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Mark E. Symons was born in 1911
in Shields and the 5-5 boxer was months shy of his 16th birthday when
he turned pro in 1927. An early manager, Ed Love, thought Marty Simmons
sounded better than Mark Symons and that’s the name he wound up
using in the ring. He was one of the top middleweights in the country
as he began his long career in the 1920’s. But his big years were
in the ‘30’s when he was ranked seventh in the country by
the National Boxing Association and sixth among light heavyweights. Simmons
fought all over the nation as well as Australia. He had a long-running
feud after losing to Freddie Apostoli and wanted another shot at him in
a neutral ring with an unbiased referee. He fought to a draw with Apostoli
but the unpopular decision went to Apostoli. He found out two weeks after
the fight that the referee was Apostoli’s brother-in-law. He was
the Michigan middleweight champion in 1933 when he fought to a draw with
Ezzard Charles who would go on to win the world heavyweight championship.
He boxed until 1940 and fought 26 champions, including bouts with Archie
Moore and Gus Lesnevich. He was knocked down only once - a TKO. Simmons’
career record was 386-16 and he once won 80 consecutive fights and when
he retired he still retained his crown. By his own admission he also fought
somewhere between 35-40 draws. His biggest paycheck was $48,000 which
he won in Australia. After the government took their share and his manager
took his one-third cut, he was left with $8,000. When he returned from
Australia, he and wife, Helen, moved to California, first living in San
Francisco and then in Los Angeles. During that time he rubbed elbows with
Clark Gable and Mae West, two of Hollywood’s biggest fight fans.
He retired from fighting in 1940 and returned home and got a steady job
with Wilcox Rich (now Eaton Manufacturing). For the next 40-plus years,
he was involved with the Golden Gloves, Catholic Youth Organization (CYO)
and union-sponsored (UAW/CIO) youth boxing programs. He and boyhood friend,
Butch Otto, wound up training hundreds of aspiring amateurs over the years.
When the Golden Gloves flourished in Saginaw during the 1970’s they
drew four-day crowd totals of nearly 14,000 people. In 1977, Simmons was
awarded the Liberty Bell Award by the Saginaw County Bar Association for
outstanding contributions to the community. He died March 21, 1995, and
is buried at Roselawn Cemetery.
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