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Janet Wolfe

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Janet Wolfe
Birth nameJanet Boyer
Born(1933-06-13)June 13, 1933
Orr, Minnesota, U.S.
DiedJuly 28, 1951(1951-07-28) (aged 18)
East Liverpool, Ohio, U.S.
Cause of deathBrain haemorrhage
FamilyBilly Wolfe (father)
Mildred Burke (mother)
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Janet Boyer
Janet Boyer Wolfe
Janet Wolfe
Jeanette Wolfe
Violet Wolfe
Billed height5 ft 3 in (160 cm)
Billed weight120 lb (54 kg)
Trained byBilly Wolfe
Debut1951

Janet Boyer Wolfe (June 13, 1933 – July 28, 1951), also known as Jeanette Wolfe, was an American professional wrestler. She was the foster daughter of Billy Wolfe and Mildred Burke.[citation needed] She was trained by her father, who operated a troupe of women wrestlers associated with the NWA.[1]

Early History

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Janet Boyer was born to Selma Boyer, and was raised in Orr in St. Louis County, Minnesota. Little is known about her family life, other than she attended a wrestling school and was trained by Tony Stecher in wrestling, hoping to get signed into a promotion; she was eventually sent to Billy Wolfe when she was 17, but was initially rejected due to her small size and weight, but shortly after turning 18 was after gaining weight, and would be adopted by Billy Wolfe, who mentored her and she adopted "Wolfe" to her surname. Mildred Burk had little involvement in her life.

She only wrestled three matches in her life, with the third being against Ella Waldek on July 27, 1951. [2] [3]

Death

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On July 27, 1951, Wolfe was body-slammed hard on the mat by Ella Waldek, to whom she lost the match in approximately seven minutes, which might have ruptured a vein in her stomach. Later that same evening, in the final contest of the benefit show at Patterson Field in East Liverpool, Ohio, she was scheduled to be the tag-team partner of Eva Lee, but she was complaining of a major headache minutes prior to this. Nevertheless she wrestled for a few minutes before tagging Lee, who then saw her partner collapse on the ring apron and lost consciousness.

The match was stopped as people attended to Wolfe, who never regained consciousness. She was brought into the locker room, where she was briefly operated on by medical officials who were at the event, applying oxygen masks, before paramedics arrived and took Wolfe to East Liverpool Osteopathic Hospital, where she was pronounced dead at 4:00 a.m. on July 28. The official cause of death was a brain hemorrhage, and the doctor found that a blood clot had formed possibly six or seven days before, signifying that Waldek was not to blame for her death, even though police questioned all three women involved in the match and ultimately let them go.[4]

In the aftermath, Waldek continued to perform and was labeled as a murderer by the crowd, something which is said to have helped her notoriety. Waldek, however, always believed that the huge meal that Wolfe ate between the two matches contributed to her death.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Hornbaker, Tim; National Wrestling Alliance, The Untold Story of the Monopoly that Strangled Pro Wrestling, p. 291, ECW Press, 2007, ISBN 1-55022-741-6
  2. ^ https://prowrestlingstories.com/pro-wrestling-stories/janet-boyer-wolfe/
  3. ^ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/77125108/janet_boyer-wolfe
  4. ^ https://prowrestlingstories.com/pro-wrestling-stories/janet-boyer-wolfe/
  5. ^ "Ella Waldek: A life of triumphs and tragedy". canoe.com. Archived from the original on July 24, 2017.
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