AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Boston version)

The AWA World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling championship owned and promoted by the American Wrestling Association in Boston.[1] The title existed from 1928 through 1952.[1]

AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Boston version)
Details
Date established February 21, 1928

Title history

Key
Reign The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed
# Indicates what number the reign is
N/A The information is not available or is unknown
# Wrestlers Reign Date Days held Location Notes
1 Ed Lewis 1 February 21, 1928 311 St. Louis, Missouri Defeated Joe Stecher to win the original main line title
2 Gus Sonnenberg 1 January 4, 1929 705 Boston, Massachusetts
3 Ed Don George 1 December 10, 1930 125 Los Angeles, California
4 Ed Lewis 2 April 14, 1931 20 Los Angeles, California
5 Henri Deglane 1 May 4, 1931 751 Montreal, Quebec Wins by DQ after allegedly being bitten; recognized in Boston and Montreal as AWA champion; Lews still recognized in California.
6 Ed Don George 2 February 9, 1933 901 Boston, Massachusetts
7 Danno O'Mahoney 1 July 30, 1935 352 Boston, Massachusetts The title was unified with the NWA World Heavyweight Championship and New York State Athletic Commission World Heavyweight Championship to be the Unified World Heavyweight Championship; loses to Dick Shikat on March 2, 1936 in New York, but continues to be recognized as champion by AWA.
8 Yvon Robert 1 July 16, 1936 531 Montreal, Quebec Stripped in December 1937 for not defending against Lou Thesz.
9 Lou Thesz 1 December 29, 1937 44 St. Louis, Missouri Defeats Everette Marshall and is presented the AWA title.
10 Steve Casey 1 February 11, 1938 384 Boston, Massachusetts
11 Marv Westenberg 1 March 02, 1939 14 Boston, Massachusetts
12 Gus Sonnenberg 2 March 16, 1939 13 Boston, Massachusetts
13 Steve Casey 2 March 29, 1939 20 Boston, Massachusetts
14 Ed Don George 3 April 18, 1939 199 Albany, NY
15 Steve Casey 3 November 3, 1939 183 Buffalo, New York
16 The French Angel 1 May 13, 1940 731 Boston, Massachusetts
17 Steve Casey 4 May 14, 1942 810 Boston, Massachusetts
18 The French Angel 2 August 1, 1944 14 San Francisco, California
19 Steve Casey 5 August 15, 1944 253 San Francisco, California Casey goes to the US Army; Sandor Szabo emerges from a series of elimination bouts as the duration world champion; Casey defeats Szabo in the consolidation match on April 4, 1945 in Boston, Massachusetts.
20 Sandor Szabo 1 April 25, 1945 7 Boston, Massachusetts
21 Frank Sexton 1 May 2, 1945 35 Boston, Massachusetts
22 Steve Casey 6 June 6, 1945 21 Boston, Massachusetts
23 Frank Sexton 2 June 27, 1945 1791 Boston, Massachusetts
24 Don Eagle 1 May 23, 1950 1 Cleveland, Ohio
25 Gorgeous George 1 May 26, 1950 97 Chicago, Illinois
26 Don Eagle 2 August 31, 1950 Columbus, Ohio
Vacant November 1952 Vacated in November 1952 when Eagle was inactive due to back injuries. Eagle's reign may have lasted between 759 and 822 days.

References

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