Sport: Wrestling
Born: March 27, 1933
Died: February 9, 2002
Town: East Orange, New Jersey
Robert Fort Hanson was born March 27, 1933 in East Orange, NJ. When he was a boy, the Philadelphia Eagles had an All-Pro running back—also from New Jersey—named Swede Hanson, so that became his nickname as a boy. By the time he entered high school he was actually larger than the NFL Swede Hanson, standing six feet tall and tipping the scales at 200-plus pounds. And from there he kept on growing.
Swede had enormous hands and wore size 17 shoes. Fans would later nickname him “Big Foot.” Besides his size, Swede was also quick and agile. The star of the East Orange high-school football squad, he was offered a scholarship by Wake Forest following his junior season. Money was tight in the single-parent Hanson household, so when Swede was offered a job at Newark Airport as an aircraft mechanic, he turned down the scholarship and dropped out of school before his senior year.
Swede kept in shape as an amateur boxer in the mid-1950s. He had a 64–3 record, losing all three times to the same opponent, but captured a pair of Golden Gloves titles. Pro fighters were captivated by Swede. They befriended him and sometimes sparred with him, too. He spent time in the ring with Rocky Marciano and Archie Moore, and Sugar Ray Robinson and Joe Louis were among his friends. In 1957, at the suggestion of New Jersey promoter Willie Gilzenberg, Swede decided to become a pro wrestler.
Swede trained with George Tragos, a star-maker in the grappling world. After three months, he turned him over to promoter Vince McMahon, whose son Vince Jr. would run WWF and WWE a generation later. Swede was paired with another wrestling neophyte, Bruno Sammartino, and they clicked. McMahon booked them all over the region and, in a few years, they were both huge stars. Swede was famous for his enormous size (6’5” 275 lbs.), his bright blond hair, and the hardest punch in the sport.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Swede worked primarily in the Carolinas. He and Rip Hawk formed one of wrestling’s most successful tag teams. Known as “The Blond Bombers,” they would work together on and off for more than 15 years—nearly all of that time as bad guys (aka “heels”). They differed from others of their ilk in that they refused to “cheat” to win matches. They wrestled clean, as it were. The pair won several championships in the 1960s and introduced the now-classic quick tag, exchanging places every few seconds to wear an opponent down.
In 1971, Swede suffered a heart attack. He was able to return to the ring and actually became a fan favorite for a while—and eventually faced off against his old partner, Hawk. By the end of the decade, however, Swede was back to being a heel under the management of Freddie Blassie. To build up the menacing aspect of his character, Swede’s vanquished foes were often carried away on a stretcher. In 1979, he earned a title shot against Bob Backlund, but lost. During the 1980s, Swede joined WWF and recast himself as a good ol’ boy, complete with long hair, a rebel cap and a Confederate flag. He retired in 1986.
During his post-wrestling days, Swede worked construction and also managed a bar. He became a huge Duke basketball fan, although he reportedly never attended a game at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Swede suffered a number of health problems in his late-60s, including diabetes, high blood pressure and Alzheimer’s. He passed away in a Columbia, SC hospital in 2002.