Jess McMahon | |
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Born | Roderick James McMahon (1882-10-29)October 29, 1882[1] Manhattan, New York, U.S. |
Died | November 21, 1954(1954-11-21) (aged 72) |
Alma mater | Manhattan College |
Occupation(s) | Professional boxing and wrestling promoter |
Spouse | |
Children | 3; includingVincent J. |
Family | McMahon |
Roderick James "Jess"McMahon Sr. (October 29, 1882 – November 21, 1954) was an Americanprofessional wrestling andprofessional boxing promoter, and patriarch of theMcMahon family, founders ofCapitol Wrestling Corporation, precursor to the present-dayWWE.
Roderick James McMahon was born October 29, 1882, inManhattan, New York, to hotel owner Roderick McMahon (1846–1922) and Elizabeth McMahon (1848–1911), fromCounty Galway.[2] His parents had recently moved fromIreland toNew York City.[1] He and his older siblings Lauretta (born 1876), Catharine (born 1878) and Edward (born 1880) attendedManhattan College. McMahon graduated with a commercial diploma at the age of 17. The McMahon brothers showed a higher interest in sports than in a banking career.[1]
By 1909, the McMahon brothers were managing partners of the Olympic Athletic Club and bookers at the Empire Athletic Club andSt. Nicholas Athletic Club, located in or nearHarlem.[citation needed] Because of a loss of public interest in boxing, the two McMahons expanded their affairs in 1911, founding theNew York Lincoln Giants, a black baseball team, which played at Olympic Field in Harlem. With a team that included five of the best black players in the nation (who the McMahons recruited away from teams in Chicago and Philadelphia), the Lincoln Giants dominated black and white opponents for three seasons. In 1914, financial difficulties forced them to sell the team; however, they retained the contracts of many of the players, and for three more years they operated another team, theLincoln Stars, using Lenox Oval on 145th Street as a home field.[3] Touring with the squad, McMahon and his brother ventured to Havana, Cuba, in 1915, where they co-promoted the fight betweenJess Willard and then-championJack Johnson, scheduled for 45 rounds (Willard won by knockout in the 26th round).[1]
In the 1930s, the McMahons operated the Commonwealth Casino, on East 135th Street in Harlem. Boxing was the primary attraction. The McMahons booked black fighters to cater to Harlem's growing black population; fights between blacks and whites drew the largest, racially mixed crowds. In 1922, they established a black professional basketball team, the Commonwealth Big 5, to try to attract patrons to the casino. For two years, the team defeated black and white opponents, including Harlem's other black professional team, theRens. Sportswriters considered the Big 5 the best black team in the nation, although they could not defeat the dominant white team of the time, theOriginal Celtics. Despite their success, the Big 5 did not attract large crowds, and the McMahons shut the team down after the 1923/1924 season, leaving the Rens to become the dominant black team of the 1920s and 1930s.[4]
After 1915, Jess anchored inLong Island, where he became the first McMahon to promote professional wrestling, at the Freeport Municipal Stadium.[5] The wrestling wars led McMahon to ally himself with another independent faction, captained by Carlos Louis Henriquez. Together they booked theConey Island and Brooklyn Sport Stadiums, with Carlos being the main fan favorite.[6] The formation of "the Trust" calmed the New York territory enough to allow McMahon access to a larger pool of wrestlers. Among those wrestlers wereJim Browning, Hans Kampfer, Mike Romano andEverett Marshall.[1] By 1937, wrestling's popularity was waning. However, while most bookers left the city for fresher ground, Jess dug in for the long haul. His contacts allowed him to freely trade wrestlers with promoters in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland and Connecticut.[1] A perpetual force inNortheastern sports, McMahon may be more remembered for his spell as matchmaker at theGarden than for his 20 years as a wrestling promoter.
On January 7, 1953, the first show under theCapitol Wrestling Corporation (CWC) banner was produced.[7] It is not certain who the founder of the CWC was. Some sources state that it was Jess' sonVincent J. McMahon[8][9] while other sources (including the website of the CWC's successor,WWE) credit Jess himself as the founder of the CWC.[10][11][12]
McMahon married a youngNew York City woman named Rose E. Davis in 1912 who was of Irish descent, and together they had three children: sons Roderick James Jr. and Vincent James, and daughter Dorothy.[1] On November 22, 1954, as a result of acerebral hemorrhage, Jess died at a hospital inWilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.[1] Upon his death, his second son, Vincent, took over the business, eventually creating theWorld Wide Wrestling Federation promotion, known today asWWE.
On January 7, 1953, he put on the first-ever Capitol Wrestling Corporation event
He inaugurated his promotion on January 7, 1952, [...].
McMahon formed a company he called the Capitol Wrestling Corporation, and presented his first regular wrestling show under the Capitol banner on January 7, 1953
From the time Vince, Sr. took over Capitol Wrestling Corporation from his father, the company continued to flourish in the northeastern United States.