Johnny Reagan est décédé à St.. Louis
Johnny Reagan était un combattant important de la St.. Scène de boxe Louis au cours de la première décennie du 20e siècle. Originaire de Brooklyn, Reagan a déménagé à St. Louis s'entraînera sous la direction de Jack McKenna. McKenna a basé son opération à St. Louis, où son combattant combattit principalement à St. Louis’ Club de l'extrémité ouest. Reagan was a rising bantamweight at the time of his move to St. Louis.
One of McKenna’s other top fighters was future World Featherweight Boxing Champion Abe Attell. Reagan and Attell started out as friends and training partners. A heated dispute in the training room one day resulted in a ferocious brawl. McKenna heard the ruckus and ran in to find both men beaten and exhausted.
Reagan left the group but stayed in St. Louis. Reagan would fight several professional bouts with Abe Attell in St. Louis. Reagan also fought Abe’s younger brother, Monte, a more natural bantamweight in St. Louis.
While most of the fighters left St. Louis for California by 1910, Reagan remained in the city. Still fighting in 1911 à 31 ans, Reagan was on the downside of his career. At the time of his death, he was looking for local business opportunities to move into after his retirement from the ring.
Sur Décembre 14, 1911, Reagan went to Alexian Brothers Hospital on St. Louis’ South Side. A major hospital at the time, Reagan reported difficulty breathing. Doctors discovered Reagan had pneumonia in his right lung.
Reagan continued to decline over the following month. He passed away on January 11, 1912 around 1:10 p.m. at Alexian Brothers. He was only 31 years-old. La St. Louis Post-Dispatch said Reagan’s body would be sent back to Brooklyn, where his wife still lived.
Aujourd'hui, Reagan would probably have recovered but medical science was not as advanced as it is today. Pneumonia was a life-threatening illness no matter your age or condition.
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Sources: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Janvier 11, 1912 édition, p. 17 and January 12, 1912 édition, p. 16
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