fbpx
Wikipedia

Anthony Veranis

Anthony Veranis, also known as "Mickey White" and "Tony" (June 15, 1938 – April 25, 1966) was an associate of the Winter Hill Gang and a professional welterweight boxer.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Veranis was born in the Savin Hill neighborhood of Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts. He is of Lithuanian and Irish descent, as his mother's maidan name is Dillon. Tony attended church services at the neighborhood St. William's Church, on Dorchester Avenue, at the corner of Belfort Street. (See the obituary of Tony's brother Ralph Veranis, waked at Murphy's Funeral Home, Dorchester, Avenue, and the funeral mass was at St. Margaret's Church.

"RALPH VERANIS Obituary: 

https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/bostonglobe/name/ralph-veranis-obituary?id=2019790 "VERANIS, Ralph A. In Dorchester, died October 2, 2019. Ralph was a Korean war Veteran serving in the U.S. Army. He was a retired maintenance man for the Boston Globe and the Boston Housing Authority for many years. He also was a member of the Quincy Elks, Lodge #943. He was a true gentleman who was loved by all who knew him. Beloved son of the late Anthony S. and Theresa (Dillon) Veranis. Loving brother of the late Anthony S. "Tony" Veranis, Jr. . . .His (Ralph's) Funeral Mass will be (was) celebrated in St. Margaret Church of St. Teresa of Calcutta Parish, on Thursday morning, October 10, at 10 A.M. Burial with military honors will follow in New Calvary Cemetery, Boston." (See, the Boston Globe which published this obituary,) His father Anthony Sr. died when he was still a child leaving his mother (Theresa Dillon Veranis) to raise and support him on her own. By the age of twenty-seven, he had a fleeting resemblance to actor Eric Close. His mother Theresa had cried often for her troubled son Anthony during his hardships and was very close to him. He had an older brother Ralph who died on October 2, 2019. Tony had been in trouble with the law before, but had successfully made comebacks each time which pleased her.

When he was young his parents would take him to the Mechanics Hall, Worcester to watch the fights, but when Veranis started his boxing career she could not bare to see her son fight, but enjoyed hearing the crowds cheering for him. Veranis told a Boston Herald reporter several months before his gangland murder, "Boxing got me out of trouble - it does that for a lot of kids." From BoxRec, cited below: "Veranis turned professional on December 8, 1956 in Portland, ME, under the name "Mickey White," with a fifth round technical knockout over Al Pepin.

"He continued his impressive run as a professional by going 26-0-2 (15 KOs) before dropping back-to-back fights to Barry Allison and Joe Devlin within a 16-day span in March 1958. He passed out after his knockout defeat to Devlin and was taken to Boston City Hospital where he remained in a coma before recovering in June 1958.

"He died tragically shortly before his 28th birthday on April 25, 1966, when he was beaten, then shot to death. His body was dumped in the Blue Hills off Route 28."https://boxrec.com/wiki/index.php/Tony_Veranis

He had "Tony" tattooed on the fingers of one of his hands and "Luck" on the other. He stood at 5'7" (175 cm, BoxRec)and fought as a professional for 18 months as a welterweight and middleweight. He had a broken nose as seen in boxing photographs c. 1957 from years of amateur boxing, fighting in prison and on the street. He was raised a Catholic. He trained with Joe DeNucci, George W. Holden, Joseph Barboza, Rocco DiSiglio, Rico Sacramone and Edward G. Connors' younger brother James.

He attended public high school in Boston and was considered by officials in the Massachusetts correctional system to be a "persistent delinquent" when he was prepubescent to the time of a teenager. As Veranis was incarcerated in 1950 at Lyman Correctional School, he was anonymously involved in the Unraveling Juvenile Delinquency (UJD) study conducted by Harvard University professors Sheldon Glueck and Eleanor (Touroff) Glueck, discovering the causes of juvenile delinquency and adult crime and assessing the overall effectiveness of correctional treatment in controlling criminal careers.

Boxing career edit

As a teenager he was sent to the Lyman Correction School (now the Lyman School for Boys), the United States' first reform school located in Westborough, Massachusetts. While serving time there, infamous boxer and fight manager Clement Stein Jr. saw him in bouts and got him enlisted in an amateur boxing league when he was released. He boxed with an orthodox stance. In 1957, at the age of eighteen he became a professional welterweight boxer. During his professional boxing career he was sponsored by the boxing equipment and sportswear company Ben Lee. Friends later said that he was quiet, polite and anxious to do well.

On December 8, 1956, he fought against Al Pepin in Portland, Maine, which was his professional boxing debut. On January 28, 1957, he impressed the audience by defeating the boxer 150-pound Gunboat Steeves in Boston, Massachusetts. On February 21, 1957, he knocked out Guy LaConte in Revere, Massachusetts. On February 27, 1957, he knocked out Don Vincent in the second round. Veranis fought against Boston native boxer Mickey Dwyer in a six-round bout in Boston, Massachusetts, and outscored him. On April 22, 1957, he knocked down Mark Murray in Holyoke, Massachusetts, three times and defeated him. On May 16, 1957, Veranis completed in his first main event against Joe Klein and won. On June 11, 1957, he knocked down competitor Norm Gautreau in Boston in 1:55. On July 25, 1957, he fought Eddie Prince and was hard pressed to win an eight-round split decision. On August 27, 1957, he fought against Gene Lopes, as a last minute substitute replacement in Fall River, Massachusetts, and won. He later fought Gene Lopes again on September 12, 1957, and knocked him out again in the seventh round. On November 19, 1957, he fought against Roy Tiger Steele in Boston and won. During this match, Veranis was said by boxing officials to have "avenged the only blemish on his record with an easy decision."

When boxing against Bobby Murphy on December 3, 1957, he dropped Murphy in the seventh round. Murphy rose up off the ring floor but was badly battered when referee Eddie Curley called a stop to the match. On December 17, 1957, he fought against Barry Allison, who at the time was the New England Middleweight champion. His middleweight title was not at stake though, and Veranis was disqualified. On February 13, 1958, Veranis knocked out Silby Ford for a mandatory eight count in the fifth round. He broke Ford's jaw and dislodged several teeth that sent him down. Ford was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital following Anthony's victory. On March 1, 1958, he fought for the New England Middleweight Champion title against Barry Allison whose title was up for grabs and lost. On March 17, 1958, he fought his last professional match against Joe Devlin. He was knocked down by Joe Devlin in every round. After the fight he passed out and was taken to Boston City Hospital where he remained in a coma until June 1958.

Suffering from blackouts edit

BoxRec does not record an alleged second exhibition bout with Gunboat Steeves (he had previously boxed against him on February 28, 1957).

BoxRec does not record this, which seems a fabrication: "In September 1964 after returning to the ring and fighting Pineapple Stevenson, he blacked out while fighting, and woke up in the hospital again. During that match he had put Pineapple Stevenson in a coma. Anthony himself started to suffer from extremely bad migraines, nausea, blurry vision with the inability to focus, and temporary mood swings that changed his behavior. It is unknown if he sought professional rehabilitation at a hospital to help these symptoms that plagued him. He told to a friend, "I thought my life was over when I couldn't fight anymore. I was filled with self-pity, I started drinking again and I got into trouble." It is also thought that not being able to box anymore caused him severe depression which brought him to start drinking heavily and becoming incapacitated with alcohol on a regular basis." Not true, after release from prison, he became sober, and parish priest Father Hart and local reporters attest to him amending his life, going straight, working construction.

Out of 30 professional matches he won 26, although never was able to obtain the welterweight championship belt as it was not available to him the first time and lost it in 1958, lost two matches and was disqualified from one. BoxRec confirms his record as 27 wins, O draws, and 2 losses.

Criminal career edit

He was arrested for an unidentified crime on December 23, 1963, and sent to Massachusetts Correctional Institution - Norfolk. While incarcerated at the prison was an altar boy at prison masses. Father John Fitzgerald of St. Joseph's Church in Massachusetts Correctional Institution - Norfolk later said, "He wanted to get straightened out, and I think he did. He was a wonderful boy who'd run with a bad crowd. He frequently stopped in to see me and Father Peter Hart after he got out, and everything seemed to be all right. He took me to the fights, and he was with respectable fellows." Tony was working on construction crews.

Death and afterward edit

On April 25, 1966, a month after his release from prison John Martorano beat Anthony savagely and shot him in the head in Quincy, Massachusetts. Martorano had his corpse dumped in the Blue Hills Reservation off Route 128 in Dedham, Massachusetts.

References edit

  • "Veranis Found Self- Too Late", The Massachusetts Globe, by Bud Collins April 27, 1965
  • Crime in the Making: Pathways and Turning Points through Life by Robert J. Sampson and John L. Laub

See, some of 11 books of William M. Connolly, MPH, JD, such as Character Assassins II, and Shots Heard Round the World, Volumes I and II, and The Fix: the Corruption of Massachusetts Courts and Agencies, and Demonic Dems: Their Socialist Party and Leftist Allies: Note bene: William Connolly grew up in the same neighborhood, Savin Hill, with the Veranis Brothers, at around the same time. And few know these facts better than I and my brother Neal Connolly, who practiced criminal law as a trial attorney in Boston for over 40 years and a co-author of the last referenced book: Demonic Dems.

anthony, veranis, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia s notability guideline for biographies Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention If notability cannot be shown the article is likely to be merged redirected or deleted Find sources Anthony Veranis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Anthony Veranis also known as Mickey White and Tony June 15 1938 April 25 1966 was an associate of the Winter Hill Gang and a professional welterweight boxer Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Boxing career 2 Suffering from blackouts 2 1 Criminal career 2 2 Death and afterward 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Veranis was born in the Savin Hill neighborhood of Dorchester Boston Massachusetts He is of Lithuanian and Irish descent as his mother s maidan name is Dillon Tony attended church services at the neighborhood St William s Church on Dorchester Avenue at the corner of Belfort Street See the obituary of Tony s brother Ralph Veranis waked at Murphy s Funeral Home Dorchester Avenue and the funeral mass was at St Margaret s Church RALPH VERANIS Obituary https www legacy com us obituaries bostonglobe name ralph veranis obituary id 2019790 VERANIS Ralph A In Dorchester died October 2 2019 Ralph was a Korean war Veteran serving in the U S Army He was a retired maintenance man for the Boston Globe and the Boston Housing Authority for many years He also was a member of the Quincy Elks Lodge 943 He was a true gentleman who was loved by all who knew him Beloved son of the late Anthony S and Theresa Dillon Veranis Loving brother of the late Anthony S Tony Veranis Jr His Ralph s Funeral Mass will be was celebrated in St Margaret Church of St Teresa of Calcutta Parish on Thursday morning October 10 at 10 A M Burial with military honors will follow in New Calvary Cemetery Boston See the Boston Globe which published this obituary His father Anthony Sr died when he was still a child leaving his mother Theresa Dillon Veranis to raise and support him on her own By the age of twenty seven he had a fleeting resemblance to actor Eric Close His mother Theresa had cried often for her troubled son Anthony during his hardships and was very close to him He had an older brother Ralph who died on October 2 2019 Tony had been in trouble with the law before but had successfully made comebacks each time which pleased her When he was young his parents would take him to the Mechanics Hall Worcester to watch the fights but when Veranis started his boxing career she could not bare to see her son fight but enjoyed hearing the crowds cheering for him Veranis told a Boston Herald reporter several months before his gangland murder Boxing got me out of trouble it does that for a lot of kids From BoxRec cited below Veranis turned professional on December 8 1956 in Portland ME under the name Mickey White with a fifth round technical knockout over Al Pepin He continued his impressive run as a professional by going 26 0 2 15 KOs before dropping back to back fights to Barry Allison and Joe Devlin within a 16 day span in March 1958 He passed out after his knockout defeat to Devlin and was taken to Boston City Hospital where he remained in a coma before recovering in June 1958 He died tragically shortly before his 28th birthday on April 25 1966 when he was beaten then shot to death His body was dumped in the Blue Hills off Route 28 https boxrec com wiki index php Tony VeranisHe had Tony tattooed on the fingers of one of his hands and Luck on the other He stood at 5 7 175 cm BoxRec and fought as a professional for 18 months as a welterweight and middleweight He had a broken nose as seen in boxing photographs c 1957 from years of amateur boxing fighting in prison and on the street He was raised a Catholic He trained with Joe DeNucci George W Holden Joseph Barboza Rocco DiSiglio Rico Sacramone and Edward G Connors younger brother James He attended public high school in Boston and was considered by officials in the Massachusetts correctional system to be a persistent delinquent when he was prepubescent to the time of a teenager As Veranis was incarcerated in 1950 at Lyman Correctional School he was anonymously involved in the Unraveling Juvenile Delinquency UJD study conducted by Harvard University professors Sheldon Glueck and Eleanor Touroff Glueck discovering the causes of juvenile delinquency and adult crime and assessing the overall effectiveness of correctional treatment in controlling criminal careers Boxing career edit As a teenager he was sent to the Lyman Correction School now the Lyman School for Boys the United States first reform school located in Westborough Massachusetts While serving time there infamous boxer and fight manager Clement Stein Jr saw him in bouts and got him enlisted in an amateur boxing league when he was released He boxed with an orthodox stance In 1957 at the age of eighteen he became a professional welterweight boxer During his professional boxing career he was sponsored by the boxing equipment and sportswear company Ben Lee Friends later said that he was quiet polite and anxious to do well On December 8 1956 he fought against Al Pepin in Portland Maine which was his professional boxing debut On January 28 1957 he impressed the audience by defeating the boxer 150 pound Gunboat Steeves in Boston Massachusetts On February 21 1957 he knocked out Guy LaConte in Revere Massachusetts On February 27 1957 he knocked out Don Vincent in the second round Veranis fought against Boston native boxer Mickey Dwyer in a six round bout in Boston Massachusetts and outscored him On April 22 1957 he knocked down Mark Murray in Holyoke Massachusetts three times and defeated him On May 16 1957 Veranis completed in his first main event against Joe Klein and won On June 11 1957 he knocked down competitor Norm Gautreau in Boston in 1 55 On July 25 1957 he fought Eddie Prince and was hard pressed to win an eight round split decision On August 27 1957 he fought against Gene Lopes as a last minute substitute replacement in Fall River Massachusetts and won He later fought Gene Lopes again on September 12 1957 and knocked him out again in the seventh round On November 19 1957 he fought against Roy Tiger Steele in Boston and won During this match Veranis was said by boxing officials to have avenged the only blemish on his record with an easy decision When boxing against Bobby Murphy on December 3 1957 he dropped Murphy in the seventh round Murphy rose up off the ring floor but was badly battered when referee Eddie Curley called a stop to the match On December 17 1957 he fought against Barry Allison who at the time was the New England Middleweight champion His middleweight title was not at stake though and Veranis was disqualified On February 13 1958 Veranis knocked out Silby Ford for a mandatory eight count in the fifth round He broke Ford s jaw and dislodged several teeth that sent him down Ford was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital following Anthony s victory On March 1 1958 he fought for the New England Middleweight Champion title against Barry Allison whose title was up for grabs and lost On March 17 1958 he fought his last professional match against Joe Devlin He was knocked down by Joe Devlin in every round After the fight he passed out and was taken to Boston City Hospital where he remained in a coma until June 1958 Suffering from blackouts editBoxRec does not record an alleged second exhibition bout with Gunboat Steeves he had previously boxed against him on February 28 1957 BoxRec does not record this which seems a fabrication In September 1964 after returning to the ring and fighting Pineapple Stevenson he blacked out while fighting and woke up in the hospital again During that match he had put Pineapple Stevenson in a coma Anthony himself started to suffer from extremely bad migraines nausea blurry vision with the inability to focus and temporary mood swings that changed his behavior It is unknown if he sought professional rehabilitation at a hospital to help these symptoms that plagued him He told to a friend I thought my life was over when I couldn t fight anymore I was filled with self pity I started drinking again and I got into trouble It is also thought that not being able to box anymore caused him severe depression which brought him to start drinking heavily and becoming incapacitated with alcohol on a regular basis Not true after release from prison he became sober and parish priest Father Hart and local reporters attest to him amending his life going straight working construction Out of 30 professional matches he won 26 although never was able to obtain the welterweight championship belt as it was not available to him the first time and lost it in 1958 lost two matches and was disqualified from one BoxRec confirms his record as 27 wins O draws and 2 losses Criminal career edit He was arrested for an unidentified crime on December 23 1963 and sent to Massachusetts Correctional Institution Norfolk While incarcerated at the prison was an altar boy at prison masses Father John Fitzgerald of St Joseph s Church in Massachusetts Correctional Institution Norfolk later said He wanted to get straightened out and I think he did He was a wonderful boy who d run with a bad crowd He frequently stopped in to see me and Father Peter Hart after he got out and everything seemed to be all right He took me to the fights and he was with respectable fellows Tony was working on construction crews Death and afterward edit On April 25 1966 a month after his release from prison John Martorano beat Anthony savagely and shot him in the head in Quincy Massachusetts Martorano had his corpse dumped in the Blue Hills Reservation off Route 128 in Dedham Massachusetts References edit Veranis Found Self Too Late The Massachusetts Globe by Bud Collins April 27 1965 Crime in the Making Pathways and Turning Points through Life by Robert J Sampson and John L Laub https web archive org web 20080513042605 http thebrothersbulger com Anthony 20 28Tony 29 20Veranis htmSee some of 11 books of William M Connolly MPH JD such as Character Assassins II and Shots Heard Round the World Volumes I and II and The Fix the Corruption of Massachusetts Courts and Agencies and Demonic Dems Their Socialist Party and Leftist Allies Note bene William Connolly grew up in the same neighborhood Savin Hill with the Veranis Brothers at around the same time And few know these facts better than I and my brother Neal Connolly who practiced criminal law as a trial attorney in Boston for over 40 years and a co author of the last referenced book Demonic Dems Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anthony Veranis amp oldid 1191992793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.