More than a decade before Rosa Parks remained seated, the Black heavyweight boxing champion of the world refused an order to sit at the back of a bus station in the heart of Dixie. On March 22, 1944, Joe Louis was serving as a goodwill ambassador in the Special Services Division, a morale-boosting agency of the U.S. Army. He was traveling through the South with fellow ambassador and future champion Sugar Ray Robinson. The two men were sitting on a depot bench waiting for a taxi when a white military police officer demanded they move to the “colored” section behind the building. Louis refused. And then he refused again when the officer said, “Down here, you do as you’re told.” Louis replied that his skin color didn’t matter, because their uniforms were the same olive green. Robinson would later describe the mild-mannered boxer as ready to “explode” when the MP raised his club to brain the champ. Robinson tackled the MP to the ground as other officers rushed over to the fracas and Black soldiers yelled, “That’s Joe Louis!” When a provost marshal arrived, Louis told him that military posts were federal “reservations” where Jim Crow state laws did not apply. He could, therefore, park his ass wherever he damn well pleased. Louis and Robinson were briefly detained at the Camp Sibert jailhouse, though they were not formally arrested. Given the heavyweight champ was the literal poster child for a communal American war recruitment effort, the Camp Sibert commander, Brig. Gen. Haig Shekerjian, understood that making examples of Louis and Robinson would be scandalous. The general assured Louis that discrimination would not be tolerated at Camp Sibert. The men were let go. When a bus pulled up as they stepped outside, Louis and Robinson were told they could sit up front if they wanted. They demurred, but not to the back. The men sat in the middle, away from the loud exhaust. By desegregating the bus system at Camp Sibert, Louis set the wheels in motion for a wider movement. As historians Randy Roberts and Johnny Smith write in their recent book, “The Fight of His Life: Joe Louis’s Battle for Freedom During World War II”: There were no photographers or newsreel cameras present to capture the historic moment. But Joe’s protest against racism, a profound civil rights demonstration widely circulated in the Black Press, added pressure on the War Department to end discriminatory practices on military bases and inspired Black soldiers to follow his lead .… A few months later, Jackie Robinson refused to move to the back of a bus at Camp Hood, Texas, when a white driver ordered him to the rear. Citing Joe and Ray’s stand at Camp Sibert, Robinson objected to the driver’s demand. Eight decades later, Jackie Robinson is a household name, his jersey number officially retired across Major League Baseball, and his legacy celebrated in museums, movies, documentaries, articles, book reports and TikTok reels. But the story of Louis’ influence on Robinson and others has more or less gone untold. Until Smith and Roberts dug up the Camp Sibert transcript, the source material describing the event had never been utilized. The lacunae illuminates the larger injustice that Louis has never received his due as a civil rights pioneer, a trailblazer as significant as Robinson and others who followed. “Louis knew that, as a prominent athlete, he had opportunities to make an impact that were unavailable to nearly all Black Americans, so he was selective and strategic, making deliberate choices as to when to use the power afforded him,” says Smith, who teaches sports history at Georgia Tech University. “Standing up to discrimination at Camp Sibert was a pivotal moment Louis wasn’t going to let slide.” In the spirit of reclaiming Louis’ legacy, let’s go three rounds with his political evolution in the years before, during and after World War II. Round 1: White power meets the Brown Bomber Born in 1914 in rural Alabama, Louis, the quarter-Cherokee grandson of slaves, was one of eight children born to sharecroppers Munroe and Lily Barrow. When Joe was 2, Munroe was committed to a mental institution, so the son never knew his biological father. (Equally tragic, Munroe remained at the Searcy State Hospital until his death in 1938, never knowing his son was a world-renowned boxer.) A few years later, Lily married Pat Brooks, a construction worker and a devout Baptist like herself. They weren’t long for Alabama. The menacing threat of the Ku Klux Klan, coupled with ample job prospects in the auto industry up north, found the family joining the Great Migration in 1926. They settled in Detroit’s Black Bottom neighborhood in a house with “toilets indoors and electric lights.” Louis was a shy, soft-spoken kid with a speech impediment who had difficulties in school; in his own words “I couldn’t hardly get past the sixth grade.” As a teenager, he enrolled in a vocational school for cabinetmaking. It was there, in the gym, where he first laced up boxing gloves and found his true vocation. In April 1934, Louis won the U.S. Amateur Athletic Union light heavyweight championship. On July 4 in Chicago, he notched his first professional victory, knocking out Jack Kracken in the sixth round. In 1937, Louis beat James J. Braddock to win the heavyweight belt. By the time he retired after a 1951 defeat, Louis had amassed a 66-3 record. But that number hardly tells the tale of the tape. The Brown Bomber, who wore the crown from 1937 to 1949, still holds the record for longest continuous reign atop the heavyweight division, most title victories at 27, and not for nothing, Ring Magazine in 2003 declared Louis to be the “greatest puncher of all time.” In the bouts that mattered most, Louis was a ferocious, technically brilliant fighter. However, there are two wins (and a loss) above all others that deserve to be viewed through a civil rights lens. The first major flag was planted when Louis defeated Italian fighter Primo Carnera, a personal favorite of Benito Mussolini, with a sixth-round knockout in June 1935 at Yankee Stadium. For many Black American fans, the bout was more than Louis running his record to 22-0, it was a symbolic stand against colonialism. Mussolini was mobilizing for an invasion of Ethiopia — after a previous, smaller 1930 incursion — that came in October, but was met with unexpected pushback from the independent African nation. Alas, its resistance proved unsustainable against fascist Italy’s superior firepower and devastating chemical warfare attacks. Joe Louis is guided by the referee to a neutral corner after flooring Primo Carnera for the last time in the sixth round of their heavyweight bout in 1935. Louis defeated Carnera, a favorite of Benito Mussolini, by technical knockout. (AP Photo) Louis’ pummeling of Carnera reverberated long after the “Ambling Alp” hit the canvas. The deep connections Black Americans felt beyond the blow-by-blows were immortalized in Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.”(“If Joe lost, we were back in slavery and beyond help.”) The Carnera fight, however, didn’t make Louis a favorite of white fans. As noted in “The Fight of His Life,” newspaper reports described Louis as “a menacing killer inside the ring, a bestial fighter no White man would want to meet in a dark alley,” who was simultaneously “servile outside the gym, a harmless Black man who knew his place.” Going beyond the workaday bigotry of the white media establishment, Louis took these portrayals as a personal affront because it’s simply not who he was. From the days of his childhood stammer, the Brown Bomber could be self-conscious, but was mostly affable, intelligent and mild-mannered. A firebrand, Louis was not. Publicly, he sublimated whatever racism came his way. Boxing always came first, but he also came by his easygoing persona naturally. Throughout the 1930s, Louis donated money to the NAACP, but otherwise kept quiet on civil rights. By the decade’s end, however, he would get beyond his fear of public speaking and go out on the campaign trail, a position afforded him after he landed what was arguably the first American punch to the face of Adolf Hitler. Round 2: Freedom fighter On June 19, 1936, two days after Reichsfuhrer of the SS Heinrich Himmler was named chief of police for all German states, Louis fought Max Schmeling, the pugilistic Aryan apple of Der Fuhrer’s eye. The Brown Bomber took the fight lightly, spending time on his new hobby: golf. Schmeling was ahead on all the scorecards when he felled Louis in the 12th with a brutal right to the jaw. Two years later, Louis was heavyweight champion and the rematch on June 22, 1938, came amidst extremely heightened tension between Germany and the United States. Although Schmeling never joined the Nazi party, American journalists and boxing fans saw him a stand-in for all Nazis, including Hitler, who had annexed Austria three months earlier. The fight was such a geopolitical proxy that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt brought Louis to the White House and said, “Joe, we need muscles like yours to beat Germany.” In “My Life Story”, Louis wrote, “White Americans — even while some of them were lynching black people in the South — were depending on me to K.O. a German.” In front of 70,000 at Yankee Stadium, and with an all-time, single-event record worldwide radio audience of 100 million tuned in, he did exactly that. The Brown Bomber unleashed a Blitzkrieg Bop on Schmeling, landing more than 30 solid blows, breaking two of his vertebrae and sending him to the canvas three times. He won by knockout at 2:04 in the first round. “By the second Schmeling fight, white fans, even those who had never rooted for a Black man before at any time before, were cheering for Louis because they wanted to defeat fascism and Nazism,” says Louis’ oldest son, Joe Louis Barrow Jr., now 78. “The great Georgetown basketball coach John Thompson, told me how as a kid, he lived in a basement Washington, D.C. apartment. He and his parents would go upstairs to calmly listen to Louis fights with the white folks above them, and then go back downstairs to yell and scream in a victory celebration.” Winning the so-called “undercard of World War II” marked Louis as the first crossover African American superstar and gave him a newfound confidence in the public arena. He became a presidential surrogate, not for Roosevelt, but for FDR’s 1940 Republican opponent, Wendell Wilkie. From 1932 to 1940, a large percentage of African Americans had shifted from the party of Abraham Lincoln to the New Deal Democrats. Louis supported many of Roosevelt’s economic goals, but felt that over eight years, the administration hadn’t advanced the cause of civil rights, particularly in its refusal to pursue anti-lynching legislation in an effort to placate the segregationist Southern Bloc. Heavyweight champion Joe Louis stands over German challenger Max Schmeling, who is down for the count after being knocked to the canvas for the third time in the first round of their highly anticipated title fight in New York on June 22, 1938. Schmeling had defeated Louis two years earlier. (AP Photo) Louis was a Wilkie workhorse, giving more than 100 speeches across the Northeast and Midwest, loudly cheered and, occasionally, jeered, by Black audiences. In the end, Louis being out on the stump meant little, as FDR won hands-down, but it meant a lot for him personally. He now saw himself as a leader and a fighter beyond his fists. Smith described Louis at this time as a man who “grew more independent and discovered his voice in the fight for racial equality, a voice that no one had heard publicly before 1940 .… Joe Louis was nobody’s boy. He was a man — a Race Man determined to define his own place.” In the months following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Brown Bomber further bolstered his patriotic bona fides by fighting in two charity bouts, bringing in roughly $85,000 for the Naval Relief Society. In between he enlisted, and up until basic training continued his self-funded tour of military camps, putting on exhibitions and entertaining the troops, which he’d been doing even before the Day of Infamy. Joe Louis became such a popular figure that the U.S. Army — the segregated U.S. Army — built a unifying campaign around him. The Office of War Information made him the centerpiece of a massive recruitment effort, a dedicated soldier decked out in fatigues and armed for battle, highlighting his red-white-and-blue quote: “We’re going to do our part. And we’ll win because we’re on God’s side.” No Black man had ever occupied such an American space. “He was a man — a Race Man determined to define his own place.” “Joe Louis’ contributions to the war effort are unprecedented. He was featured in a propaganda campaign in the early days of World War II, when America was getting hammered in the Pacific Theater,” says Smith. “This came at a time when the majority of military leaders didn’t believe Black soldiers were physically fit to be in combat, that they were cowardly, weak and incapable. Joe defied the ugly stereotypes. There was no denying his toughness and discipline.” Louis was so popular that he was tasked to appear as himself in the 1943 film version of Irving Berlin’s rah-rah musical “This is the Army.” Louis is basically there to reiterate Black America’s commitment to America’s r