Professional wrestling In the early 1930s, a dispute arose over the bookings of new wrestling sensation
Jim Londos, so
New York City promoter
Jack Curley negotiated an alliance between various regional managers that enabled Londos to travel the country as champion while allowing the promoters to share profits evenly across the regions. As a result of this arrangement, new wrestling "territories" emerged across the
U.S., and in 1935, a 25-year-old Crockett, who had also served as a concert promoter while also owning a theater and a restaurant, decided to set up a permanent wrestling shop based in
Charlotte, North Carolina. The organization, known as
Jim Crockett Promotions, scheduled wrestling events in both Carolinas, as well as in
Virginia, under the banner of Eastern States Championship Wrestling. Over the next decade, ESCW featured some of the top wrestling stars of the day. Then in 1948, wrestling's top promoters gathered in
Waterloo, Iowa, to form the industry's first true governing body, known as the
National Wrestling Alliance. As the dominant force representing the Carolina region, Jim Crockett Promotions soon became an important member of the NWA, with Crockett serving as a chief lieutenant under longtime NWA President and leading St. Louis promoter
Sam Muchnick. Over the next 25 years, Crockett's Carolina territory reigned among the most successful regions in the NWA, as he regularly sold out the 16,000-seat
Greensboro Coliseum featuring such stars as
Johnny Weaver, Rip Hawk, Swede Hanson, and
Gene &
Ole Anderson on his Championship Wrestling program.
Ice hockey and baseball The championship trophy of the
Southern Hockey League was named the
James Crockett Cup. In 1976, the Crockett family purchased the
Asheville Orioles and renamed them the
Charlotte Orioles. They also saved the historic
Calvin Griffith Park from being torn down and restored it to preserve its history. It was renamed
Jim Crockett Memorial Park, and then DBA "Crockett Park" in 1977. The stadium was set on fire by a group of juveniles on March 16, 1985, and by 1987, it was closed down. ==Personal life and death==