Friday, December 7, 2012

Jack Sharkey and Andy Callahan

Boxing Buddies Jack Sharkey and Lawrence's Toy Bulldog Andy Callahan



The first piece of writing I did on this was a brief bio on Andy Callahan for IBRO. You can read it here. Since my research started with Andy Callahan, so to does this blog.



Throughout his ring career (1927-1938), Andy Callahan was a charismatic, flawed hero who  embodied the city of Lawrence.  His recuperative powers and stamina in the ring were as legendary as his hard-partying ways. At his best, he dazzled audiences with skill and strength that allowed him to punch well above his weight class. His warmth and wit made him a favorite of   reporters, boxing businessmen and the most stubborn of anti-socials,  Heavyweight Jack Sharkey.  At his worst, he would show up for fights still drunk or hungover. Managers, trainers and audiences never knew which Andy Callahan they were getting. Locally, Andy was infamous for bar fights, pulling fire alarms, big cigars and loving lots of women. Think a hybrid of Colin Farrell and Jimmy Cagney, who, by the way, was a great friend and admirer of Callahan's.

The professional boxing scene in Lawrence was on the wane throughout the 1920s. Ironically, some of the best home grown fighters - Arthur Flynn,  Henry"Bud"Janco, Mike (Saccuzzo) Sarko and Callahan came into their own during this decade. Callahan put Lawrence on the map, much in the same way Micky Ward has done for Lowell. His ring career burned brightest from 1928 through his failed 1933 World Middleweight Championship bid with the much bigger Vince Dundee. Most believed Callahan, grossly outweighed by the true middleweight Dundee, legitimately won the fight. His trajectory changed after that fight and while there were bursts of brilliance and lots of wonderful scraps with Sammy Fuller, he never regained his upward momentum.

Judging by the small bits in local papers that reported on his misdeeds, Callahan spent the years between 1938 and December, 1941 in dissipation.  Soon after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, Callahan enlisted and repeatedly refused any concessions be made because of his age (he was in his early 30s) or celebrity. Andy fought alongside younger men in the front lines of Northern Africa and Italy. On November 19, 1943 he was killed in a vicious firefight in Monte Cassino, Italy. 

In the Lawrence History Center's Andy Callahan file there is a photocopy of a letter sent to Andy's mother by Heavyweight Champ Jack Sharkey, detailing a detour he took while on a spring, 1944 USO tour to find Andy's grave. In strikingly beautiful penmanship (who knew?), the Boston Gob wrote that,  upon seeing his grave, he "felt as if Andy was OK" and "kidding, such as he always did." Sharkey assured Mrs. Callahan that Andy was "loved by all his comrades and was very much liked by his superiors." Sharkey ended with "Truly, I loved him myself like a brother." 

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