Charlie Pilkington | |
---|---|
Statistics | |
Real name | Charles Pilkington |
Nickname(s) | "The Meriden Flash" |
Rated at | Featherweight |
Nationality | American |
Born |
New York City |
September 22, 1897
Died | May 20, 1974 Meriden, Connecticut |
(aged 76)
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 252 |
Wins | 185 |
Losses | 17 |
Draws | 7 |
Charles Francis Pilkington (born September 22, 1897 in New York City), known as Charlie Pilkington and The Meriden Flash, was a professional boxer in the Featherweight division.
Pilkington was born on September 22, 1897 in New York City to Anglo-Irish parents. He was a descendant of Jacobite members of the Pilkington Family of Lancashire, England who fled to Ireland after the Battle of Preston in 1716 and was a descendant of Bishop James Pilkington of Rivington. Growing up in a tenement in East Harlem, Pilkington was advised by a doctor to pursue exercise to improve his health and took up boxing at the Union Settlement Association.
Pilkington learned to box by watching Benny Leonard, Harlem Tommy Murphy, and Irish Patsy Cline at his neighborhood gym and based much of his early technique off of what he observed. Beginning his boxing career with a win in an amateur match at the Union Settlement Association Athletic Club in 1915, Pilkington would spend four years in the amateur leagues, earning the name the "Harlem Flash". When he later moved to Meriden, Connecticut, this early nickname morphed into the "Meriden Flash." During this time, Pilkington lost only 4 out of 150 matches; winning the New York State and Metropolitan Crown boxing titles in the featherweight division. During his early career, he was the first professional boxer to be coached and managed by famed manager Al Weill.
Turning pro to support his family in 1919, he began professional boxing in New Jersey and Connecticut. During his first professional fight, he knocked out Joe Welling in four rounds. Later, he boxed against well known boxer Sammy Waltz, knocking him down with his first punch.