History

1969: Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes, a Golden Glove Boxer, Squares Up

A former streetfighter, the mayor knew a thing or two about throwing a punch and taking one.

by Vince Guerrieri | Jan. 7, 2025 | 10:00 AM

Courtesy Cleveland State University, Michael Schwartz Library Special Collections

Courtesy Cleveland State University, Michael Schwartz Library Special Collections

He grew up a street fighter in the Outhwaite Homes, one of Cleveland’s first public housing projects, and became a Golden Gloves boxer, bearing a scar on his forehead from a 1943 match.

Stokes also boxed during his time in Europe in the Army, and after his return stateside, he won a state collegiate boxing championship while a student in West Virginia

When a meeting of Black athletes and political figures was convened in Cleveland in 1967 about heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali’s refusal to report for military service — the famed “Ali Summit” — Stokes was there. Five months later, he would win the election to become the first Black mayor of a major city in America.

RELATED: Cleveland Innerbelt Freeway Opened to Great Fanfare in 1961

Stokes saw the value of boxing as a tool for physical fitness, as well as keeping young boys off the street. He appointed Wilfred “Whiz Bang” Carter, a former boxer who had trained him, to the boxing and wrestling commission with the idea of making Cleveland a prominent destination for prizefights.

And on Jan. 20, 1969, while he was watching Golden Gloves training at Lakeview Terrace — another local public housing project in Ohio City — he had no qualms lacing up some gloves himself. His sparring opponent was Ernesto Negron, a featherweight — a weight class at which Stokes himself had fought. Still in his shirt and tie, Stokes’ footwork kept his opponent off-balance. 

Two months later, Stokes watched the Golden Gloves finals.

Negron had lost in the preliminaries, but the big success story from the event was a heavyweight from Youngstown named Earnie Shavers, who would go on to a successful pro career and who showed as a young Golden Glover that he possessed punching power.

For more updates about Cleveland, sign up for our Cleveland Magazine Daily newsletter, delivered to your inbox six times a week.

Cleveland Magazine is also available in print, publishing 12 times a year with immersive features, helpful guides and beautiful photography and design.

Vince Guerrieri

Vince Guerrieri is a sportswriter who's gone straight. He's written for Cleveland Magazine since 2014, and his work has also appeared in publications including Popular Mechanics, POLITICO, Smithsonian, CityLab and Defector.

Get the Latest in Your Inbox

Whether you're looking for daily news bites, the latest bites or bite-sized adventures, our email newsletter experiences have something for everyone.