Jack Johnson was the African American boxer who became the first Black heavyweight champion of the world in 1908, breaking the color line in boxing's most prestigious title and showing how Black athletes contested segregation through achievement (Topic 4.19, AP African American Studies).
Jack Johnson was the first African American to hold boxing's world heavyweight title, winning it in 1908 at a time when the sport's biggest prize was deliberately kept white. Promoters and white champions had refused to fight Black challengers for years, so Johnson's victory wasn't just a sports headline. It cracked open a title that segregation had walled off, and it made him one of the most famous (and most resented) Black men in America during the height of Jim Crow.
In the CED, Johnson sits inside a longer story. Black athletes had been breaking barriers since Reconstruction, from Oliver Lewis winning the first Kentucky Derby in 1875 to the founding of the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes in 1895 (EK 4.19.A.1, EK 4.19.A.2). Johnson extends that pattern into the twentieth century. His unapologetic dominance in the ring, in front of white audiences who wanted him to lose, turned athletic achievement itself into a public challenge to white supremacy. White America's furious search for a "Great White Hope" to dethrone him tells you exactly how much his title threatened the racial order.
Jack Johnson lives in Topic 4.19, African Americans and Sports, in Unit 4: Movements and Debates. He bridges two learning objectives. LO 4.19.A asks you to describe how Black athletes broke barriers in segregated sports starting in the nineteenth century, and Johnson's 1908 title is the marquee twentieth-century example of that barrier-breaking. LO 4.19.B asks you to explain how Black athletes contested discrimination and advocated for equality, and Johnson is the prototype. Before Muhammad Ali refused the draft and before Smith and Carlos raised their fists, Johnson proved that a Black athlete's success could itself be a form of protest (EK 4.19.B.1). On the exam, he's your earliest twentieth-century evidence for the claim that sports became a public stage where African Americans fought segregation in front of the whole country.
Keep studying AP® African American Studies Unit 4
Muhammad Ali (Unit 4)
Johnson and Ali are two ends of the same thread. Johnson contested racism by dominating a sport that tried to exclude him, while Ali went further and used his championship platform for explicit protest, refusing to fight in Vietnam in 1967. Pair them to show how Black athletes' resistance evolved from breaking barriers to openly challenging the government.
Jackie Robinson (Unit 4)
Johnson integrated boxing's heavyweight title in 1908, nearly four decades before Robinson integrated Major League Baseball in 1947. Together they show that the desegregation of sports wasn't one moment but a long fight, with each barrier broken sport by sport.
Jesse Owens and the 1936 Berlin Olympics (Unit 4)
Like Johnson, Owens defeated white supremacy on its own stage. Johnson humiliated the "Great White Hope" mythology in the ring; Owens did the same to Nazi racial ideology at the Olympics. Both prove EK 4.19.B.1's point that achievement itself can be a political statement.
Colin Kaepernick (Unit 4)
Kaepernick's kneeling protest in 2016 and the backlash it triggered echo the hostility Johnson faced a century earlier. Both cases show that when Black athletes step outside the role of entertainer, white audiences and institutions push back hard, which is exactly the continuity Topic 4.19 wants you to trace.
Jack Johnson shows up as evidence for arguments about Black athletes and racial barriers. The 2025 exam used a Jack Johnson-related source as a stimulus in a short-answer question, so be ready to read a document or image about him and explain what his career reveals about segregation and Black resistance in the early twentieth century. In multiple choice, he often appears in questions asking which athlete best exemplifies barrier-breaking in a particular era, so know his place on the timeline. He's the early twentieth-century figure, after nineteenth-century pioneers like Oliver Lewis and before Owens, Robinson, and Ali. The strongest move on an FRQ is using Johnson to start a continuity argument: barrier-breaking in 1908, integration in 1947, open protest in 1967, and kneeling in 2016.
Both were Black heavyweight champions who defied white America, so they blur together fast. Keep the eras and methods straight. Johnson (champion in 1908, Jim Crow era) contested racism mainly through his victories and his refusal to act deferential. Ali (1960s, civil rights and Vietnam era) used his title as an explicit political platform, refusing the draft in 1967 and saying "The real enemy of my people is right here." Johnson broke the barrier; Ali weaponized the spotlight.
Jack Johnson became the first Black heavyweight champion of the world in 1908, breaking the color line in boxing's most prestigious title.
He extends the barrier-breaking tradition that began during Reconstruction with athletes like Kentucky Derby winners Oliver Lewis and Billy Walker (EK 4.19.A.1).
Johnson's dominance during the Jim Crow era made his success itself a challenge to white supremacy, which is why white promoters searched for a "Great White Hope" to beat him.
He supports both LO 4.19.A (describing Black athletes' barrier-breaking contributions) and LO 4.19.B (explaining how athletes contested discrimination).
On the exam, Johnson works best as the starting point of a continuity argument running through Owens, Robinson, Ali, Smith and Carlos, and Kaepernick.
Don't confuse him with Muhammad Ali: Johnson broke the barrier in 1908, while Ali used his championship as a protest platform in the 1960s.
Jack Johnson was the African American boxer who became the first Black heavyweight champion of the world in 1908. He matters in Topic 4.19 as a key example of how Black athletes broke racial barriers in segregated sports and contested discrimination through their achievements.
No. Black athletes had been breaking barriers since Reconstruction. Oliver Lewis won the first Kentucky Derby in 1875, Billy Walker won it in 1877, and Black athletes founded the Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes in 1895. Johnson is the major early twentieth-century example in that longer tradition.
Johnson won the heavyweight title in 1908 during the Jim Crow era and contested racism through his victories and defiant public persona. Ali, champion in the 1960s, made his protest explicit by refusing to enlist for the Vietnam War in 1967 and calling out racism at home. Same sport, different eras and methods of resistance.
Boxing's heavyweight title was treated as proof of white physical superiority, and white champions had refused to fight Black challengers. When Johnson won and kept winning, white America searched for a "Great White Hope" to take the title back, showing how much his success threatened the racial order.
Yes. The 2025 exam featured a Jack Johnson-related source as a short-answer stimulus, and he fits multiple-choice questions about athletes breaking racial barriers. Knowing his 1908 title and his place before Owens, Robinson, and Ali is the exam-ready move.
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