Doug Lewis

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameDouglas Toliver "Doug"•Lewis
Used nameDoug•Lewis
Born6 August 1898 in Toronto, Ontario (CAN)
Died19 February 1981 in Los Angeles, California (USA)
Measurements170 cm / 66 kg
AffiliationsPraestamos A.C., Toronto (CAN)
NOC Canada
Medals OG
Gold 0
Silver 0
Bronze 1
Total 1

Biography

In 1924 Doug Lewis was the Canadian amateur welterweight boxing champion and was selected to represent his country at that year’s Summer Olympics. In the opening round he won his bout against Sweden’s Edvard Hultgren by decision and then advanced to the quarter-finals after his opponent, Italy’s Giuseppe Oldani, was disqualified “for repeatedly holding in the clinches” in round two. After another win by decision against Hugh Haggerty of the United States, he was defeated by Jean Delarge of Belgium, the eventual gold medalist, in the semifinals, but won a bronze medal after Ireland’s Paddy Dwyer forfeited the third-place bout. Lewis turned professional after the Olympics and won his first fight, against Abe Prince of the United States, by TKO in October 1924. In a career that stretched nearly ten years, he made only one bid for a major title, the Canadian welterweight in 1927, and lost against the defending titleholder George Fifield. He retired in June 1933, after winning a bout against Canadian Paul Amato, with a record of 23-8-2.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1924 Summer Olympics Boxing CAN Doug Lewis
Welterweight, Men (Olympic) 3 Bronze

Errata

Previously misidendified as one Douglas Bentley (incorrectly transcribed as Bendup due bad handwriting at Ontario birth index) Lewis, but contemporary Canadian newspapers describe the boxer explicitly as colored. Douglas Bentley Lewis was white. Year of birth also seen as 1904.