(APR 29) WBAN is excited to
announce that the month of May 2020, we are giving an honorary
Fighter of the month to prominent Pioneer Female Boxing champion
Barbara Buttrick, 90 years old for her life long achievements in
the sport, in and out of the ring.
Barbara Buttrick Inducted into the
International Women's Boxing Hall of Fame in 2014, in Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida, USA.
The countless
pioneer boxers who helped pave the way for many, many years, who
did not have the opportunities that today's boxers in the sport.
It is with great pleasure to honor Buttrick for your years of
service in the sport, not only what she did in that squared
circle, but what she accomplished outside of the ring.
In the year 2020, has been a
great year for Buttrick, who has received top honors with
being one of the first women to be inducted into the
International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2020, and also being
awarded one of the highest special awards with the International
Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame [IWBHF] for the “Lifetime
Achievement Award. The IWBHF event is to take place on
August 29, 2020, at the Orleans Hotel and Casino, in Las Vegas,
Nevada. Buttrick was also inducted into the IWBHF in
2014.
In the Miami Herald, written by
Michelle Genz, in April of 1998, she wrote the following about
Buttrick:
"It’s nearly impossible to
imagine former women’s boxing champion Barbara Buttrick with a
bloody nose, harder still to imagine the diminutive
English-accented bookkeeper bloodying someone else’s. But as
"The Mighty Atom of the Ring," she not only bloodied but broke
three noses (including her ex-husband’s, who sparred with her)
and scored 12 knockouts, without ever being knocked out herself.
Her career record: 30-1-1. "I had a hard left jab," she says. "I
could punch hard from my side, was the reason I could stand up
to the bigger girls. They weren’t so keen to come rushing in."
But the toughest fight of all was
getting anyone – besides her opponents – to take her seriously.
Buttrick grew up in Yorkshire, England, an only child who was
tiny for her age – she boxed as a 4-foot-11, 98-pound flyweight.
"I was small, but I was mean," she says. One day, when she came
home with muddy shoes, her mother handed her the Sunday Dispatch
to wipe them with. Barbara, then 15, noticed a story about Polly
Burns, prizefighter of the early 1900’s.
It struck a nerve; she bought
boxing gloves and a book called The Noble Art of Self-Defense.
She found a trainer in London and got a day job as a typist.
Every evening, she went to the gym for three hours of
bag-punching, rope-skipping and sparring with her 118-pound
coach, Len Smith, whom she eventually married. Finding
competitors proved difficult because British officials refused
to recognize female boxers.
Eventually, Buttrick fought in
boxing booths, portable rings that passed through villages,
inviting anyone to fight. Sports writers found her quick and
skillful, her endurance formidable: in France,. She fought 15
two-round exhibitions in a single day. In 1952, Buttrick and
Smith headed for America, where she won eight bouts in a row and
knocked out the U.S. female bantamweight champion...Full
article