, teacher, and author Dr. Hardy made signal contributions to medicine over his long career.


Side 2
James Daniel Hardy
May 14, 1918 – February 19, 2003



In 1963 Dr. Hardy and co-workers did the first human lung transplant. In 1964 he and co-workers excised a living human heart for the first time and performed the first heart transplant in a human utilizing a chimpanzee heart. The procedure emphasized the need for generally accepted criteria for brain death so donor organs could be secured.

Dr. Hardy trained over 200 surgeons. He authored, co-authored, or edited 23 books, including 2 that became standard surgical texts, and 2 autobiographies; published over 500 articles in medical journals; and served on numerous editorial boards and as editor-in-chief of the World Journal of Surgery.  Among numerous other honors James Hardy served as president of the Southern Surgical Association, the American Surgical Association, the American College of Surgeons, the International Surgical Society, and the Society of University Surgeons. [2012: 7444 Hwy. 25 South, Calera]















St. Vincent Hospital, Birmingham in 1908





Photo of Shelby County Newala limestone taken by Charles Butts in 1924





Saturday, October 10, 2020

Alabama History and Culture News: October 10 edition

 


Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!


Clio, birthplace of former Alabama Gov George Wallace, elects first African American mayor
The Barbour County town of Clio has a long history since its founding in 1890. Its known as the birthplace of former Alabama governor George ...

City honors Native American history as Montgomery observes 1st Indigenous Peoples' Day
“From an early age I was told shut up, this is the way it is, when I knew it wasn't,” said Jackson. Alabama Indigenous Coalition members and supporters ...


Adjoining Huntsville's historic Maple Hill Cemetery is a playground that looks much like any other, featuring a modern swing set and climbing ...


Birmingham arts groups struggle during pandemic but seek to adapt, move forward
Alabama Ballet company dancer Andres Castillo lifts fellow dancer Madison Ryan ... These historic venues – both owned by the nonprofit Birmingham ...


Alabama writer turns 100, reflects on lifelong career in journalism and fashion
Letters written between Madera and her late husband John T., which were saved by the Alabama Department of Archives and History, give a glimpse ...


What's the Black Belt? Alabama Education Policy Center sets out to define it
“If you use a historical one, you get another, and as you get attitudes toward race, it varies with time and history, and so it's a lot more complicated.”.

LGBTQ History Month: Archives aim to preserve Southern queer history
When Spectrum, the undergraduate LGBTQ student group at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, launched in 1983 it became a resource not just ..


Quilts Again at Belle Mont
The historic house museum owned by the Alabama Historical Commission was built circa 1828. It is one of Alabama's most distinguished Federal ...


The haunted history of Newton's Oates-Reynolds Memorial Building
Most residents of Alabama will know the name of Newton because of the legend of Bill Sketoe, told in the classic “13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey” book ...


'Black Belt Bounty' racks up awards at regional outdoor media conferences
Most of the contributors are from Alabama, with many from the Black Belt. “The history, traditions, food, abundant natural resources and, of course, ...


'Black Belt Bounty' racks up awards at regional outdoor media conferences
Most of the contributors are from Alabama, with many from the Black Belt. “The history, traditions, food, abundant natural resources and, of course, ...


Ashville Museum, Archives announces 2nd printing of 'History of St. Clair County'
Ashville Museum, Archives announces 2nd printing of 'History of St. Clair ... of Mattie Lou Teague Crow's book, "History of St. Clair County, Alabama.


Quilts Again at Belle Mont
The historic house museum owned by the Alabama Historical Commission was built circa 1828. It is one of Alabama's most distinguished Federal ...


Booker T. Washington's letter shows South Berwick-Tuskegee connection was 'meant to be'
The connection between the town of South Berwick, Maine, and its sister city of Tuskegee, Alabama, has a history going back to 1898. A letter ...


Books by Alabama authors any horror fan would love
The listing below names only a few of the talented authors with Alabama ties who write horror or supernatural novels. (We've included the genre “ ..


Absolutely Alabama: Gardens, The Gulf, Cowboys and Memories
Also, we'll visit some unforgettable places which one man show us in his new book, Forgotten Alabama. Gardens, The Gulf, Cowboys and Memories.


DON NOBLE: Tuscaloosa author presents images of town and country in earlier days
This new book, “The World through the Dime Store Door: A Memoir,” her ... She has published four books for children, a nonfiction work on Alabama ...


2020 Moundville Native American Festival goes virtual
The University of Alabama's Moundville Archaeological Park will conduct ... Native American performers, demonstrators and living history teachers.


5 things you may not know about Birmingham's LGBTQ history
As Alabama's first queer film showcase, SHOUT features documentaries and short films that explore issues and situations involving the LGBTQ ...


It is the largest funeral in Alabama history. He is buried at Montgomery's Oakwood Cemetery Annex. “People visit his grave daily from all over the ...