In 1910, former undefeated boxing champion James J. Jeffries sought to reclaim the heavyweight championship as the "great white hope" from African-American Jack Johnson.
Denver | Denver Broncos | John Denver | University of Denver | Denver Art Museum | Denver Nuggets | The Denver Post | University of Colorado Denver | Travis Dickerson | Denver International Airport | Bob Denver | Dickerson, Maryland | Eric Dickerson | Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad | Dickerson | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Denver | Denver Mint | Denver International Airport Automated Guideway Transit System | Denver City, Texas | Denver Center for the Performing Arts | Union Station (Denver) | Thomas Denver Jonsson | Mahlon Dickerson | Kent Denver School | George Dickerson | Denver Zoo | Denver School of Science and Technology | Denver Public Library | Denver, North Carolina | Denver, Norfolk |
He now lives in Southern California and tours with Howard E. Scott, Lee Oskar and Harold Brown as the Lowrider Band.
John J. Dickerson (1900–1966), Republican politician from New Jersey
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John S. Dickerson (born 1982), American evangelical Christian pastor and journalist
Jordan also made a record with two members of War, Harold Brown and B.B. Dickerson, "The Other Side of War Warms Your Heart" on Soufflé Records, which featured Bobby Womack on Guitar.
The Lowrider Band consists of four of the five surviving original core group members of the multi-platinum selling band War: Howard E. Scott, B.B. Dickerson, Lee Oskar, and Harold Brown.