http://www.peisportshalloffame.ca/perso ... .cfm?ID=88Starting as a 60-pound paperweight, Ace would remarkably move through every weight division in boxing. At his peak in the mid 1940's as the Maritime's middleweight champion, knocking out Moncton's Billy Landry in the first round to become the leading contender for the Canadian title, McCluskey would finally call it a day as heavyweight in 1959. Often fighting twice a month, the durable Ace relied on powerful arms and broad shoulders to deliver stunning blows from either hand. Only knocked out three times, Ace would win over fifty fights by way of knockout. During one memorable stretch in 1946, while fighting out of New York City, the battling Irishman engaged in over twelve fights in seven weeks, winning every contest. With his decision in March of that year over New Jersey's Johnny Harvey, it is notably the first time that an Island boxer ever fought at legendary Madison Square Gardens.
Losing only five of his 127 pro bouts, and one of those on a technicality, Ace (who now lives in Spring Brook with wife Barbara) never considered boxing to be work. In a recent interview, Ace observes, "If I had my day over again, I'd do it, right from scratch, I loved it so much." Born, he reckons, thirty-two years too soon to have made any real money from this brutal sport , McCluskey matched mitts with the toughest fighters of his era, among them Yvon Durelle and Roger Whynott, the latter fighter being held to a ten round draw in 1947 before a crowd of over four thousand at the old Charlottetown Forum.
I can't find any record of any of his fights.