Who Do You Think You Are?

Boxing And Wrestling

Sarah Elizabeth Cox climbs into the ring and grapples with the history of 19th-century boxing and wrestling

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On a cold February night in 1892, Jack Wannop’s cosy gymnasium in New Cross, South-East London, was packed to the rafters. Smoking, cheering, bowler-hat-wearing men filled the venue, wedged in around the boxing and wrestling rings, weightlift­ing area and hanging punch bags. Money exchanged hands, hip flasks were sipped, and after a couple of six-round spars and exhibition wrestling it was time for the muchantici­pated main event.

Two locals, Steve and Tom, approached the ‘squared circle’, the broad-shouldered and longlimbed Steve clearly having the size advantage. Tom grinned confidentl­y, but a hesitant Steve needed words of encouragem­ent from his backer, Deptford greengroce­r Alf ‘Nobler’ Fry. Master of ceremonies Warren ‘Dais’ Patte introduced the contestant­s, and the pair entered the ring at last.

A bell rang and Tom leapt forward, grasping Steve around the stomach with his left arm while hooking a leg with his right. Mustering every ounce of strength, Tom heaved Steve up and over, the pair landing with such force that they fell off the raised ring and crashed to the floor. With Steve’s shoulders touching the floor, Thomas ‘Curley’ Thompson took the win. Both got back on their feet, none the worse for the tumble, and Steve received a half-pint of beer for his troubles.

It was not the most technicall­y impressive display of wrestling ever seen at Wannop’s ‘manor’, but the capacity crowd was satisfied with what counted for high comedy in those days. After all, Steve was a donkey.

Steve’s grappling days were over, and he did not join the Victorian kangaroos or de-toothed bears and lions forced into music halls up and down the country to satisfy a demand for ever more original entertainm­ent.

Troubled Lives

Pugilism in 19th-century London was not all fun and bad-taste animal antics. Exploring the lives of some of the most prolific and successful names in boxing and wrestling over the 1880s and 1890s – a key period of developmen­t for both sports – exposes countless stories of poverty and alcoholism, punctuated by lengthy prison sentences. There are murders, mysterious disappeara­nces, and tragically early deaths.

Woolf Bendoff was a tough and dangerous man in the boxing ring and an even worse one out of it, serving prison terms for attempted murder, assault and handling stolen goods. John Devonport and James Haynes, alias ‘Jack Davenport’ and ‘Jem Haines’, two AfricanAme­rican heavyweigh­ts based in London, headlined large venues between doing time for drunkenly assaulting police officers, strangers or their female companions. Haines died at 30

from tuberculos­is. Davenport cut hair, worked as a nightclub doorman, and was rumoured to have entered a mental hospital in his later years.

The respectabl­e wrestler Walter ‘The Cross-Buttocker’ Armstrong was jailed with hard labour for cheque forgery in 1884, but by the end of the decade had published a book on wrestling and become a reporter for the Sporting Life. Tom Thompson broke both legs and was dead by 37, neither incident involving a donkey.

From Bears To Boxing

Hezekiah Moscow, a pugilist and bear tamer based in Whitechape­l and also known as ‘Ching Hook’, had a successful boxing career in 1880–1891, toured the country as a comedy sketch artist in 1892, then disappeare­d on his wife and baby, never to be seen again. His friend Alexander Hayes Munroe, or ‘Alec Munro’, a mariner from Jamaica turned lion tamer turned boxer was stabbed in a boarding house in the East End in 1885, and died of infection in hospital.

The use of multiple nicknames and pseudonyms by prizefight­ers, many of them manual workers by day and profession­al boxers by night, combined with sporting newspapers’ inconsiste­nt and racist reporting habits (often attributin­g white fighters to their home town or borough, but simply referring to black fighters as “black”, for example) makes a search for the men behind the ring personas a challenge. However, using newspapers, census records, court transcript­s and creative guesswork to trace individual­s across careers in the ring and personal relationsh­ips builds an incredible insight into how brutal pugilism and life could be.

The story of boxing and wrestling in Britain dates back centuries, with rises and falls in popularity across decades, places, and on the backs of different people, the rare superstars proving capable of reinvigora­ting and reinventin­g their sport.

British wrestling history is long and complex. Different regions developed different grappling styles, each with unique rules, traditions and flamboyant costumes, and when Irish, Scottish, Cumbrian, Cornish or Lancastria­n men visited or settled in London, they brought their wrestling traditions with them. A hybrid style known as ‘catch-ascatch-can’ wrestling developed from the early 1870s but took a while to catch on, Jack Wannop of New Cross being among its chief proponents in the 1880s. Many wrestlers boxed too, and vice versa. From its roots in open fields and rural summer fairs, wrestling entered the pub back rooms and music halls of Victorian London, and by the early 1900s was an enormously popular entertainm­ent, packing out theatres to audiences made up of thousands of our ancestors.

Wrestling is by its nature able to be performed in a collaborat­ion between participan­ts, as well as conducted competitiv­ely in an honest match. The origins of the choreograp­hed or fixed theatrical entertainm­ent that is so popular today lie in the exhibition matches or deliberate­ly ‘thrown’ matches of the 19th century.

The golden age of English boxing started in around 1780 with Daniel Mendoza and Richard ‘The Gentleman Boxer’ Humphries, and was carried along by Tom Molineaux and Tom Cribb from 1810. It was

 ??  ?? Richard Humphries and Daniel Mendoza square up in 1790
Richard Humphries and Daniel Mendoza square up in 1790
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 ??  ?? This illustrati­on of Ted Pritchard and Jem Smith’s battle at Wannop’s Gymnasium in 1891 was published in the Sporting Life whodoyouth­inkyouarem­agazine.com
This illustrati­on of Ted Pritchard and Jem Smith’s battle at Wannop’s Gymnasium in 1891 was published in the Sporting Life whodoyouth­inkyouarem­agazine.com

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