Rinty Monaghan, the Singing Boxing Champion

Back
Rinty Monaghan, the Singing Boxing Champion

Sorry, this film is not available for viewing in your region

Unfortunately, due to copyright permissions we are unable to show this video in your area.

Details

Location

Little Corporation Street Belfast

Year

1968

Date

Length

06min 06sec

Audio

sound

Format

Betacam

black and white

Source

Digitised as part of the UTV Archive Partnership Project (ITV, Northern Ireland Screen and PRONI)

Courtesy

Department for Communities, ITV, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, UTV Archive

Rights Holder

ITV

It is illegal to download, copy, print or otherwise utilise in any other form this material, without written consent from the copyright holder.

Description

Meet Rinty Monaghan, the world flyweight boxing champion, as he leaves his home at 32 Little Corporation Street and walks up the street. In an interview conducted by Leslie Dawes, boxing referee Andy Smyth gives his opinion of Rinty as he recalls his victorious London fight against Emile Famechon. In the boxing gym, Rinty explains how his nickname came about and reminisce about his boxing achievements and the fights he remembers the most. Belfast native that he was, Rinty enjoyed a good climb and was known as a bit of an amateur steeplejack. Man of many talents and possibly the best singer boxer ever, Rinty shares his well-known and customary rendition of ‘When Irish Eyes Are Smiling’.

John Joseph ‘Rinty’ Monaghan (1918 - 1984) became the world flyweight boxing champion at the Kings Hall, Belfast in 1948 and retired undefeated in 1950 at the end of a sixteen-year professional boxing career in which he fought sixty-six contests, winning fifty-one, drawing six others and being beaten only nine times.

Notes

John Joseph Monaghan, one of 13 children, was born on 21 August 1918 at 23 Lancaster Street, Belfast and, after marrying Frances Thompson in 1938, he moved to Little Corporation Street, in the Docklands area of the city. He was only 11 when he began taking part in street boxing contests and by the time he was fourteen he was picking up a few shillings for victories. At this point he started training in a gym in Hardinge Street and was on the way to a professional boxing career.

Monaghan's career was interrupted by wartime service in the Navy but in November 1945, out of uniform and back in full training, Monaghan knocked out Eddie 'Bunty' Doran to win the Ulster flyweight title. In March 1948, there followed the highpoint of his career when he knocked out his old adversary, Patterson, in the seventh round of a fight at the Kings Hall to become the undisputed British, Commonwealth and World flyweight champion and the first Northern Ireland boxer ever to hold a world title.  Monaghan later claimed that the clinching factor in his pre-fight preparations had been a diet of goat's milk and raw eggs. He used to walk Beauty the goat in the countryside outside Belfast where he did his training. In April 1949 he retained his world championship and won the European flyweight title when he defeated Maurice Sandeyron in Belfast and the following September, although he could only draw with Terry Allen in Belfast, he held on to his titles.

By this time, Monaghan had suffered from health problems and in April 1950, aged 32, he was forced to renounce his titles and retire undefeated. Although he some money from his boxing, it was quickly dissipated due to mismanagment forcing him to work successively as a taxi driver, lorry driver and a petrol pump attendant. In his last job at the Shamrock filling station, a queue of cars used to form as everyone wanted to have a chat with Rinty. He is buried in the Belfast City Cemetery beneath a headstone with the inscription ‘Undefeated World Flyweight Champion’ and in 2015 Rinty Monaghan’s was erected in Belfast to honour his legacy.

Credits

Interviews conducted by Leslie Dawes

Interviewes are Rinty Monaghan and Andy Smyth

Ulster Television 

×

Please scroll to review and accept our terms and conditions (last updated on ) before viewing the moving images content.

To remember your terms and conditions acceptance, you can register as a site member or allow cookies on your browser.