Al Palzer won the "White Hope" tournament organized by promoter Tom O'Rourke at New York City's National Sporting Club that was held in May 1911. O’Rourke had managed the legendary African American boxers
Joe Walcott and
George Dixon. He also had signed Palzer to a contract before the tournament, and likely manipulated it so that Palzer could win. Other White Hope tournaments were created in response to O'Rouke's contest. On 19 December 1911, Palzer fought
Al Kaufman in Brooklyn and scored a
K.O. in the fifth round of their 10-round bout. Kaufman had fought Jack Johnson for the world heavyweight title in San Francisco on 9 September 1909. The 10-rounder ended in a no-decision, and the two fighters met in Reno, Nevada to box an exhibition in July 1910. On New Year's Day 1913, Palzer met
Luther McCarty in
Vernon, California to determine the "White Heavyweight Championship" of the world. McCarty won the title by way of a T.K.O. in the 18th round. It would be a title he would hold for the rest of his life which would only be a short five months. On 24 May 1913, Canadian
Arthur Pelkey vied for McCarty's title at
Tommy Burns's Arena in
Calgary, Alberta. Burns had been the world heavyweight champ who had lost his title to Jack Johnson on
Boxing Day in 1908. Approximately two minutes into the first round of the scheduled 10-round bout, the 210 lbs. Pekley
K.O.-ed the 200 lbs. McCarty. Eight minutes later, McCarty was pronounced dead. Pelkey reportedly broke down and wept when told of McCarty's death. Tommy Burns's Arena burned down the following day, likely as a result of arson. A coroner's jury ruled that McCarty had died of a
cerebral hemorrhage. The ruling held that he had not been killed by a blow delivered by Pelkey but that the hemorrhage probably was the result of a previous injury, likely suffered while riding a horse. Pelkey later claimed that his legal expenses linked to McCarty's death bankrupted him. Pelkey reportedly was never the same fighter after killing McCarty. He lost the white heavyweight title to
Gunboat Smith on New Year's Day 1914 at Coffroth's Arena in
Daly City, California via a T.K.O. in the 15th round of the scheduled 20-round bout. In
London on 16 July 1914, Smith lost the title to European heavyweight champ
Georges Carpentier when he was disqualified in the sixth round of their scheduled 20-round bout. The white heavyweight title bout sported a purse worth 9,000 pounds sterling (equivalent to approximately $ in today's funds). Carpentier would be the last to hold the world white heavyweight crown. He fought one more fight, beating Kid Jackson in
Bourdeaux, France on July 26 before joining the French military with the outbreak of
World War I. When "The Great White Hope"
Jess Willard beat Jack Johnson for the world heavyweight title on 5 April 1915, the world white heavyweight crown became defunct. No heavyweight champ would offer a title shot to a black heavyweight challenger for 22 years, until
James J. Braddock lost his title to
Joe Louis in 1937. ==Max Baer==