|  | IN THE RING, Jersey Joe 
                Walcott was the picture of perseverance. He won the heavyweight 
                title in his fifth try, accomplishing the feat at the age of 37. 
                He held the record for   oldest heavyweight champion 
                until 45-year-old George Foreman won the crown in 1994. 
 Born Arnold Cream in Merchantville, New Jersey, Walcott took the 
                name of his boxing idol, Joe Walcott, the welterweight champion 
                from Barbados. He turned pro in 1930 at the age of 16 and 
                embarked on a slow, but steady, rise to the top.
 
 Walcott wound up a loser in his early bouts against world-class 
                competition. He lost a
 pair of fights to Tiger Jack Fox and was knocked out by 
                contender Abe Simon. But that
 would change in 1945 when Walcott reeled off victories against 
                such top heavyweights as Joe Baksi, Lee Q. Murray, Curtis 
                Sheppard and Jimmy Bivins. He closed out 1946 with a pair of 
                losses to former light heavyweight champ Joey Maxim and 
                heavyweight contender Elmer Ray, but promptly avenged those 
                defeats in 1947.
 
 Walcott, considered an excellent boxer and slick defensive 
                fighter, challenged Joe Louis
 for the title in December of 1947 at Madison Square Garden. He 
                dropped the champion twice but lost a 15-round split decision to 
                "The Brown Bomber." The very next year, Louis defeated him 
                again, knocking Walcott out in 11 rounds. When Louis retired, 
                Walcott and Ezzard Charles met for the vacant NBA heavyweight 
                title in 1949 with Charles emerging victorious via 15-round 
                decision.
 
 Walcott beat future Hall-of-Famer Harold Johnson in 1950 and 
                would duel twice more with Charles in 1951. Charles bested 
                Walcott again in the first match earning a 15-round decision. 
                But in the rematch, Walcott scored a seventh-round knockout, 
                courtesy of his left hook, to finally win the heavyweight title.
 
 Walcott would meet Charles a fourth time, earning a decision in 
                his first title defense.
 But he would meet up with Rocky Marciano in his second defense 
                and lost the title when the Brockton Blockbuster halted him in 
                Round 13. After Marciano knocked him out in the first round of 
                their 1953 rematch, Walcott retired.
 
 After retiring, Walcott remained active in boxing as a referee 
                and later as the chairman
 of the New Jersey State Athletic Commission.
 |  |