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Pragmatic Obots Unite

Pragmatic Obots Unite

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Saturday Open Thread: African-American Wrestlers

December 21, 2019 by pragobots 66 Comments

It’s the POU Family! I hope everyone has a great upcoming holiday week. This week’s morning threads highlighted various African-American wrestlers. Continuing on with the theme, today’s thread focuses on Thunderbolt Patterson.

Claude Patterson (born July 8, 1941) is an American retired professional wrestler, ring nameThunderbolt Patterson. He began his career in 1964 and wrestled primarily in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. During the early 1970s, he was blacklisted by the National Wrestling Alliance for repeated appearances with independent promotions, complaints of institutional racism and attempts to form a wrestlers’ labor union.

Patterson had grown up in Iowa and worked for John Deere in Waterloo, Iowa when he broke into professional wrestling in the Kansas City area. Promoter Gus Karras put Patterson in matches against Don Soto in 1964. In 1965, Patterson moved to Texas and worked with promoter Dory Funk Sr. The following year, he traveled to California, where he held the WWA Tag Team Championship with Alberto Torres. He also continued to work in Texas, where he worked as a villainous character in Dallas until he was turned on by his partner Boris Malenko, Fritz Von Erich had a Russian chain match with Malenko for Patterson’s contract which Malenko owned.

In 1969, he worked for Big Time Wrestling in Michigan and Ohio.

In 1970, he feuded with Jose Lothario and held the Florida version of the NWA Brass Knuckles Championship.

Patterson agreed to work for an outlaw promotion (that is, one outside of the NWA) run by Ann Gunkel, the widow of his old friend and Georgia promoter Ray Gunkel, in the 1970s. He also spoke out against poor working conditions for wrestlers and sued for racial discrimination, and as a result, he was blacklisted from wrestling. He had been complaining about racism from promoters for many years (he would later recall that only Dory Funk Sr. had backed him) and wanted to start a wrestlers’ union, a dream he shared with Jim Wilson a former NFL player and wrestler, himself blacklisted. It would be years, with Patterson working at the Los Angeles Times in the interim, before he would get another shot when Dusty Rhodes took ill in Florida.

In 1976, he won the NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship from Bruiser Brody.[ In 1977 he scored a surprise pinfall win over The Sheik in Toronto for the U.S. title but lost three weeks later.

Patterson joined Ole Anderson as a tag team partner in the early 1980s and they briefly held the NWA National Tag Team Championship. Ole’s kayfabe nephew, a young Arn Anderson, came to the sport, and Ole, saying he was “tired of carrying guys like Patterson and Dusty Rhodes” broke up with Patterson, and joined Arn in what would be the foundation for the Four Horsemen which would include NWA Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair and Tully Blanchard.

Patterson retired from the ring in 1993 (his last match was at Slamboree ’93, where he teamed with Brad Armstrong to defeat Ivan Koloff and Baron von Raschke). He would also mentor Ice Train, until retiring completely in 1994.

On July 27, 2019, Patterson was inducted into the 2019 Class of the George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame in his hometown of Waterloo.

Patterson is regularly mentioned by commentators Kevin Kelly and Steve Corino on the Ring of Honor wrestling promotion’s Ring of Honor Wrestling syndicated television show. They often refer to Caprice Coleman as his favorite wrestler.

In 1988, he was a labor organizer for Service Employees International Union in Atlanta.

After retiring from professional wrestling, he began running a Christian camp for children. Patterson is also an ordained minister.

Filed Under: African Americans, Entertainment, Open Thread, Sports Tagged With: African-American Wrestlers, Claude Patterson, Saturday Open Thread, Thunderbolt Patterson

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