Phil Hickerson and the Vanishing World of Territory Wrestling
Posted: May 21st 2026 By: Stephen Watts
Professional wrestling lost another piece of its territorial foundation this week with the passing of Phil Hickerson at the age of 79.
For modern fans raised on billion-dollar wrestling companies, global television deals, and heavily produced sports entertainment, Hickerson’s name may not immediately register alongside the industry’s most commercially recognizable stars.
But that would completely misunderstand the era he came from.
Because wrestling was not built only by the Hogans, Flairs, Rhodeses, and Sammartinos of the world.
It was built by men like Phil Hickerson.
Men who could walk into a town with nothing but a sneer, a rough reputation, and enough credibility to make an audience genuinely angry before the opening bell ever rang.
Phil Hickerson belonged to a version of professional wrestling that is rapidly disappearing from living memory. A version where every territory had its own culture, every arena had its own atmosphere, and every heel had to convince local fans that he might actually be dangerous.
And few wrestlers fit that world more naturally than Hickerson.
Wrestling Before National Expansion
To understand Phil Hickerson’s importance, you first have to understand the wrestling business he entered.
When Hickerson broke into wrestling in the early 1970s, the territorial system still controlled professional wrestling across North America. The industry was fragmented into regional promotions connected loosely through the National Wrestling Alliance, each territory developing its own stars, styles, and identities.
Memphis wrestling did not feel like Mid-Atlantic wrestling.
Florida did not feel like Texas.
The WWWF did not feel like Georgia Championship Wrestling.
Every territory spoke its own language.
And Memphis wrestling, in particular, thrived on emotional violence.
The Memphis territory was loud, gritty, chaotic, and deeply personal. The crowds were not passive observers waiting for catchphrases and entrance videos. Fans in Memphis wanted blood feuds. They wanted villains they could hate. They wanted heroes who felt like they belonged to them.
The wrestling often looked rough because it was rough.
And Phil Hickerson looked like he had been built specifically for that environment.
Born in Jackson, Tennessee in 1947, Hickerson debuted professionally in 1974 and quickly established himself as one of the territory’s most believable antagonists. He carried himself less like a polished television performer and more like a man who might legitimately start a fight outside the building after the show ended.
That authenticity mattered in the territory era.
Modern wrestling often asks fans to admire performers.
Territory wrestling asked fans to emotionally invest in conflict.
Hickerson understood that instinctively.
The Bicentennial Kings and Southern Wrestling at Full Volume
Although Hickerson found success throughout his career, his most famous run came alongside Dennis Condrey as one half of The Bicentennial Kings.
The name itself sounded almost absurdly patriotic.
The team itself was anything but.
Hickerson and Condrey wrestled with the kind of ugly aggression that made Southern wrestling crowds furious. Their matches felt less choreographed than survived. They insulted crowds, cheated openly, and embraced the kind of villainy that territory wrestling depended upon.
And fans responded exactly the way promoters hoped they would.
With anger.
Real anger.
The Bicentennial Kings became one of the defining heel teams of the Memphis territory during the late 1970s, collecting championships throughout the region while battling stars like Jerry Lawler, Bill Dundee, and Tojo Yamamoto during one of the hottest stretches in Memphis wrestling history.
But titles were never the true currency of territory wrestling.
Emotion was.
And Hickerson understood emotional wrestling better than many performers who would eventually become far more nationally famous.
Fans wanted somebody to hate.
Hickerson gave them exactly that.
The Lost Art of the Believable Heel
One of the hardest things for younger fans to fully grasp is how differently wrestling audiences once interacted with villains.
Today’s wrestling crowds often celebrate heels for being entertaining. Fans admire performances even while booing the character.
Territory-era audiences were different.
Especially in Memphis.
A wrestler like Phil Hickerson was not trying to become cool. He was not trying to become secretly liked online. He was not building a merchandise brand or chasing viral moments.
He was trying to provoke hostility.
And the hostility in those buildings could become frighteningly real.
The best heels of the territory era carried an almost uncomfortable authenticity. Fans believed they were dangerous men. In some cases, fans believed they were simply bad human beings.
That emotional realism is one of the reasons old Memphis wrestling still feels unique decades later.
The violence felt personal.
The insults felt personal.
The rivalries felt personal.
Phil Hickerson thrived inside that environment because he never looked artificial. He looked like a product of the same Southern bars, roads, and rough edges as the audiences paying to see him lose.
That made him effective.
Very effective.
Wrestling’s Strange Ability to Reinvent Itself
Like many territory veterans, Hickerson’s career also reflected professional wrestling’s bizarre ability to swing between seriousness and absurdity without warning.
Over time, he worked throughout various territories and even toured internationally in Japan with All Japan Pro Wrestling. Yet one of the more memorable later chapters of his career came when he reinvented himself in Memphis under the intentionally ridiculous gimmick of “PY Chu-Hi,” a faux-Japanese character managed by Tojo Yamamoto.
That type of character shift feels ridiculous today.
But old-school wrestling was full of those contradictions.
That flexibility was part of wrestling’s strange charm during the territorial years. The business had not yet been standardized into one national presentation style. Every territory developed its own strange ecosystem of personalities and storytelling approaches.
Hickerson survived because he understood how to adapt without losing the core thing that made him valuable... Believability.
The Wrestlers Who Held the Territories Together
Modern wrestling history understandably focuses heavily on the largest stars.
But the territorial system did not survive for decades because of only a handful of superstars.
It survived because every territory needed dependable wrestlers. Phil Hickerson was one of those wrestlers.
The men beneath the very top of the card were essential to the wrestling ecosystem. They filled out touring schedules, anchored feuds, and gave territories their personality. Without them, the industry’s legendary stars never become legendary in the first place.
The territory system required depth.
It required atmosphere.
It required believable conflict.
Wrestlers like Hickerson supplied that foundation night after night.
That is why his passing matters historically even if casual modern fans are unfamiliar with his work.
When wrestlers like Phil Hickerson pass away, wrestling loses more than another former performer.
It loses another direct link to the territorial era itself.
The Vanishing Generation
The reality facing wrestling historians and longtime fans today is unavoidable.
The territorial generation is disappearing.
Each passing year removes more wrestlers who experienced ,the territory roads, the old armories, the regional TV studios, the smoky arenas, the endless drives between towns, the emotional intensity of local wrestling culture
And with them disappear firsthand memories from one of the most unique periods in professional wrestling history.
That is part of why preserving wrestling history matters. This is why Wrestling Fans International Association (WFIA) matters. WFIA.orgWFIA.org
Not simply the title changes or match results.
But the atmosphere.
The personalities.
The regional identities.
The people who made wrestling feel alive in different ways across different territories.
Phil Hickerson represented that world.
A world where wrestling still felt local.
Still felt dangerous.
Still felt deeply tied to the cities and fans supporting it.
And while wrestling has evolved dramatically since those years, the territorial foundation built by wrestlers like Hickerson still echoes throughout the industry today.
Because before wrestling became global content…
…it belonged to towns, territories, crowds, and rough-edged men like Phil Hickerson.
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