Early career Born in
Shenstone, a small village in
Albert County, New Brunswick, Prosser met 7-year veteran Paul Peller who persuaded him to enter professional wrestling. Training under
Emile Dupree in
Shediac, he eventually made his debut in 1968 teaming with Peller in
Stu Hart's Stampede Wrestling as
The Butchers. During their time in the promotion, they proved a popular tag team headlining sold out events in Calgary and Edmonton four weeks straight, which included matches against football player
Bob Luce and Emile Dupre. The following year, he and Peller joined Dupre,
Leo Burke and others to tour
the Maritimes with
Grand Prix Wrestling during the summer before returning to Calgary by the end of the year. Wrestling under the name
Freddie Sweetan, Prosser teamed with Stampede Wrestling veteran
"Bruiser" Bob Sweetan and eventually won the Stampede Wrestling Tag Team Championship before losing the titles to
Bud & Ray Osborne in
Calgary, Alberta on April 18, 1969. He and Peller would later win the titles the following year.
National Wrestling Alliance In part to an agreement with Sweetan and Leo Burke, Prosser and Sweetan( being the same person) began wrestling in the
Kansas City-area as
Killer Kox and
K.O. Kox with
Bob Geigel's
NWA Central States. Feuding with Bob Geigel &
The Stomper over the NWA Central States North American Tag Team titles, he later faced Geigel in a singles match the following year on November 5, 1970. While in the United States, he would also team with fellow Canadians
The Beast in the
Amarillo area and
Michel "Le Justice" Dubois in the Mid-Atlantic region who together faced
Terry &
Bobby Kay,
George &
Sandy Scott,
Big Boy Brown &
Klondike Bill,
Les Thatcher &
Nelson Royal and, most notably
The Royal Kangaroos whom they had a five-week feud with in 1973. During their time in the Carolinas, they would also face
J. J. Dillon in
Greensboro, North Carolina in 1972.
Return to Canada and later career Returning to the Maritimes during the summer months, he also had a successful run with
Eric Pomeroy feuding with The Beast, who enlisted Rudy Kay and Leo Burke, fighting over the ESA International Tag Team Championship throughout the early 1970s. He and The Beast would also engage in several single matches as well. He and Pomeroy would win the ESA International Tag Team titles three times before losing the titles to The Beast & Rudy Kay in
Halifax, Nova Scotia on October 12, 1971. He would later team with a number of tag team partners including
Kurt Von Steiger, Mr. X and J. J. Dillon defeating The Beast & Bobby Kay in September 1973. Losing single matches to
Jacques Rougeau and
Johnny Valentine at the
Maple Leaf Gardens in February 1974, the titles were later vacated when Dillon did not return to the promotion the following summer. However, he and Michel Dubois would reunite to regain the titles defeating The Beast & Bobby Kay in July 1974. That same year, while visiting with Prosser and Pomeroy in their motor home, Prosser's father told Pomeroy that he was going to return to his house and commit suicide. After he had left, Pomeroy and Prosser returned to his house to find several
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers were already at the scene where they informed the two Prosser's father had killed himself with a shotgun from the house. ==Death==