{"title":"African American Boxer Billy Clarke in Modernizing Guatemala","authors":"A. Dunn","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.720","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the final decades of the 19th century the Central American nation of Guatemala represented some intriguing employment and entrepreneurial possibilities from the point of view of US citizens. The lure of coffee cultivation, mahogany harvesting, even mining was real. Additionally, the promise of employment building an inter-oceanic railroad resulted in significant numbers of African Americans journeying to Guatemala. The relocation offered good pay and many apparently believed that it would also take them to a place where Jim Crow racism was not the predominant and limiting factor that it was in the United States. For at least one of those men however, railroad work was not the primary enticement to the region. By 1893, such alleged opportunities in Guatemala had attracted the black athlete, entrepreneur, and entertainer Billy A. Clarke. During his two years in the country, with his sometime business partner and sparring mate, Rod Lewis, also an African American, Clarke operated a gymnasium where he taught the “Art of Pugilism,” staged several prize fights, and, for a time, captured the imagination of the capital city with the example of modern, imported entertainment and professional sports.\n Between 1892 and 1898, Guatemala was ruled by, first president, and later, dictator, General José María Reina Barrios. A globalizer enamored of modernization, European architecture, and North American technology, the environment fostered by Reina Barrios attracted not only contractors and African American workers from the United States to build railroads but also other foreigners who made for the Central American nation, bringing the outside world to the mile-high capital of Guatemala City. Into this setting came Billy A. Clarke, drawn by the same baseline possibilities of solid work and the prospect of less Jim Crow as his African American railroad compatriots, but with the additional promise that his individual skills as a fighter and promoter might reap even bigger rewards. The story of Clarke in Guatemala is one of race, identity, and creative self-promotion. Building an image that combined ideas of the exotic and powerful African with ideas of the North American armed with “know-how” and scientific fighting skills, Clarke became a Guatemala City celebrity and was eventually known as the “Champion of Central America.”","PeriodicalId":190332,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History","volume":"41 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199366439.013.720","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the final decades of the 19th century the Central American nation of Guatemala represented some intriguing employment and entrepreneurial possibilities from the point of view of US citizens. The lure of coffee cultivation, mahogany harvesting, even mining was real. Additionally, the promise of employment building an inter-oceanic railroad resulted in significant numbers of African Americans journeying to Guatemala. The relocation offered good pay and many apparently believed that it would also take them to a place where Jim Crow racism was not the predominant and limiting factor that it was in the United States. For at least one of those men however, railroad work was not the primary enticement to the region. By 1893, such alleged opportunities in Guatemala had attracted the black athlete, entrepreneur, and entertainer Billy A. Clarke. During his two years in the country, with his sometime business partner and sparring mate, Rod Lewis, also an African American, Clarke operated a gymnasium where he taught the “Art of Pugilism,” staged several prize fights, and, for a time, captured the imagination of the capital city with the example of modern, imported entertainment and professional sports.
Between 1892 and 1898, Guatemala was ruled by, first president, and later, dictator, General José María Reina Barrios. A globalizer enamored of modernization, European architecture, and North American technology, the environment fostered by Reina Barrios attracted not only contractors and African American workers from the United States to build railroads but also other foreigners who made for the Central American nation, bringing the outside world to the mile-high capital of Guatemala City. Into this setting came Billy A. Clarke, drawn by the same baseline possibilities of solid work and the prospect of less Jim Crow as his African American railroad compatriots, but with the additional promise that his individual skills as a fighter and promoter might reap even bigger rewards. The story of Clarke in Guatemala is one of race, identity, and creative self-promotion. Building an image that combined ideas of the exotic and powerful African with ideas of the North American armed with “know-how” and scientific fighting skills, Clarke became a Guatemala City celebrity and was eventually known as the “Champion of Central America.”
在19世纪最后几十年,中美洲国家危地马拉从美国公民的角度来看,代表了一些有趣的就业和创业的可能性。咖啡种植、红木收获,甚至采矿的诱惑都是真实存在的。此外,修建跨洋铁路带来的就业机会也吸引了大量非裔美国人前往危地马拉。搬迁带来了丰厚的收入,许多人显然认为,这也会把他们带到一个地方,在那里,吉姆·克劳种族主义不像在美国那样占主导地位和限制因素。然而,至少对其中一个人来说,铁路工作并不是吸引他们来到这个地区的主要原因。到1893年,危地马拉所谓的机会吸引了黑人运动员、企业家和艺人比利·a·克拉克。在这个国家的两年里,克拉克与他的商业伙伴兼拳击伙伴罗德·刘易斯(Rod Lewis)(也是一名非裔美国人)经营了一家健身房,在那里他教授“拳击艺术”,举办了几场职业拳击赛,并一度以现代、引进的娱乐和职业体育为榜样,吸引了首都的想象力。在1892年到1898年之间,危地马拉由第一任总统,后来的独裁者,约瑟夫·María雷纳·巴里奥斯将军统治。作为一个迷恋现代化、欧洲建筑和北美技术的全球化者,雷纳·巴里奥斯所营造的环境不仅吸引了来自美国的承包商和非裔美国工人来修建铁路,还吸引了其他为这个中美洲国家建造铁路的外国人,把外面的世界带到了海拔一英里的首都危地马拉城。比利·a·克拉克(Billy a . Clarke)也来到了这里,他和他的非裔美国铁路同胞一样,有着扎实工作的可能性和少一些种族歧视的前景,但他还有一个额外的希望,那就是他作为一名斗士和推动者的个人技能可能会获得更大的回报。克拉克在危地马拉的故事是一个关于种族、身份和创造性自我推销的故事。克拉克的形象将充满异国情调和强大的非洲人的形象与拥有“专有技术”和科学格斗技巧的北美人的形象相结合,成为危地马拉城的名人,并最终被称为“中美洲冠军”。