(Frank Gotch is universally regarded as one of the greates...)
Frank Gotch is universally regarded as one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time. His relentless training regimen and ferocious style in the ring that enabled him to dominate all comers have been well documented, but this Paladin Press Combat Classic reprint offers a fascinating portrait of another important aspect of his success – his unparalleled skill at the art of catch-as-catch-can wrestling.
Frank Gotch was an American professional wrestler.
Background
Frank Alvin was born on April 27, 1878, in Humboldt, Iowa, United States; the youngest of nine children of Frederick Gotch and Amelia Gotch, and of German ancestry.
During the Civil War, Frederick fought in the Army of the Potomac under General Ulysses S. Grant. After the war, he settled on a farmstead six miles south of Humboldt, Iowa.
Career
While growing up on the farm, Frank enjoyed all sports but showed a particular aptitude for boxing and wrestling. As a young man, he wrestled with the local heroes and eventually defeated them all. By the age of 21, he was ready to test some of the nation’s finest wrestlers. When the American champion, Dan McLeod, came to the area, Gotch and McLeod wrestled for two hours on a cinder track in Luverne. McLeod won the match but not without a tremendous struggle. He recommended that the young farmer contact the legendary Martin “Farmer” Burns and become his protege.
On December 19, 1899, Gotch wrestled Burns in Fort Dodge. He lost once again but impressed Burns enough that Burns took Gotch under his wing. Gotch learned all he could from the master wrestler and then embarked upon what would become the greatest career in the history of professional wrestling. In 1901 Gotch traveled to Alaska and wrestled in the mining camps. He returned to Humboldt with an estimated $30,000 in earnings, a fortune in those days. Soon after, Gotch won the Iowa heavyweight championship and then began chasing the American champion, Tom Jenkins, a powerful and rugged wrestler from Cleveland, Ohio.
The Gotch-Jenkins series is one of the most talked-about in the history of wrestling. They met on the mat eight times, with Gotch winning five times. Jenkins eventually became the boxing and wrestling coach at West Point, teaching cadets for 37 years. With the American title locked up, Gotch set his sights on the world championship held by George Hackenschmidt, also known as “the Russian Lion” for his prodigious strength.
On April 3, 1908, Gotch defeated Hackenschmidt in a grueling, two-hour match in Chicago. The victory made Gotch one of the best-known athletes in the world. President Theodore Roosevelt invited him to the White House, and he starred in a play that toured the East Coast and Europe.
Gotch and Hackenschmidt had a rematch on September 4, 1911, in the new Comiskey Baseball Park in Chicago. A crowd estimated at nearly 30,000 saw Gotch win two falls in less than 30 minutes, cementing his fame as the greatest wrestler of all time.
From 1908 through 1915 Gotch won 88 straight matches, without losing a single fall. When he retired in 1915, his record was estimated at 200 bouts with only six losses, all early in his career. Added to that were hundreds of exhibition matches without a single defeat. Gotch was also a very rich man. He had invested heavily in farmland all over the Midwest, was part owner of an automobile dealership, and had other business dealings.
Gotch was being mentioned as a possible candidate for governor of Iowa when he was struck down by a kidney ailment. He died at age 39 in his Humboldt home. His passing was front-page news on sports sections all across the nation. He left behind a widow, Gladys, and a young son, Frank Jr. Today, Frank Gotch Park is located near the farmstead where he grew up, and wrestling fans from around the nation still come to Humboldt to learn more about his sensational career.
Although Gotch wrestled as a professional, back when the sport was real, he had a tremendous impact on amateur wrestling. His fame also made thousands of young Iowa boys want to try the sport of wrestling and laid the foundation for the state’s great wrestling legacy.
Achievements
On April 2, 2016, Gotch was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as a "Legacy" member.
Karl Gotch and Simon Gotch both took their professional wrestling names as a tribute to him.
The Humboldt Community School District sponsors the annual Frank Gotch Wrestling Tournament. Because of Gotch's legacy, Iowa remains a professional wrestling stronghold at the high school and collegiate levels to this day. Gotch's success and fame are credited with playing a part in the creation of the Iowa High School Wrestling Tournament, in 1921.
(Frank Gotch is universally regarded as one of the greates...)
1908
Personality
Quotes from others about the person
According to Mac Davis in the 100 Greatest Sports Heroes, “As the idol of millions in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, Gotch made wrestling a big-time sport in his day. He drew larger crowds than did the heavyweight champion of boxing when defending his title. Babies had been named in his honor, as had buildings, toys, farm implements, and a hundred other things. The word ‘Gotch’ was a synonym for quality and strength.”
According to Nat Fleischer, in his Milo to Londos, “There was a glamour about Gotch that made huge crowds willing to pay to see him perform. His fame made college men want to take up the sport all across the nation.”
Connections
Frank Alvin married Gladys Oestrich Fraser. They had a son, Frank Robert Gotch.
Father:
Frederick Rudolph Gotsch
Mother:
Amelia Nopens Gotsch
Spouse:
Gladys Oestrich Fraser
Sister:
Gladys Oestrich Fraser
Brother:
Charley F. Gotsch
Brother:
Millie M. Gotsch Hulsizer
Son:
Frank Robert Gotch
References
The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa
Iowa has been blessed with citizens of strong character who have made invaluable contributions to the state and to the nation. In the 1930s alone, such towering figures as John L. Lewis, Henry A. Wallace, and Herbert Hoover hugely influenced the nation’s affairs.