Karl Davis (wrestler) explained

Karl Davis
Birthname:Karl Thurman Davis
Birth Date:16 April 1908
Birth Place:Columbus, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:Hesperia, California
Module:
Child:yes
Names:Killer Karl Davis
Crippler Karl Davis
El Diablo #2
Red Devil #2
The Red Mask
The Mask
Big Boy Davis
Carl Davis
Joe Lawrence
Height:6 ft 2 in
Weight:240 lb
Billed:Houston, Texas
Memphis, Tennessee
Crested Butte, Colorado
Trainer:John Pesek
Debut:1925
Retired:1957

Karl Thurman Davis, Sr. (April 16, 1908 – July 1, 1977) was an American professional wrestler best known by his ring name, Crippler Karl and Killer Karl Davis. Regarded as one of the most hated "heel performers" during the 1930s and 40s,[1] [2] he was given the "Crippler" moniker by Toronto sportswriter Johnny Fitzgerald after injuring Whipper Billy Watson during a bout in Toronto.[3] [4] Davis is perhaps best remembered for his tenure in the Gulf Athletic Club where he won the Texas Heavyweight Championship once and Southern Heavyweight Championship three times. He was at one time a claimant to the original World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship, having decisions over Ed "Strangler" Lewis and Jim Londos, before his defeat by Chief Little Beaver in 1937. He also formed successful tag teams with Wee Willie Davis, both as themselves and masked wrestlers Los Hermanos Diablos, and Ted Christy[5] in NWA Hollywood Wrestling between 1947 and 1955.

In his 35-year career, Davis wrestled for extended periods of time for various wrestling promotions: Al Haft Sports, the American Wrestling Association, Eastern Sports Enterprises, Fred Kohler Enterprises, Gulas-Welch Enterprises, Heart of America Sports Attractions, International Wrestling Association, Jack Pfefer Promotions, Jim Crockett Promotions, John J. Doyle Enterprises, Mike London Sports, Minneapolis Boxing & Wrestling Club, Pinkie George Promotions, Rocky Mountain Sports Enterprises, Queensbury Athletic Club, Salt Lake Wrestling Club, Sam Avey Inc., Sam Muchnick Sports Attractions, San Francisco Booking Office, Tom Packs Sports Enterprises, and Western States Sports.

After his initial retirement from professional wrestling, Brooks pursued a career in acting and became a popular character actor throughout the 1950s. A tall and striking individual he was frequently cast as a henchman.[6] [3] [2]

Early life

A native of Columbus, Ohio, Davis attended Ohio State University and graduated in 1928 with a degree in civil engineering and physical education. A standout athlete in basketball, baseball, football, Davis was a four-sport letterman and selected as an All-American fullback in 1927–28. He pursued a career in professional sports and played for both the Philadelphia Yellowjackets and the St. Louis Cardinals.[3] [4] [2] Davis achieved an 11–2 record before an injury ended his baseball career after playing one season.[7]

Professional wrestling career

While still attending OSU, Davis began wrestling professionally in order to pay his way through school. He initially used the assumed name of "Joe Lawrence"[3] and also wrestled under a mask.[4] He eventually adopted the name Karl "Killer" Davis, and other names, appearing in almost 3,000 matches.[6] One of the most hated "heel performers" in pro wrestling,[1] he frequently had to leave the ring under a police escort and sustained numerous scars on his hands from attacks by irate wrestling fans. On July 20, 1938, after defeating Yvon Robert in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls match at the Montreal Forum, a French-Canadian man broke through the police cordon and slashed him in the face.[8] Davis required a total of 46 stitches (17 on the inside and 29 on the outside) on his lower lip. The fan, a government tax collector,[3] was eventually arrested and served over a year in jail.[4]

Davis was suspended from competition for excessive violence several times during his career. He used his "shoulder bust" finisher to seriously injure four opponents over a 9-week period in Toronto. Officials finally took action against Davis for breaking the left shoulder of Vincent Lopez in front of 11,000 fans at the Grand Olympic Auditorium in 1947,[2] issuing him an eight-month suspension.[9] Davis was also one of June Byers' initial trainers,[10] and who was discovered by women's wrestling manager Billy Wolfe while facing Davis in an intergender match at one of Morris Siegel's "Friday Night Wrestling" shows in Houston.[11]

At age 41, Davis took up acting and made his feature film debut with a small role in the 1949 film Mighty Joe Young. Initially only in small, uncredited roles, he began to appear in cast lists from 1951 and received regular roles in both film and TV for a decade.[6] Davis became a born-again Christian during the mid-1950s,[9] [12] appearing with fellow wrestlers Jules Strongbow and Tiny Roebuck at the Church of the Open Door for a Youth for Christ rally in June 1956,[13] and was also ordained as a Pentecostal minister.[3] In his later years, Davis was critical of the pro wrestling industry as it began to focus more on "gimmick characters", such as Gorgeous George and Classy Freddie Blassie, designed to appeal to television audiences.[3] He cited this as one of the reasons for retiring from wrestling in 1957.[4]

Retirement and later years

In 1962, Davis founded the private security firm Desert Security Patrol to protect homes and businesses in Hesperia, California.[14] He had previously served 9 years as a patrolman with the Houston Police Department while wrestling for the Gulf Athletic Club. Within a few years, his company had a staff of six patrolmen and a radio operator.[4] Working closely with the local sheriff's department, Desert Security Patrol was responsible for investigating a number of local crimes during the mid-1960s[15] [16] and, in August 1965, Davis personally captured a burglary suspect following a high speed chase.[17] He was also an avid golfer and won numerous trophies competing in country club tournaments.[2]

Davis was forced to step down as head of Desert Security Patrol after suffering a series of heart attacks. He died at his home on 1 July 1977 in Hesperia, and subsequently cremated at Montecito Memorial Park.[18] At the time of his death, Davis was living alone, destitute and surviving on social security having lost most of his money through bad investments over the years.[2]

Personal life

Davis married his first wife, Virginia Rexine Dye, on October 8, 1928. They had three children, Nancy Jean (1929–1995), Mona Lee (1929–1995) and Carl Jr. (1931–1994), before separating in the mid-1940s. He had two more children[7] from a second marriage prior to marrying his third wife, Clara Louise Deburn (1927–2001) in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1956. Fellow wrestler Hans Schnabel served as his best man. Davis became the stepfather of her three children Bobbie (born 1948), Michael Steven (born 1953) and Ronald Bruce (1955–1998).[3] [18]

Filmography

+ Film appearances
YearTitleRoleNotes
1949Mighty Joe Young The Circus StrongmanUncredited[19]
The Reckless MomentWrestler Uncredited
Always Leave Them LaughingBouncer Uncredited
1950The Daughter of Rosie O'GradyStagehand with hook Uncredited
Gambling HouseBig Uncredited
1951Fingerprints Don't LieRod Barenger
Mask of the DragonKingpin
1952Flesh and FuryBroadway character Uncredited
Young Paul BaroniBoxing spectator Uncredited
Young Man with IdeasPunchy
1953SalomeThe Slave Master
Fair Wind to JavaReederStunt double
Uncredited
Siren of BagdadMorab
SangareeBrawler Uncredited
The Lost PlanetKarlo / Robot R-4
The Great Adventures of Captain KiddCulliford's Crewman
1954Demetrius and the GladiatorsMacro
The EgyptianLibyan Guard
So This Is ParisAngel
1955TimberjackRed Bush
Pirates of TripoliAssassin
The Road to DenverHunsacker
Creature with the Atom BrainWillard Pearce
1957Zombies of Mora TauZombie
Apache WarriorBounty Man
1958The Bonnie Parker StoryThe Texan
Man or GunSwede
+ Television appearances
YearTitleRoleNotes
1951Dick TracyHefty2 episodes
Boston BlackieKiller / Turk3 episodes
1952The Cisco Kid Gregg / Jiggers2 episodes
Fireside TheatreEpisode: "Hurry, Hurry"
Adventures of Wild Bill HickokAbdulEpisode: "Wrestling Story"
1953Mr. and Mrs. NorthGiantEpisode: "Jade Dragon"
Space PatrolDurkEpisode: "The Vital Factor"
1954Annie Oakley Charlie Bassett / Steve2 episodes
1955The Life of RileyFascinating Freddie, the WrestlerEpisode: "Riley Buys a Wrestler"
1956Playhouse 90WrestlerEpisode: "Requiem for a Heavyweight"
1958Sky KingMighty MorganEpisode: "The Brain and the Brawn"
Death Valley DaysConvictEpisode: "The Telescope Eye"
The Adventures of Jim BowieBald ManEpisode: "The Cave"
State TrooperBig Mike GeorgeEpisode: "Joker's Dead"
Alfred Hitchcock PresentsDan FoleyEpisode: "Safety for the Witness"
1958–195926 MenRed Dolan / Ebbie Holiday2 episodes
Mike HammerLouis / Jutman2 episodes
1959Frontier DoctorDobeEpisode: "Bitter Creek Gang"
BroncoMarcus TraxelEpisode: "Silent Witness"
Perry MasonLeo KasterEpisode: "The Case of the Stuttering Bishop"
1959–1961LawmanHayes / Gang Member2 episodes
1960StartimeBig ManEpisode: "The Young Juggler"
Surfside 6Rudy WalperEpisode: "Odd Job"
1961The Tab Hunter ShowFinneganEpisode: "Personal Appearance"

Championships and accomplishments

External links

Notes and References

  1. Sandboe . Bernice . December 1937 . A Villain Explains . . XVI . 11 .
  2. News: Mata Kaur . Dev . July 4, 1977 . Famed Wrestler dies a lonely man . .
  3. News: . August 13, 1961 . 'Crippler Karl' Born To Play the Heavy . 13 . .
  4. News: McKone . Jim . August 10, 1965 . High & Inside . 10 . .
  5. Web site: Pro-Wrestling Rankings: 1950s . Tanabe . Hisaharu . 2003 . The Great Hisa's Puroresu Dojo . Wrestling-Titles.com . 2016-02-18.
  6. Book: Gallinghouse, Scott . 2019 . Rondo Hatton: Beauty Within the Brute . The Mighty Joe Young Strongmen . Orlando, Florida . BearManor Media . 978-1-62933-494-3.
  7. Book: Le Bow, Guy . 1950 . The Wrestling Scene . New York City, New York . Homecrafts Sports Division . 48 . KARL DAVIS - Former football, baseball, and basketball star at Ohio State is 38, 6'2", 240 lbs. and resides in Los Angeles, Calif. He was All-American fullback in 1927-28 while at Ohio State. Played for the St. Louis Cards chain. Had an 11-2 record but an injury ended his baseball career after his first season. Married, five children..
  8. News: . July 21, 1938 . YVON ROBERT MEETS SURPRISE REVERSE. Hopes of Bout Against Masked Marvel Jarred by Defeat by Karl Davis. FAN ASSAILS WRESTLER. Davis Suffers Deep Gash Under Lip When Attacked by Infuriated Spectator Following Bout . 11 . .
  9. News: . May 17, 1958 . Karl Davis, Former Wrestler, to Speak . 4 . .
  10. Book: Hornbaker, Tim . 2012 . Legends of Pro Wrestling: 150 Years of Headlocks, Body Slams, and Piledrivers . New York . Sports Publishing . June Byers . 978-1613210758 . Trained by: Shorty Roberts, Mae Young, Bobby Managoff, Karl Davis .
  11. Book: Leen, Jeff . 2010 . The Queen of the Ring: Sex, Muscles, Diamonds, and the Making of an American Legend . New York City, New York . Atlantic Monthly Press . 120 . 978-0-8021-1882-0 . One night while watching Morris Sigel's “Friday Night Wrestling” program in Houston, Wolfe looked into the ring and saw strapping twenty-one-year-old June Byers trading holds with 300-pound Krippler Karl Davis, much to the crowd's delight.
  12. News: . August 25, 1956 . Karl Davis Hopes To Forget 'Crippler' Title in New Life . 10 . .
  13. News: . June 30, 1956 . Wrestlers to Attend Rally . 25 . .
  14. News: . February 21, 1962 . Karl Davis opens local patrol route . 3 . The Victor Press .
  15. News: . December 16, 1962 . Hiding in Wrong Place; Suspect Found In Ladies Room . 20 . .
  16. News: . January 7, 1966 . Runaway Boys Held After Machine Pried . 12 . .
  17. News: . August 4, 1965 . 'Crippler Karl' Gets Man; High-Speed Chase Nets Stolen Auto, Suspect . 22 . .
  18. News: . July 3, 1977 . Karl Davis Sr. . 2 . .
  19. Web site: Mighty Joe Young – Full Cast & Crew . . November 18, 2022 .