Sputnik Monroe(1927-2006)
He was born Rocco Monroe DiGrazio in Dodge City, Kansas; his father had
been killed in an airplane accident a month before his birth. His
mother remarried and his stepfather adopted him, changing his name to
Rock Monroe Brumbaugh. At seventeen, he was wrestling all comers at
county fairs; after serving in the U.S. Navy, he went professional and
soon became known as one of its best known personalities. He received
the nickname "Sputnik" at a television taping in Mobile, Alabama in
1957 when a female heckler called him "a Communist, a damned sputnik".
Wrestling in venues in the segregated pre-Civil Rights South such as
Houston, Memphis and Mobile, Monroe was one of the first professional
wrestlers to wrestle against (and later with) African Americans; he
later successfully formed a tag team duo with African American wrestler
Norvell Austin. Monroe was a hero to African Americans in the South,
particularly in Memphis, where he insisted that he play before
integrated audiences and became a hero to those African Americans
restricted to the balconies and "nosebleed" seats of the stadiums,
theaters, and other venues scattered throughout the South, as he was
the only major wrestler who treated them with respect. Upon entering
the ring, Monroe would turn to the African American patrons and
acknowledge their approbation, while the white patrons booed and cursed
him. He was a fixture in the black community of Memphis, and in 2002
was honored with an exhibit at the Memphis Rock n Soul Museum, as one
of the first to advocate the integration of public events. Married six
times, he was survived by his current wife Joanne, two sons and a
daughter.