'It's about time!' Trump gives posthumous pardon to Jack Johnson, the black boxer who was made a criminal for having a white girlfriend, after Sylvester Stallone intervened

  • Trump said last month that he might posthumously pardon Jack Johnson
  • 'Rocky' actor and Trump friend Sylvester Stallone pitched him on Johnson's case
  • Johnson was the first black boxing heavyweight champion of the world, defeating Tommy Burns for the title in 1908
  • In 1913 he was convicted of violating the Mann Act for accompanying his white girlfriend across state lines for 'immoral purposes' 
  • He spent seven years abroad as a fugitive, but later served a year in prison
  • He was released in 1921 and his great-great niece Linda Haywood has pushed for vindication 
  • Stallone and several contemporary boxers, including three-time world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis, also stood alongside Trump 

Jack Johnson was the first black boxing heavyweight champion of the world, defeating Tommy Burns for the title in 1908

Jack Johnson was the first black boxing heavyweight champion of the world, defeating Tommy Burns for the title in 1908

President Donald Trump posthumously pardoned black boxer Jack Johnson on Wednesday after an intervention from 'Rocky' actor Sylvester Stallone.

Trump said that Johnson, the first black heavyweight champion, was a 'truly legendary' boxer who was 'pretty much unbeatable.'   

'I believe that Jack Johnson a worthy person,' he said. 'So I am taking this very righteous step, I believe, to correct a wrong.'

The president said with Johnson's  great great niece by his side in the Oval Office, 'We righted a wrong ... And a lot of people knew it. I knew it.'

Stallone and several contemporary boxers, including three-time world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis, also stood alongside Trump.

'I don't care if it's Rambo or Rocky, I still don't know which one I like better,' Trump told Stallone.

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President Donald Trump posthumously pardoned black boxer Jack Johnson on Wednesday after an intervention from 'Rocky' actor Sylvester Stallone

President Donald Trump posthumously pardoned black boxer Jack Johnson on Wednesday after an intervention from 'Rocky' actor Sylvester Stallone

The pardon for the first black heavyweight champion came more than 100 years after he was convicted by an all-white jury of accompanying his white girlfriend across state lines for 'immoral purposes'.

A month ago the president said in a tweet that he was considering pardoning Johnson after Stallone plead the champ's case.

'Sylvester Stallone called me with the story of heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson,' he tweeted.

'His trials and tribulations were great, his life complex and controversial. Others have looked at this over the years, most thought it would be done, but yes, I am considering a Full Pardon!' he added. 

Stallone, who is famous for his boxing film 'Rocky,' is a friend and supporter of the president's. 

Stallone and several contemporary boxers, including three-time world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis (right) stood alongside Trump as he signed the pardon

Stallone and several contemporary boxers, including three-time world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis (right) stood alongside Trump as he signed the pardon

Sly Stallone, who is famous for his boxing film 'Rocky', is a friend and supporter of the president's. He's seen here in Washington on Thursday

Sly Stallone, who is famous for his boxing film 'Rocky', is a friend and supporter of the president's. He's seen here in Washington on Thursday

The tweet came a week after Trump pardoned I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney.

Trump pardoned him saying Libby was 'treated unfairly' by a special counsel.  

Johnson's great-great niece 61-year-old Linda E. Haywood had long-rallied for vindication for the boxing champion. She said Thursday at the White House that the act by Trump had helped to 'erase the shame' from her family history.

'I appreciate you rewriting history,' she said. 

Senator John McCain has also backed up calls for a pardon.

'Jack Johnson was a boxing legend and pioneer whose career and reputation were ruined by a racially charged conviction more than a century ago,' McCain said in an April statement. 

The senator has been in support of the pardon since 2004.

'Johnson's imprisonment forced him into the shadows of bigotry and prejudice, and continues to stand as a stain on our national honor,' he added. 

Johnson was the first black boxing heavyweight champion of the world, defeating Tommy Burns for the title in 1908.

However, his stellar career was plagued with hostile racism during the Jim Crow era.  

Trump tweeted in April that he was considering granting the first black boxing champion  a posthumous pardon after his friend Sylvester Stallone pleaded his case

Trump tweeted in April that he was considering granting the first black boxing champion a posthumous pardon after his friend Sylvester Stallone pleaded his case

Johnson was married to three white women in his lifetime, facts that angered many during the Jim Crow era of lynching black people

Johnson was married to three white women in his lifetime, facts that angered many during the Jim Crow era of lynching black people

Going against the norm, Johnson was married to three white women in his lifetime, a fact that was frowned upon during a time that killed black people for merely whistling at white women.  

At a time when sports segregation was at its heights, Johnson - the son of former slaves - would become iconic for beating his white counterparts or the 'great white hopes,' leading to the climatic battle in 1910  against James J Jeffries. 

'He is one of the craftiest, cunningest boxers that ever stepped into the ring,' said once claimed the legendary boxer John L. Sullivan, following the epic Jeffries and Johnson matched dubbed 'the fight of the century.'

In 1913, Johnson was convicted of violating the Mann Act, making it illegal to transport women across state lines for 'immoral' purposes. Spending seven years abroad as a fugitive, he returned to serve a year in federal prison and was released in 1921.

Johnson died in 1946 at the age of 68 when he was in an car accident in North Carolina.

But for many, the often reckless - and extremely dangerous - life Johnson lived, made him one of the greatest black athletes of his time and generation. 

'They say I'm controversial and they say I'm bold, but I wasn't nothing like Jack Johnson,' the iconic Muhammad Ali once told broadcaster Howard Cosell. 

'They had lynchings and rapings and burnings and every time he'd fight they'd lynch Negroes and burn houses. This man was told if you beat this white man we're going to shoot you from the audience. He said well just shoot my black so-and-so because I'm a knock him out.

Spending seven years abroad as a fugitive, he returned to serve a year in federal prison and was released in 1921

Spending seven years abroad as a fugitive, he returned to serve a year in federal prison and was released in 1921

'Here's a Negro during the time you'd be lynched for looking at white ladies. He'd walk down the street and left the country with them. He was bold. ... He had to be a courageous man.'

But the questionable prison sentence has tarnished Johnson's legacy for his family. 

His family 'didn't talk about it because they were ashamed of him, that he went to prison,' Haywood said of her great-great uncle to Click 2 Houston.

'They were led to believe that he did something wrong. They were so ashamed after being so proud of him. The white man came and told them that he did something wrong, he did something dirty and they painted him out to be something that he wasn't.'

The woman hadn't known she was related to the boxer until she was 12, well after Johnson had passed. 

She recalled learning about her distant relative when she was in the sixth grade, during Black History month, 

But when Haywood asked her mom about her great-great-uncle, 'She just grimaced.' 

And when Haywood's mother called Johnson 'defiant,' the woman remembered adding: '"Momma, no disrespect, that man wasn't defiant."' He was just being a man. He was being himself.'

Haywood had been trying to get Johnson pardoned since Bush was in office.

President Bill Clinton had previously pardoned Henry O. Flipper, the first African-American officer to lead the Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry Regiment during the Civil War. Flipper had been framed for embezzlement. 

Bush, himself, pardoned Charles Winter in 2008. Winters was a volunteer in the Arab-Israeli War who was convicted of violating the US Neutrality Acts in 1949.

Haywood has been trying to get Johnson pardoned since President George W Bush was in office

Haywood has been trying to get Johnson pardoned since President George W Bush was in office

She had wanted Barack Obama to conduct the pardon while he was president but the Justice Department said at the time that 'processing posthumous pardon petitions is grounded in the belief that the time of the officials involved in the clemency process is better spent on the pardon and commutation requests of living persons.'

In 2009, Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary at the time, said:'In terms of Jack Johnson, I think the Department of Justice came back recommending - not recommending a pardon on that.' 

Haywood was hopeful that President Trump would act.

'I certainly hope President Trump will grant my uncle a pardon. This pardon is long overdue and I was very disappointed when President Obama did not grant my uncle a pardon,' Haywood said.

Taking things a step further, Haywood also wants the history books to be rewritten to reflect what was actually happening at the time.  

'Knowing that he was treated unfairly and unfairly convicted and targeted because of his choice of companions, who happened to be Caucasian, that's wrong,' she explained. 

'It bothered my people to the point they didn't even want to talk about it. My mother didn't even want to talk about it. That's stupid ... It bothers me.

'The last thing you want to do is die and have your name tarnished. That's wrong. You don't want it to be tarnished if you're living.'

Of the three marriages, Haywood stated that Johnson had no children. She did explain, however, that there are roughly 70 great-grandnieces and nephews still alive. 

Her mother, 87, is the oldest living descendant of the Chicago land area family.