fighters in boxing ring with referee

Tommy Campbell, Kansas City’s Greatest Boxer

In the late 1940s and 1950s, Kansas City native Tommy Campbell won 50 professional fights and became the world’s No. 2 lightweight. But thanks to a run-in with organized crime, he is now all but forgotten in the town that nurtured him.

Phil S. Dixon, author of Tommy Campbell: A Boxing Bout with the Mob, relates how Campbell became the only fighter to testify in court about how mobsters attempted to seize control of the lightweight division, muscling him into throwing one fight.

Dixon, a resident of Belton, Missouri, is the author of The Monarchs: 1920-1938; John “Buck” O’Neil: The Rookie, the Man, the Legacy; Wilber “Bullet” Rogan and the Kansas City Monarchs; and The Ultimate Kansas City Baseball Trivia Quiz Book.

Upcoming in this series:
Watch or Listen to Past Events in this Series:
16
Sep

If It Looks Like a Man: Gender Identity, Female So...

Central Library | 2:00pm
10
Mar

Yes, We Can! Immigrant Women and Their Influence o...

Central Library | 2:00pm
14
Mar

Brides on the Santa Fe Trail

3:00pm
20
Jan

Robert Farnsworth

Central Library | 2:00pm
fighters in boxing ring with referee

Tommy Campbell, Kansas City’s Greatest Boxer

Date & Location
-
In Person