When people talk about the Blanchard name in professional wrestling, they often begin with Tully Blanchard, the fiery member of the original Four Horsemen, or with Tessa Blanchard, who carried the family legacy into the modern era. But behind the lineage is a patriarch: Joseph Edgar Blanchard, known to fans as “Joltin’ Joe,” a man who bridged two worlds — football and wrestling — before carving his mark as both an in-ring competitor and a promoter. His story stretches from the wide-open fields of the Canadian Football League to the sweaty arenas of Texas wrestling, leaving a trail of influence that shaped generations of performers.
Gridiron Beginnings
Born December 7, 1928, in Haskell, Oklahoma, Joe Blanchard was built for competition. He wasn’t just a football player; he was a multi-sport athlete who thrived on challenge. At Kansas State University, he became a standout on the football team while also excelling as a wrestler, capturing the Big 7 Conference wrestling tournament championship in 1950. The mat and the gridiron would define his life — first one, then the other, and eventually both converging in his career as a pro wrestler.
Blanchard’s pro football career began north of the border with the Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League. He played three seasons, lining up alongside names that would later echo in wrestling lore: Gene Kiniski and Wilbur Snyder. With the Eskimos, he reached the 1952 Grey Cup, Canada’s Super Bowl, though his team fell 21–11 to the Toronto Argonauts.
In 1954, he played his final football season with the Calgary Stampeders. But as the football chapter closed, another door opened — one that would carry his name into a very different kind of battle.
Entering the Wrestling World
In 1953, even before hanging up his football cleats, Blanchard laced up his wrestling boots. He debuted in Calgary’s Stampede Wrestling, then operated by Stu Hart, where many football players-turned-wrestlers tested their toughness. The transition was natural. His athletic background, amateur wrestling credentials, and rugged football conditioning made him a natural fit in the squared circle.
Blanchard wrestled across North America during the booming territory era. His travels took him to Texas, Hawaii, and beyond, as he built a reputation as a dependable, athletic worker who could hold his own with anyone.
His biggest in-ring successes came in Hawaii’s 50th State Big Time Wrestling, where he twice captured the NWA Hawaii Tag Team Championship alongside Lord James Blears, and in Texas, where he became a two-time NWA Texas Heavyweight Champion. In the days before pay-per-view, these titles weren’t just props — they were stamps of approval from promoters who trusted Blanchard to carry their territory.
The Promoter: Southwest Championship Wrestling
By the late 1970s, Blanchard was ready to transition from performer to promoter. In 1978, he founded Southwest Championship Wrestling (SCW), based in San Antonio, Texas. The territory quickly gained a reputation for its gritty style and for showcasing both veterans and young talent. For Blanchard, it was the perfect fusion of his competitive instincts and his eye for talent.
SCW was one of the first promotions to secure a national cable television deal through the USA Network. For a time, it looked like Blanchard’s group might even compete with the growing World Wrestling Federation (WWF). Though the promotion ultimately struggled financially and was sold in 1985 to Fred Behrend — becoming Texas All-Star Wrestling— its existence marked a key stepping stone in the wrestling wars of the 1980s.
Blanchard officially retired from active competition in 1978, but true to the wrestler’s code of never saying never, he returned in December 1984 for a final bout against Jonathan Boyd. After three decades of competition, it was time to pass the torch.
Mentor and Trainer
Blanchard wasn’t just a promoter; he was a teacher. Among those who came through his orbit were Dusty Rhodes, who would go on to become “The American Dream,” one of the most beloved figures in wrestling history; King Curtis Iaukea, the charismatic Hawaiian brawler; and his own son, Tully Blanchard, who became a cornerstone of Jim Crockett Promotions and a founding member of the legendary Four Horsemen stable.
It’s difficult to measure how much Blanchard’s quiet mentorship shaped these careers. Wrestling, particularly in the territorial days, thrived on passed-down knowledge. The veterans who could “work” and teach others how to do the same were worth their weight in gold. Joe Blanchard was one of those veterans.
The AWA Years
In the late 1980s, Blanchard took on another high-profile role: President of the American Wrestling Association (AWA). In 1989, he succeeded Stanley Blackburn as the figurehead of Verne Gagne’s promotion. The AWA was struggling against WWF’s dominance and WCW’s rising power, but Blanchard lent his credibility to the company during its final years. He stayed until the AWA closed its doors in 1991, helping to oversee its last chapters.
Family Legacy
Joe Blanchard’s greatest legacy may not be his own championships or his promoting, but the family he nurtured. His son Tully became one of the most famous wrestlers of the 1980s, renowned for his technical brilliance and brash persona. Later, his granddaughter Tessa Blanchard broke barriers as one of the few women to hold a major promotion’s world championship, carrying the Impact Wrestling World Title in 2020.
Through them, Joe Blanchard’s name — and the lessons he imparted — continue to echo in arenas worldwide.
Later Life and Passing
Blanchard lived long enough to see both his son and granddaughter succeed at the highest levels of wrestling. In 2016, he was posthumously inducted into the George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame, honoring his dual contributions to wrestling both as a performer and as a promoter.
On March 22, 2012, Joe Blanchard died in San Antonio, Texas, at the age of 83, from squamous-cell carcinoma. His passing was noted across the wrestling world, remembered not with fanfare but with quiet respect — the way he had always carried himself.
Championships and Accomplishments
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NWA Texas Heavyweight Championship (2x) – NWA Big Time Wrestling
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NWA Hawaii Tag Team Championship (2x) – with Lord James Blears
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George Tragos/Lou Thesz Hall of Fame (2016)
Legacy: The Quiet Builder
Joe Blanchard was never the flashiest performer, nor did he seek the spotlight like many of his contemporaries. He was steady, reliable, and fiercely dedicated to the craft of wrestling. From the football fields of Canada to the wrestling mats of Kansas, from the territories of Texas and Hawaii to the presidency of the AWA, Blanchard lived multiple lives within one.
Most of all, he planted seeds. As a trainer, he shaped future icons. As a promoter, he helped create opportunities for wrestlers on a national stage. And as a patriarch, he built a family legacy that endures into the 21st century.
In the end, “Joltin’ Joe” may not have been the loudest voice in the room, but his influence buzzed quietly through wrestling history — a reminder that not all legends need the brightest spotlight to leave the deepest mark.