Sports. Honestly. Since 2011

The Pioneers: Ethel Johnson: The First African-American Female Wrestler (VIDEO)

The Pioneers is a new on-going series looking at some of the earliest pioneers of professional wrestling as we know it, from the wrestlers to promoters to trainers who helped shape professional wrestling around the world. Today we look at Ethel Johnson.

Ethel Johnson

The Pioneers: Ethel Johnson

It’s tough to pinpoint exactly who stepped in the ring first, but the consensus is that Columbus, Indiana’s Ethel Johnson was the first African-American women’s wrestler, starting her training in 1950. She entered the business after training with her older sister, Babs Wingo, who also became a successful pro-wrestler around the same time (another of their sisters, Marva Scott, would also enter the business).

Johnson got her big break when she signed up as part of the stable of promoter Billy Wolfe in 1950, taking the then 16-year old under his wing and furthering her training with Wolfe’s then wife, Mildred Burke – she would debut in 1952, at the age of 18. Billy Wolfe would become infamous for her abusive ways with his girls (Burke would leave him in 1952 and start her own women’s wrestling troupe) and held a monopoly on women’s wrestlers in North America – if you didn’t work with Wolfe, it was tough to find work elsewhere (although this caused ex-wife Mildred Burke to head to Japan where she was a huge influence in helping establish wrestling – men and womens).

Photo: From the Baltimore Afro-American, 1952
Photo: JET Magazine, 1952

Ethel Johnson was naturally athletic and it showed in her matches – she was one of the first women (perhaps even wrestlers in general) to use a standing dropkick in her matches. By the end of the 1950’s, she was working with the white women wrestlers, including such legends as June Byers and Penny Banner, as well as working NWA territories. She became a favourite of Stu Hart in the late 50’s, working for his then promotion, Big Time Wrestling (before it was renamed Stampede Wrestling), as well as working for Jess McMahon (Vince McMahon Jr.‘s grandfather) in Capitol Wrestling (what would become the WWE).

She worked for the NWA for most of her career, but in her final years, she was an active member of Verne Gagne‘s AWA roster, up until her retirement in 1976, after a 26 year career in the business. Her final match was against her sister, Marva Scott.

Check out more of our articles on The Pioneers of pro wrestling.

Stay tuned to the Last Word on Pro Wrestling for more on this and other stories from around the world of wrestling, as they develop. You can always count on LWOPW to be on top of the major news in the wrestling world, as well as to provide you with analysis, previews, videos, interviews, and editorials on the wrestling world.

Share:

More Posts

A photo of AEW wrestler "Hangman" Adam Page.

AEW Gets Modern Masculinity

When it comes to AEW and their presentation of men and male relationships in storylines and characters, I don’t think the company gets enough credit. Sports generally

Send Us A Message