Jack "Doc" Kearns (born John Patrick Leo McKernan; August 17, 1882 – July 7, 1963) was an American boxer and boxing manager. He was born on a farm in Waterloo, Michigan[citation needed] to Phillip H. McKernan and Frances M. Knauf (aka Hoff,[1] later Quigley), daughter of German immigrant and Waterloo, Michigan, settler Peter Knauf. His father was the son of Irish immigrants Philip and Amelia "Ann" McKernan and is noted as being "among the early pioneers in the Northwestern Territories of Montana, Idaho and Washington."[2]
Professional boxing
Known as "Young Kid Kearns", he adopted the Kearns surname while boxing. Following 67 professional lightweight and welterweight fights, he became more well known as a flamboyant boxing coach and manager.[3]
Kearns was reportedly tutored as a manager and promoter in San Francisco—then the epicenter of the boxing scene in America—by veteran featherweight Dal Hawkins, the former boxing instructor at the Seattle Athletic Club, a city in which Kearns had briefly "piloted a primitive taxicab."[4]
He is most remembered for achieving the first "million dollar gate" in boxing when the Jack Dempsey vs. Georges Carpentier bout generated a record $1,789,238 in ticket sales,[5] and for managing Jack Dempsey, who became World Heavyweight Champion from 1919 to 1926 and gave him the nickname "The Doc". Kearns was sued by Dempsey, then repeatedly and unsuccessfully sued Dempsey for large sums of money, following his firing; the two became friendly again in later life. Following his death, Dempsey was quoted as saying that Kearns "made me a champ... he was a great manager, and I'll miss him."[6] Kearns managed six world champions: Jack Dempsey, Mickey Walker, Jackie Fields, Benny Leonard, Joey Maxim, and Archie Moore.[7]
Personal life
On March 20, 1915, Kearns married Edythe Angell, a dancer who had performed in Vaudeville as the Angell Sisters with her sister Gertrude and solo as Ledana.[8] The couple divorced, and he remarried August 4, 1921; the pair were also divorced, on March 18, 1932. However, Kearns disputed the existence of this second marriage to a woman known as Legana Kearns, despite a judgement against him for alimony, which he lost by default, being a no-show in court.[9][10]
Legacy
The Million Dollar Gate, Kearns' memoir as told to sportswriter Oscar Fraley, was published posthumously in 1966.[11]
In 1989, the LA Times reported Kearns to be "one of the great sports con men of the century."[12]
^Waltzer, JimThe Battle of the Century: Dempsey, Carpentier, and the Birth of Modern Promotion: Dempsey, Carpentier, and the Birth of Modern Promotion, Praeger, USA, 2011, page 21. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
^Onofrio, Jan "Kearns, Jack (1882 - 1963)", Colorado Biographical Dictionary, Somerset Publishers, Inc., Michigan, USA, 1999, page 144. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
^NYTThe New York Times, July 27, 1966. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
^Madera Tribune Number 102, August 29, 1931. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
^AP "Mrs. Kearns To Fight In Court", Oakland Tribune, Oakland, California, July 24, 1929, page 3.
^Kearns, Jack, et alThe Million Dollar Gate, by Jack "Doc" Kearns and Oscar Fraley, Macmillan, New York, 1966, ISBN978-1785313813. Retrieved August 12, 2018.
^Gustkey, Earl "Town in Montana Was Overmatched: In 1923, Shelby--Population 500--Took On Jack Dempsey and His Manager", LA Times, February 5, 1989. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
^IBHOF "Jack (Doc) Kearns", International Boxing Hall of Fame, 1990. Retrieved July 12, 2018.