Maximilian Adelbert Baer was an American professional boxer and the world heavyweight champion

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Maximilian Adelbert Baer was an American professional boxer and the world heavyweight champion from June 14, 1934, to June 13, 1935. Two of his fights (a 1933 win over Max Schmeling and a 1935 loss to James J. Braddock) were rated Fight of the Year by The Ring magazine. Baer was also a boxing referee, and had occasional roles on film or television. He was the brother of heavyweight boxing contender Buddy Baer and father of actor Max Baer Jr. Baer is rated #22 on The Ring magazine's list of 100 greatest punchers of all time.

EARLY LIFE
Baer was born on February 11, 1909, in Omaha, Nebraska, to Jacob Baer (1875 to 1938) and Dora Bales (1877 to 1938). His father was the son of Aschill Baer and Fannie Fischel, who were Jewish emigrants from Alsace-Lorraine and Bohemia, respectively; his mother was of Scots-Irish descent. His elder sister was Frances May Baer (1905 to 1991), his younger sister was Bernice Jeanette Baer (1911 to 1987), his younger brother was boxer-turned-actor Jacob Henry Baer, better known as Buddy Baer (1915 to 1986), and his adopted brother was August "Augie" Baer. For a period Jacob Baer worked as the manager of the meat packing concern of the Graden Mercantile Co. in Durango, Colorado.

MOVE TO CALIFORNIA
In May 1922, tired of the winters that aggravated Frances's rheumatic fever and Jacob's high blood pressure, the Baers drove to the milder climes of the West Coast, where Dora's sister lived in Alameda, California. Jacob's expertise in the butcher business led to numerous job offers around the San Francisco Bay Area. While living in Hayward, Max took his first job as a delivery boy for John Lee Wilbur. Wilbur ran a grocery store and bought meat from Jacob.

The Baers lived in the Northern Californian towns of Hayward, San Leandro and Galt before moving to Livermore in 1926. Livermore was cowboy country, surrounded by tens of thousands of acres of rangeland which supported large cattle herds that provided fresh meat to the local area. In 1928, Jacob leased the Twin Oaks Ranch in Murray Township, where he raised more than 2,000 hogs and worked with daughter Frances's husband, Louis Santucci. Baer often credited working as a butcher boy, carrying heavy carcasses of meat, stunning cattle with one blow, and working at a gravel pit, for developing his powerful shoulders (an article in the January 1939 edition of The Family Circle Magazine reported that Baer also took the Charles Atlas exercise course.)

LINK TO ARTICLE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Baer_(boxer)

TAGS: Max Baer (boxer), 20th-century American Jews, Jewish American boxers, 20th-century American male actors, International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame inductees, Sportspeople from Omaha Nebraska, International Boxing Hall of Fame inductees, American people of German descent, American people of Czech-Jewish descent, American male film actors, American male boxers, World heavyweight boxing champions, World Boxing Association champions, Heavyweight boxers, Boxers from Nebraska

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