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PROMOTER PAUL C. WINKHAUS
Edited E-mail to the Mid-Atlantic Gateway
from longtime
Greenville wrestling historian Don Holbrook
Yes, I knew Mr. Winkhaus well. He was indeed
Crockett's man in Greenville. He also handled Columbia, Asheville,
Anderson back then and did a few other cities around here from time to
time like Greenwood at the ball park and others. He was already up in
years, we are talking late 1960's for a reference point here. He lived
in Matthews North Carolina, outside of Charlotte and he was originally
from Ohio I think. He told me that he was a sports writer for a
newspaper somewhere before he got into wrestling. One thing I remember
was how creative he was at writing press releases that he would send
over to the newspaper here in town to go along with the ad they ran
every week for Monday nights card.
Most of the years Billy Powell was ring
announcer, he actually worked for Winkhaus. Billy would walk in the back
door about 15 minutes before show time and he and Mr. Winkhaus would go
over the line up and any changes or announcements, etc.
I actually rode to the Anderson Recreation Center with Mr. Winkhaus a few times on
Thursdays. There was a period of time he was running a show there every
other week or so. This was before I was old enough to
drive. He used to stop by the Greenville Memorial Auditorium on Thursday
afternoons on his way to Anderson. He also would run the tape for
Saturday afternoon television by the WFBC-TV studio over on Rutherford
Road
on some of the Thursdays. I can remember running it in to the lobby desk
at channel 4 for him a time or two.
He was a nice old man to me, but he had a
gruff sounding voice and back then wrestling was so believable that many
of the folks around here would be on him the minute they saw him,
complaining about the heels, one thing or the other! He was interesting
to talk to and he would tell me wrestling stories and at a young age. I
thought it was so cool to have this inside track on wrestling.
Mr. Winkhaus died not long after he
retired. After his death, there was a short period I don't think they
had anyone acting as local promoter. I can remember Johnny Ringley,
Crockett's son-in-law coming down a few times, and once I remember Jim
Sr. was here on Monday handling things. There may have been an interim
along that time, I don't remember, but the next one I do remember was
Sandy Scott. He actually lived in an apartment out on Wade Hampton Blvd.
for a long while and ran the same towns Winkhaus did but also helped
George Harbin with Spartanburg and more spot shows in Western N.C. Then
Danny Miller came in when Sandy went back to the Charlotte office.
- Don Holbrook, Greenville SC

Asheville NC 1970
See WLOS-13
Asheville TV
Thanks to Don Holbrook for this information
on Paul Winkhaus, and to Carroll Hall of WrestlingMemories.com for the
photograph of Mr. Winkhaus from a
1960s issue of Wrestling Revue magazine. E-mail edited by Dick
Bourne.
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