Jack Johnson behind the
wheel of his 90 horsepower Thomas Flyer race car
Originally
the prerogative right of the English sovereign, the issuing of pardons by those
who wield executive power in countries to which Britain bequeathed its
political and legal culture represents the state-sanctioned ‘forgiveness’ of a
criminal act.
It does not
amount to exoneration.
The Mann Act
made it a serious criminal offence to engage in interstate or foreign commerce
transport of “any woman or girl for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery,
or for any other immoral purpose”.
While it is
true that Jack Johnson was specifically targeted by the authorities of the day
who disapproved of his dalliances with white women, Johnson was guilty
according to both the letter and the spirit of the Act.
The world of
the boxer and the prostitute frequently melded together in the turn of the 20th
century America. Constantly moving in search of money, both tended to lead
peripatetic lives and to live on the margins of what could be termed ‘respectable
society’.
Johnson may
not have been a ‘pimp’, but he did avail himself of the services of
prostitutes, some of whom he knew for a while and who often travelled with him.
Those who travelled across state lines with a woman to whom they were not
married technically fell afoul of the law because they were engaging in ‘sinful’,
or in the words of the Act “immoral” behaviour. For instance, a man who took
his secretary to another state for a weekend jaunt would have been going
against the law.
Context is
important.
The Mann Act
was passed during what is referred to as “the Progressive Era”. This was a
period during which many Christian leaders called for greater moral decorum. It
was a time of widespread evangelism replete with influential preachers whose
fists thudded on their pulpits as they railed against what they saw as the
social ills which were becoming more pervasive in a rapidly modernising
society.
These 'ills' included the consumption of alcohol, out-of-wedlock couplings and the sport of
boxing.
Johnson was
guilty as charged, but his prosecution was motivated by the idea of cutting
down to size a figure who was seen as a threat to the social order.
The idea of a
pardon for Jack Johnson began to be actively pursued from around the 1960s when
the social climate changed to one that was favourable to racial integration. The Great White Hope, a Broadway play
based on his life, had a successful run and a film version was later released.
But pardoning
Jack Johnson was always going to be a controversial decision. Johnson, after
all, was not the only person convicted under the Act. A not too unreasonable
argument proffered was that a pardon for Johnson should also warrant a pardon
for those who, not being involved in the sex industry or otherwise exploiting
another, were convicted purely for having out-of-marriage sex.
Jack Johnson
was a free-spirited man who did not believe in being constrained by the social
and legal boundaries of the day. In fact, he was in many ways an unruly person
and a supreme egotist who was prone to ride roughshod over many moral and legal
rules. The litany of speeding tickets that he accumulated in his life time
provides one example of this trait.
And if he is
to be the sole beneficiary of a pardon, that would suit ‘Papa Jack’
just fine.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2018)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England. He is the author of Dick Tiger: The Life and Times of a Boxing
Immortal.
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