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William Muldoon | |
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![]() Muldoon ca. 1885 | |
Born | May 25, 1852 Caneadea, New York, U.S. |
Died | June 3, 1933 (aged 81) Purchase, New York, U.S. |
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | Bill Muldoon |
Billed height | 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) |
Billed weight | 192–212 lb (87–96 kg) |
Debut | 1870 (amateur) 1876 (semi-pro) 1881 (pro) |
Retired | March, 1890 |
William Muldoon (May 25, 1852 – June 3, 1933)[1] was an AmericanGreco-Roman Wrestling champion, aphysical culturist, and the first chairman of theNew York State Athletic Commission. He once wrestled a match that lasted over seven hours.
Nicknamed "The Solid Man,"[2] Muldoon established himself as champion inGreco-Roman wrestling in the 1880s and over the years gained a remarkable measure of public influence that would continue through his days as a health farm proprietor inWestchester County and his service onNYSAC. Muldoon was a mainstay in New York sports for over 50 years.
Born inAllegany County, New York, Muldoon was the son of Irish immigrants Patrick Muldoon and Maria Donahoe.[3] His father was a farmer. Showing a knack for strength athletics at a young age, Muldoon gained a local reputation as a standout incaber-tossing,weightlifting,sprinting andamateur wrestling. His youth was otherwise characterized by a brutish, flash temper, and his desire to be treated with the respect of an adult despite being a child.
Muldoon journeyed to Paris to serve as a volunteer in theFrench Army in theFranco-Prussian War of 1870–71, where he met publisherJames Gordon Bennett, Jr., who told Muldoon he had the potential to be the best Greco-Roman wrestler in the world if he concentrated on it.[4]
By 1876, Muldoon was living inNew York City, where he accepted appointment to theNew York Police Department at the behest of SenatorJohn Morrissey, former bare-knuckle boxing champion. At the time of his resignation in 1881, Muldoon was a detective.
In 1880, Muldoon gained recognition when he won theWorld Greco-Roman Heavyweight Championship with a win over title claimant Thiebaud Bauer. His rise to prominence brought challengers from across the globe, includingEdwin Bibby andTom Cannon of England,Donald Dinnie of Scotland,"Mat" Sorakichi of Japan,Carl Abs of Germany,William Miller of Australia, andJohn McMahon andClarence Whistler, the latter being Muldoon's opponent in a titanic seven-hour match in 1881, where neither could gain a single fall.[5]
Following the celebrated match with Whistler, Muldoon assembled an athletic combination and toured the country promoting athletic events and defending his title against all comers. Muldoon became involved in theater around this time, stemming from his fame in athletics. In 1883 he shared the bill withMaurice Barrymore, a boxer turned actor, inMadame Modjeska's production ofShakespeare'sAs You Like It. Barrymore played Orlando and Muldoon was Charles the Wrestler. In 1887, he appeared onBroadway as "The Fighting Gaul" inSpartacus.
Muldoon was one of a party of gentlemen entertained byRobert Emmet Odlum, brother of women's rights activistCharlotte Odlum Smith, on the morning of May 19, 1885, the day he jumped from theBrooklyn Bridge and was killed. Muldoon assisted in unsuccessful resuscitation efforts and summoned an ambulance, which arrived too late to save Odlum.[6][7]
In 1889 Muldoon trainedJohn L. Sullivan for his famous 75-round fight againstJake Kilrain for theworld heavyweight bare-knuckle boxing championship. He had done so on a friendly wager and offered to absorb expenses if Sullivan lost. Sullivan won and Muldoon gained national notice for restoring the boxing champion to fighting form. Muldoon's methods for accomplishing Sullivan's rejuvenation drew much public interest.
On May 28, Muldoon and Sullivan would have an exhibition wrestling bout contested under London Prize Ring Rules that ended on a 5–5 draw.[8] The two would later have a three-round bout where Muldoon would win two of three bouts[9][10]
Muldoon was never defeated for his Greco-Roman Championship. He wrestled in his final championship match in 1890, defeatingEvan Lewis in Philadelphia. Despite being implored by promoters and challengers to come out of retirement, Muldoon never wrestled another finish match or claimed any active championship. He symbolically passed hisWorld Greco-Roman Heavyweight Championship to protégéErnest Roeber (whom Lewis later defeated). Muldoon would make his final public appearance as a wrestler in a charity exhibition match against Roeber atMadison Square Garden in 1894.
That same year Muldoon moved his health farm fromBelfast, New York, toWhite Plains. As he tapered off direct involvement in professional athletics, he devoted more time to devising his system on restoring one's health. Muldoon continued to train boxers and wrestlers until boxing was banned in New York at the turn of the century.
In 1900, Muldoon opened what would become the work of his life, the well-known health institute The Olympia atPurchase, New York. In subsequent years through the success of the Olympia, Muldoon would again gain national notice as he treated such notables there asU.S. Ambassador to Great BritainJoseph Hodges Choate, publisherRalph Pulitzer, SenatorChauncey Depew, Major GeneralJ. Franklin Bell, essayistElbert Hubbard, novelistTheodore Dreiser andSecretary of StateElihu Root, who was sent to Muldoon byPresident Roosevelt. In 1907 there was talk that Muldoon would be appointed to the president's cabinet to oversee physical health. For his uncompromised methods at his health farm Muldoon was dubbed "the Professor". JournalistNellie Bly was the first woman to complete Muldoon's course.
In the spring of 1909 Muldoon made a final return to the stage in a theatrical tour organized in benefit ofThe Lambs. Muldoon dedicated a Civil War monument to the town ofBelfast, New York, listing the names of local veterans in 1915, including that of his older brother John.[11]
In 1921 Muldoon was personally tapped by GovernorNathan Lewis Miller as the inaugural Chairman of theNew York State Athletic Commission, whenprofessional boxing's status was legally restored in New York. While onNYSAC, Muldoon's czarish decrees characterized his inflexible sense of integrity to the press and sporting public. He was dubbed in the papers "the Iron Duke."
In 1927 Muldoon was profiled byThe New Yorker magazine and in 1929 byThe Saturday Evening Post.[12][13] A biography was published in 1928, with a foreword byJack Dempsey.[14]
William Muldoon died at age 81 inWestchester County, New York, and was interred in a grandiose private mausoleum atKensico Cemetery inValhalla, New York. Sometime after the end of his wrestling career and before the turn of the century, Muldoon had claimed for years that he was born in 1845, and seven years older than his age verified in the Muldoon Family Bible, which documents his real birth year.
In 1996, Muldoon was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
In 2004, he was inducted into the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum under the "Pioneer Era" category.
Muldoon claimed to be a lifelong bachelor. However, he was married twice; the first marriage ended in divorce, the second in separation. His housekeeper of 30 years, Leonie Lutringer, left her entire estate to Muldoon in 1922.It has just been discovered (through DNA) that William and Leonie had a child that was placed with the Sisters of Charity of New York and eventually placed on an Orphan Train ending up in Indiana. It was revealed later in his life that he had adopted his longtime secretary Margaret Farrell – she received his entire estate at his death. Muldoon was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 1931, though his doctors did not reveal the nature of his illness to him. Muldoon died two years later. Retired boxing championGene Tunney, a disciple of Muldoon, remarked to theNew York Times at the time of Muldoon's death, "All I know about training I learned from him... His patience, intellectual courage and wisdom were inspirational."[15] William Muldoon was interred atKensico Cemetery,Valhalla, NY.
Muldoon was a strong advocate of compulsory military service,equestrianism,physical culture and theBoy Scouts of America, citing the latter as the only organization left devoted to leadership-building for young men.