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Jem Mace

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British boxer (1831-1910)

James Mace
BornJames Mace
(1831-04-08)8 April 1831
Beeston, Norfolk, England
Died30 November 1910(1910-11-30) (aged 79)
Jarrow, County Durham, England
NationalityBritish
Other namesThe Gypsy
Statistics
Weight(s)Won Welter - Heavyweight titles
Boxing range 61.6 Kg -79.3 Kg (136-175 lb)
Height176 cm (5 ft 9.3 in)
Boxing record
Total fights37* (3 No Decisions)
Wins25*
Wins by KON/A
Losses5
Draws5

James "Jem" Mace (8 April 1831 – 30 November 1910) was an English boxing champion, primarily during the bare-knuckle era. He was born at Beeston, Norfolk. Although nicknamed "The Gypsy", he denied Romani ethnicity in his autobiography. Fighting in England, at the height of his career between 1860 and 1866, he won the English Welterweight, Heavyweight, and Middleweight Championships and was considered one of the most scientific boxers of the era. Most impressively, he held the World Heavyweight Championship from 1870 to 1871 while fighting in the United States.

Early life

Mace was born the fifth of eight children to blacksmith William and his wife Ann Rudd Mace on 8 April 1831, in the remote village of Beeston, in rural Norfolk, England. Before boxing, he was a violinist.

Career

In the early 1850s, during his days as an exhibition boxer at Nat Langham's Rum Pum-pas boxing club at Cambrian Stores near what is now London's Charing Cross Road, Mace once boxed Archibald William Douglas, the 8th Marquess of Queensberry, known as Viscount Drumlanrig. Douglas had served as a former member of the House of Commons and was the father of John Douglas, credited with helping to establish boxing's modern Marquess of Queensberry Rules. During the same period and earlier, Mace completed what might be considered an apprenticeship in the boxing booth of former English middleweight champion Nat Langham, where he fought many talented amateurs, and a few men with the skills of professionals, touring and often performing at county fairs. He would continue to supplement his income by performing exhibitions and giving sparring and training sessions for Langham's boxing club in London's Westminster through the early 1860s. During his early work at county fairs, he was even known to play his violin to perform for the audience when he wasn't boxing amateurs and volunteers.

In one of his early bouts, at the age of 24, Mace defeated Bob Slack decisively on 2 October 1855 in Mildenhall, northeast of Cambridge, winning in nine rounds and only 14 minutes. On 17 February 1857, Mace defeated Bill Thorpe, an opponent close to his own height and weight, near Canvey Island, North of Kent, off the Thames Estuary in Essex, although the original location was the North Kentish marshes. Mace dominated the fighting and in the 18th round delivered a stinging left and right to Thorpe's nose, with the right causing a knockdown. Thorpe could not rise or continue the fight and his handler threw up the sponge ending the fight after 23 minutes. The match was fought for £50 a side, and saw a good crowd considering both men were novices. Pugilistica took note of Mace's speed, and the precision and strength with which he delivered his punches.

On 21 September 1858, Mace met Bob Brettle on the banks of the River Medway at Thames Haven, on the Essex Coast, for £100 a side, using London Prize Ring Rules, with Mace conceding the bout in only two rounds lasting three minutes. A number of boxing historians now consider the bout to have been for the Welterweight Championship of England. In a second attempt at Brettle, Mace took the Welterweight title in five rounds near Foolness Island, by Yanklett Creek in Essex.

On 25 January 1859, Mace met the undefeated Posh Price for £50 a side at Aldershot Common, Hampshire. In the 11th and last round, Mace hit Price with a strong blow on the left arm causing swelling, and likely a break. Price's seconds threw up the sponge after the injury became apparent in only 17 minutes of fighting. In a rough and damaging match, Mace displayed his characteristic scientific style of boxing. Mace was aged less than 27 in this early match, but his blows were hard and precise, and he showed his customary speed, which would serve him well in his later career.

Bob Travers

Mace met the black boxer Bob Travers on 21 February 1860. Travers, like Mace, was a friend of Nat Langham, and had boxed, and entertained, at his club at Westminster's Cambrian Stores. Mace would later compete against Travers in foot races. Their boxing match was for £50 a side, and they first fought six rounds off the Thames at the North Kent Marshes and then, after the police intervened, they moved to a second location which was closer to, but still to the southeast of London. By the 33rd and 34th rounds, it was evident that, though Travers tried to lead, Mace had the better defence, and continued to get in more and harder punches. Having had the better of the match, Mace finally won on a foul that occurred in the 57th round, when Travers appeared to intentionally throw himself on the ground to avoid his blow after one hour, thirty-one minutes of fighting.

English heavyweight champion, 1861

Jem Mace, baseball card

On 18 June 1861, he first won the title of Heavyweight Champion of England by defeating reigning champion Sam Hurst in 8 rounds, and 40 minutes at Medway Island, Kent. Langham had carefully schooled Mace in the finer points of boxing. Though Hurst was as much as 50 pounds heavier, and at least three inches taller, he may have been better schooled and experienced in wrestling, and had broken his leg the year before, likely affecting his speed and form. He was considered by many to be an awkward boxer and to lack speed due largely to his weight and size. After taking a commanding lead, in the eighth, Mace stepped back after lightly hitting Hurst, who had lost nearly all ability to defend himself. Hurst unwisely made another charge, and Mace was forced to land another blow, after which Hurst's seconds threw up the sponge, ending the match after 50 minutes. Mace showed skill both in his defence and attack. Hurst, who fought relatively few professional bouts, retired from the ring not long after his loss.

Heavyweight title defences

King, 1863

His victory over Hurst led to his first defence of the English heavyweight title against Tom King on a cold and rainy 28 January 1862 for £200 a side, before a crowd of around 400. This first title defence, staged in Godstone, England, was fought bare knuckle under London Prize Ring Rules and lasted for 43 rounds and 68 minutes. Mace had studied King and taken careful notes on his style, but King outweighed him by as much as 20 pounds and had a height advantage as well. For the first 30 rounds King fought evenly with Mace, the reigning champion, but in the second half of the fight Mace took control, and despite being nearly blinded in both eyes by King's blows in the early fighting, finished King with a crushing blow to the throat in the final round. In the 30th, Mace tripped King with the back of his heel, pushing him forward, and King fell hard, awkwardly landing on his head. In the 40th, Mace downed King with two uppercuts to the jaw, and fell upon him. In the 43rd and final round, Mace landed another uppercut to the jaw or throat prior to several close in blows, and then threw King who collapsed and was unable to rise. Mace's most prominent injuries were to the left side of his face and eye.

King shot a right to Mace's left eye in the 20th, causing a knockdown, Nov, 1862

Mace and King met at Medway, 28 miles from London for a rematch less than a year later on 26 November 1862 for £200 a side. King was four years younger than Mace, roughly four inches taller, and approximately 20 pounds heavier. Mace seemed to dominate the infighting, though the pace of King's blows may have been faster, and he appeared to have won the 13th. In the opinion of several ringside reporters, Mace had a moderate lead up until the 20th round, when he landed a left to King's face. At this point, Mace still led the betting at 4–1.

Windham Cup, Feb 1863

About to administer a similar blow, Mace's foot slipped slightly and King administered a strong right under his eye on the left side of his nose, sending him to the ground and nearly causing a knockout. In the 21st, King administered the same blow to Mace with his right, again knocking Mace to the grass, and causing the vanquished boxer's seconds to concede the match after 28 minutes of fighting. King took the heavyweight crown, and Mace and his seconds fully conceded the loss.

On 24 February 1863, Mace was presented the Windham Gold Cup, a boxing trophy, by Sir William Frederick Windham at Criterion Hall, the precursor to the modern Criterion Theatre, in recognition of his winning the heavyweight boxing championship of England. The trophy, said to contain 100 ounces of gold, was presented at Westminster's Leicester Square not far from Nat Langham's Cambrian Stores tavern and was considered to be worth £80,000 in modern currency.

English middleweight champion

Mace scores a left under Goss's defences, 1863

Mace was first recognised as English Middleweight champion on 1 September 1863, following his 19-round victory over Joe Goss, first staged at Wooton. The two boxers fought at catchweights of 10 stones, 10 pounds, or roughly 68kg (150lbs.), currently in the very light middleweight range. Very little fighting occurred at Wooton, and when the police intervened after 13 minutes, the fight was moved first to Bassett, then finally to Purfleet, Essex, near London. The purse was an exceptional £1000 to be split between the two boxers and the fighting ended at Purfleet after 18 rounds taking two hours and ten minutes. In the final round, Mace landed a right handed lunge to the left of Goss's jaw that knocked him out. Puglistica wrote that "Goss was entirely overmatched in science, length, and weight".

Regaining heavyweight championship

Mace shoots right to Goss's left eye, 1866

He regained the English heavyweight championship against Goss in a 21-round victory on 6 August 1866 between Purfleet, Essex, and Gravesend on the North bank of the Thames, 20 miles East of London. By one reliable account, the ring used was only 15 feet square, eight square feet shorter than the regulation size. Mace was said to be suffering from a strained left foot or ankle. In a close physical matching, Goss was nearly the same height, and only a few pounds lighter, at around 158 pounds. Goss, though he had the vitality of a man nearly seven years younger, did not gain from the advantage, as Mace's experience, skill, and conditioning seemed to count for more than the wear he had received from his years in the ring. Mace deftly avoided Goss's strong rushes with a shift of his shoulders or a bob of his head, showing great flexibility and speed. Mace could strike or counter quickly, particularly using his left, and often did so under Goss's defences, even in the early rounds where he scored early and with precision. Mace, in the 14th through 20th rounds, got the better of Goss, frequently striking his left eye with his right fist. At the end of the match in the 21st round, Mace remained strong, but Goss was groggy and weak. Mace was said to have very few injuries, but Goss had been battered around the "head, face, neck, and chest", with loosened teeth and badly battered eyes. In the final round, Goss's seconds threw up the sponge ending the fight when their boxer staggered in his attempt to land a blow on Mace, who defended himself by merely stepping aside.

Bare-knuckle boxing was an outlawed sport and both boxers, trainers, and seconds were often liable for arrest and prosecution. In 1867, Mace was arrested on the night before his scheduled title defence against Ned O'Baldwin in Woodford Essex, by the Metropolitan Police. He was held over in court not to fight again, and the incident influenced him to seek his fortune in America.

America

In 1869 he relocated to the United States where prizefighting was still flourishing. He toured with the celebrated American boxer John C. Heenan, giving exhibitions of glove boxing.

World heavyweight champion, 1870

In what should be considered his most significant victory, on 10 May 1870, he defeated the English-born American boxer Tom Allen for a purse of $2500 a side or roughly the impressive sum of £3080, in a ten-round bout lasting around 45 minutes in Kennerville, Louisiana. The fight was for what is now considered by boxing historians to have been the heavyweight world championship, though it was often considered an American championship as well. Allen was ten years younger than Mace's advanced age of 39. Allen threw Mace in the sixth, but when he threw Mace again in the last round, he broke or dislocated his shoulder when he landed awkwardly on the ground. Allen had injuries to his eyes and mouth largely from lightning-fast left jabs, while Mace's face looked nearly untouched.

On 6 April 1871, Mace suffered a loss in New Orleans to Gentleman Jose Alonso.

He defended the heavyweight title in one of his last significant fights against Joe Coburn on 30 November 1871 in a ten-round draw at Bay, St. Louis, Mississippi, 40 miles from New Orleans. Both men were close in weight and height. The first scheduled title fight between the two, in 1864, did not go ahead as Mace failed to show. Coburn was furious that Mace had prevented him from participating in the lucrative match, which would have drawn a large crowd. In the November 1871 fight, Mace was thrown repeatedly, and took some hard falls. Coburn injured his right wrist in the fifth as he threw Mace hard over the ropes. In the eighth round, known as "chancery", Coburn held Mace around the head and punched him several times. In the tenth and eleventh, Mace's left hand becomes more swollen, and difficult to use. At the request of the referee, the fighters agreed to call it a draw in the 12th round, as neither was inclined to strongly engage the other, largely due to their injured hands. The torrential rain may have partly been the cause of the abbreviated match as it required the boxers to fight up to their knees in mud.

Glove boxing

Following an attempt on his life in Mississippi, he returned to England. On the evening of 16 December 1876, he was back in America, this time as a glove boxer, and in an historic early clash for a purse of $100 under Queensberry Rules, he defeated Bill Davis at National Guard Hall at Virginia City, Nevada. In the last and ninth round, Mace found Davis's eye and scored, and when the fight was called at the end of the round with both men clinching, the total score was 52 for Mace and 32 for Davis. It was a convincing win for Mace who landed more blows, but Davis showed well against a top-rated opponent.

At the age of 58, on 7 February 1890, he fought a match with the much younger boxer Charlie Mitchell of Birmingham in Glasgow, Scotland for the vacant English heavyweight title, but lost in four rounds.

Exhibitions

As Mace rose to become the British champion he supplemented his income with exhibition work in the popular Victorian travelling circuses, becoming a circus proprietor himself for a short time. Most notably, he toured Lancashire with Pablo Fanque's Circus Royal in the late summer and autumn of 1861—Fanque being England's first black circus proprietor. Fanque was later honoured in the Beatles song "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!"

In the summer of 1870, he gave three-round exhibitions in New Jersey and New York with American champion Joe Coburn.

In 1878–79, Mace had as many as 30 three-round exhibitions with John Thompson in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and two with the Australian champion he had mentored, Larry Foley. These exhibitions, fought with gloves, paved the way for the worldwide acceptance of gloved boxing, and eventually the newer Queensberry Rules which required new gloves for each boxer. In 1882 he toured New Zealand where he discovered future world heavyweight champion Bob Fitzsimmons. With the help of his protégé, Australian champion Larry Foley, he schooled a generation of mostly Australian boxers, including the Caribbean-born Peter Jackson, multiple-weight-class champion, British-born Bob Fitzsimmons, and Young Griffo. In 1883, he returned to America as manager of the New Zealander Herbert Slade. He toured extensively with Slade in exhibitions in the latter half of 1882 in New Zealand and in the first half of 1883, first in New York, and then back in England. Around 1885, he performed a benefit with his close friend and boxing partner Bill Clark in New York.

On 10 February 1883, Mace returned to England after the death of his son Edward Albert from drowning in the Thames, and resumed his English exhibitions by April of that year with Herbert Slade. In 1884, he performed English exhibitions with Ed Smith and Jack Smith and toured England with exhibitions against Jack Knifton and Charlie Mitchell from 1886 to 1887. He continued to fight the occasional exhibition in England through 1895.

In December 1896, returning to New York City to fight Mike Donovan in a brief exhibition, he was acclaimed by world heavyweight champion James J. Corbett as "the man to whom we owe the changes that have elevated the sport". Mace continued his career exclusively as an exhibition boxer and his last recorded entry into the ring was in 1909 when he was 78 years of age. On 8 March 1897, he performed a four-round exhibition with former world welterweight champion Tommy Ryan in Syracuse, New York, before returning to England that Summer.

He continued to fight exhibitions in 1897, and in 1898 opened a boxing academy in Cape Town, South Africa. He performed exhibitions with Jack Valentine in Cape Town in 1903 and 1904.

Other pursuits and death

Mace was a skillful violinist who originally aspired to a career in music and continued with the art through his career as a boxer. Some believe the destruction of his violin in his early life by three thugs in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, and his subsequent anger and retaliation led him to a life in the ring. In 1856, he was credited with playing "The Cuckoo Song", and "Black Jack Davey" on his violin at the Strand, a supper club in London, while afterwards posing shirtless. In 1862 Mace began his own circus, appearing throughout England including Canterbury, Brighton, Ipswich, and Norwich through December of the year. Earlier in 1862, he had learned the trade and been well paid sparring in safe exhibitions with Tom King at Ginett's Circus, in Oxford, Portsmouth, and Exeter.

In 1870, Mace had a small role in the Shakespearean production of "As You Like It", on Broadway's Niblo Theatre in New York City and played several shows to crowded houses. Though he acted as a wrestler and spoke only a few lines of the script, the rougher patrons from New York's "Bowery" enjoyed his realistic portrayal of a wrestler and knew him as a famous heavyweight boxer.

Hotelier and saloons owner

In 1866, Mace became the proprietor of the Strawberry Gardens pleasure grounds at West Derby, Lancashire, near Liverpool a beautifully landscaped park which featured the sports of running, bowling, jumping, wrestling and boxing. Mace himself would often be featured in the boxing displays. At various times, he was also a professional runner, bar owner and keeper, circus proprietor and racehorse owner. The White Swan on Norwich's Swan Lane was one of the first inns from which he displayed his sign in the mid 1850s. He kept the Capitol Saloon in New York City for several years, on Twenty-Third Street in Manhattan. With his partner, Mace profited from his percentage of the gambling upstairs which included Faro, Roulette, Boston props, an old card game, Rouge et Noir, using red and black diamond cards, and other card games. The Saloon was frequented by notorious underworld criminals including shanghaier Shang Draper. John Morrissey, the former boxer, Dead Rabbits criminal gang leader, and Tammany Hall politician had a bloodless dispute in Mace's saloon. In 1871, Jimmy Haggerty, a gangster from Philadelphia, was mortally wounded in a bar fight in Mace's Saloon from a gunshot delivered by Reddy the Blacksmith, of the Bowery Boys gang. Mace later ran a hotel in Australia's Melbourne suburb of Flemington with boxer George Thompson as a partner. By 1881, while running his hotel, he owned racehorses, a few of which he ran in Australia's Melbourne Cup. In 1902, at the Coronation Tournament at London's Royal Albert Hall, Mace sponsored or participated in a show honouring the coronation of King Edward VII that combined boxing with wrestling, fencing, running, cycling and gymnastics, as part of England's National Sporting Club.

In his late sixties, after he returned to England, he ran the Black Lion Hotel on Cohill Street in Birmingham.

Personal life

Mace married three times, twice bigamously, and fathered at least fourteen children by five women. He is believed by a few sources to have had an affair with famous American Louisiana-born actress Adah Isaacs Menken, who performed frequently in England.

During his life Mace made and gambled away a considerable fortune. After the death of his wife, according to one source, he began to lose his fortune rapidly, and in his last years lived on the English old-age pension of five shillings (5/-) a week and the generosity of friends.

Death

Mace ended his life as a penniless street musician in Jarrow, Durham, with his death assigned to natural causes, and was buried in an unmarked grave at Anfield Cemetery, Liverpool, England. Funeral services were conducted by his son Alfred, a priest. Several sources reported that his total net worth acquired during his prime may have reached $1,000,000 in American 1910 currency or roughly £800,000 in the British currency of 1870, or £20,000,000 in today's currency. In 2002, the Merseyside Former Boxers' Association arranged an attractive black marble engraved memorial headstone for his grave.

Honours

Mace has a commemorative plaque on Swan Lane in the centre of Norwich, the site of the White Sun tavern which he ran.

Ring Magazine established a Hall of Fame in 1954, and most of their members subsequently became members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Mace was the 34th inductee to the organization in 1990.

He was a 2014 inductee for the Australian National Boxing Hall of Fame in the International category.

In popular culture

"Lando", a western by Louis L'Amour calls him "the world champion prize fighter, an Englishman and a gypsy. He whipped the best of them, and he was not a large man, but he was among the first to apply science to the art of fist fighting." "By footwork you can shift a man out of position... Certain blows automatically create openings for the blows to follow." "Never weighing more than 160 pounds, he had been the world's champion, defeating men as much as 60 pounds heavier."

Professional boxing record

No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
39 Draw 27–5–7 United States Mike Donovan PTS 4 3 Sep 1897 United Kingdom Olympic Club, Birmingham, England
38 Draw 27–5–6 United States Mike Donovan PTS 4 14 Dec 1896 United States Broadway Athletic Club, New York City, New York, U.S.
37 Loss 27–5–5 United Kingdom Charlie Mitchell PTS 4 7 Feb 1890 United Kingdom The Glasgow Gaiety Theatre, Glasgow, Scotland For English heavyweight title
36 Win 27–4–5 New Zealand George Belcher TKO 4 (6) 28 Oct 1882 New Zealand Theatre Royal, Christchurch, New Zealand
35 Win 26–4–5 United States Bill Davis KO 4 26 Jan 1877 United States San Francisco, California, U.S. Marquess of Queensberry Rules
34 Win 25–4–5 United Kingdom Tom Allen ? ? 29 Jul 1876 United States Virginia City, Nevada, U.S.
33 Win 24–4–5 United States Martin ? ? 15 Jun 1872 United States California, U.S.
32 Draw 23–4–5 United States Joe Coburn NC 12 30 Nov 1871 United States Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, U.S. Retained English and World heavyweight titles
31 Draw 23–4–4 United Kingdom Tom Allen NC 1 11 May 1871 Canada Port Ryerse, Ontario, Canada Retained English and World heavyweight titles
30 Win 23–4–3 United Kingdom Tom Allen PTS 10 10 May 1870 United States Kennerville, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. Retained English heavyweight title;
Won World heavyweight title
29 Win 22–4–3 United Kingdom Joe Goss PTS 21 6 Aug 1866 United Kingdom Purfleet, Essex, England Won English heavyweight title
28 Draw 21–4–3 United Kingdom Joe Goss NC 1 24 May 1866 United Kingdom Longfield Court, Kent, England For English heavyweight title
27 Win 21–4–2 United Kingdom Joe Goss KO 19 1 Sep 1863 United Kingdom Thames Haven, Kent, England Won English middleweight title
26 Loss 20–4–2 United Kingdom Tom King PTS 21 26 Nov 1862 United Kingdom Thames Haven, Kent, England Lost English heavyweight title
25 Win 20–3–2 United Kingdom Tom King KO 43 28 Jan 1862 United Kingdom Godstone, Surrey, England Retained English heavyweight title
24 Win 19–3–2 United Kingdom Sam Hurst KO 8 18 Jun 1861 United Kingdom Medway Island, Kent, England Won English heavyweight title
23 Win 18–3–2 United Kingdom Bob Brettle KO 5 20 Sep 1860 United Kingdom Yantlet Creek, Essex, England Won English middleweight title
22 Draw 17–3–2 United Kingdom Bob Brettle PTS 6 19 Sep 1860 United Kingdom Clinch’s Farm, Oxfordshire, England For English middleweight title
21 Win 17–3–1 United Kingdom Bob Travers DQ 57 21 Feb 1860 United Kingdom North Kent Marshes, Kent, England
20 Draw 16–3–1 United Kingdom Bob Travers PTS 6 20 Feb 1860 United Kingdom North Kent Marshes, Kent, England
19 Win 16–3 United Kingdom Posh Price KO 11 25 Jan 1859 United Kingdom Aldershot, Hampshire, England
18 Loss 15–3 United Kingdom Bob Brettle KO 2 21 Sep 1858 United Kingdom Medway, Kent, England For English middleweight title
17 Win 15–2 United Kingdom Bill Thorpe PTS 18 17 Feb 1857 United Kingdom Canvey Island, Essex, England
16 Win 14–2 ? ? 1856 United Kingdom Rum-Pum-Pas, London, England
15 Win 13–2 United Kingdom Mo Betson TKO ? 1856 United Kingdom Rum-Pum-Pas, London, England
14 Win 12–2 United Kingdom Jonny Walker TKO ? 1856 United Kingdom Rum-Pum-Pas, London, England
13 Win 11–2 United Kingdom Archibald William Douglas ? ? 1856 United Kingdom Rum-Pum-Pas, London, England
12 Win 10–2 United Kingdom Bob Slack KO 9 2 Oct 1855 United Kingdom Mildenhall, Suffolk, England
11 Loss 9–2 United Kingdom Nickels ? ? 1853 United Kingdom England
10 Win 9–1 United Kingdom Gutteridge ? ? 1853 United Kingdom England
9 Win 8–1 United Kingdom Lincolnshire Bulldog ? ? 1853 United Kingdom Rampling Horse, Lancashire, England
8 Win 7–1 United Kingdom Tom Harvey KO 31 12 Nov 1852 United Kingdom Harlaston Fair, Staffordshire, England
7 Win 6–1 United Kingdom Martin ? ? 1851 United Kingdom England
6 Win 5–1 United Kingdom John Pratt KO 8 14 Jan 1851 United Kingdom Drayton Becker, Norwich, England
5 Win 4–1 United Kingdom Farden Smith KO 5 1850 United Kingdom Norwich Hill, Norwich, England
4 Win 3–1 United Kingdom Tom Brewer KO ? 1850 United Kingdom Horncastle Fair, Lincolnshire, England
3 Loss 2–1 United Kingdom John Pratt KO 50 17 Apr 1850 United Kingdom Drayton Becker, Norwich, England
2 Win 2–0 United Kingdom Charles Pinfold KO 4 1845 United Kingdom Norwich Hill, Norwich, England
1 Win 1–0 United Kingdom Sydney Smith KO ? 1845 United Kingdom Wisbech, Cambridge, England

See also

References

  1. ^ "Jem Mace Boxing Record". Cyber Boxing Zone. CBZ. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  2. ^ Roberts, James, and Skutt, Alexander,Boxing Register, (2006) International Boxing Hall of Fame, McBooks Press, Ithaca, New York, pg. 35
  3. ^ "Championship in Kenner". Championship in Kenner. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  4. Born to a blacksmith in "Jem Mace in His Old Age", The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, pg. 45, 30 May 1909
  5. ^ "Jem Mace, the Father of Modern Boxing". Boxing Scene. 7 October 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  6. "Nat Langham". Jem Mace Life History.co.uk. co.uk. Archived from the original on 23 September 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  7. ^ Miles, Henry Downes (1906). Pugilistica. Vol. 3. New York Public Library. Edinburgh: J. Grant. pp. 444–563.
  8. Miles, Henry Downes (1906). Pugilistica. Vol. 3. New York Public Library. Edinburgh: J. Grant. pp. 436–7.
  9. "Sam Hurst Boxing Record". Cyber Boxing Zone. CBZ. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  10. Miles, Henry Downes (1906). Pugilistica. Vol. 3. New York Public Library. Edinburgh: J. Grant. pp. 461–3.
  11. Cheshire Observer, Chester, Cheshire England, pg. 3, 1 February 1862
  12. Additional fight details in "The Fight", The Era, London, Greater London, England, pg. 14, 2 February 1862
  13. King took the 13th and later won the fight with a right in The Bristol Mercury and Daily Post, Bristol, Bristol, England, pg. 12, 29 November 1862
  14. "The Second Struggle for the Championship", Birmingham Daily Post, Birmingham, West Midlands, England, pg. 5, 27 November 1862
  15. "Pugilism", Reynolds Newspapers, London, Greater London, England, pg. 5, 23 November 1862
  16. The knockout blow was a right by King in the 20th and 21st in "The Fight-Wednesday", The Nottingham Guardian, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England, pg. 8, 28 November 1862
  17. Date of presentation in Illustrated Sporting News, London, England pg. 476, 7 March 1863, pg. 476
  18. "Great Fight for £1000 between Mace and Goss", Sheffield and Rotterham Independent, Sheffield, England, pg. 3, 2 September 1863
  19. First location lasted only 13 minutes before police intervened in "The Fight Between Jem Mace and Goss", The Morning Post, London, Greater London, pg. 7, 2 September 1863
  20. "Slashing Fight Between Jem Mace and Joe Goss", The Nottinghamshire Guardian, Nottingham, England, pg. 7, 10 August 1866
  21. Famous Fights, Past and Present. Vol. 1. London. 1901. pp. 170–75. Retrieved 11 May 2019.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. Mace took the 14th through 16th in "Fight for 400 between Mace and Goss", Cheshire Observer, Chester, Chesire, England, pg. 2, 11 August 1866
  23. "Fight for the Championship of America", Sheffield and Rotterdam Independent, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, p.4, 12 May 1870
  24. Allen threw Mace in the last round but injured his shoulder in "Fight Between Mace and Allen", New Orleans Republican, New Orleans, Louisiana, pg. 1, 11 May 1870
  25. Lasted 45 minutes in "Last of Old School Champions Gone", The Washington Post, Washington, D.C., pg. 10, 1 December 1910
  26. , boxingnewsonline.net
  27. "Casey, Jamey, Joe Coburn:125 Years". Irish Post. 6 December 2015. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  28. Coburn threw Mace in the fifth in Lawrence Daily Journal, Lawrence, Kansas, pg. 2, 2 December 1871
  29. Injured right wrist of Coburn in "The Prize Ring", New Orleans Republican, New Orleans, Louisiana, p.1, 2 December 1871
  30. ^ "Jem Mace Autobiography". Fifty Years a Fighter. Peerless Press. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  31. "Messenger", Weekly Nevada State Journal, Reno, Nevada, pg. 2, 9 December 1876
  32. Reprinted from the Virginia City Chronicle, in "A Lively Encounter", The Morning Post, Camden, New Jersey, pg. 1, 2 January 1877
  33. The Father of Modern Boxing: The Last Bare-Knuckle Heavyweight Champion of the World. Archived 9 September 2012 at archive.today Retrieved 2011-5-1
  34. Fought an exhibition with Bill Clark in "Jem Mace, Greatest of Early Day Ring Champions, is Dead", The Inter Ocean, Chicago, Illinois, pg. 4, 1 December 1910
  35. Death of son Albert in "The San Francisco Mail", The Age, Melbourne, Australia, pg. 3, 15 March 1883
  36. Mace was a musician in "The Prize Ring", New Orleans Republican, New Orleans, Louisiana, pg. 6, 5 May 1870
  37. The audiences were large in "Mr. Walter Montgomery Supporting Jem Mace", The Derby Mercury, Derby, Derbyshire, England, pg. 7, 21 December 1870
  38. Owned Strawberry Gardens in "Opening of the Strawberry Gardens", Liverpool Mercury, Liverpool, Mercyside, England, pg. 3, 7 May 1866
  39. "Are Gamblers Felons, Column 2", The New York Times, New York, New York, pg. 8, 10 July 1871
  40. Famous Fights, Past and Present. Vol. 1. London. 1901. p. 112. Retrieved 11 May 2019.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  41. Lived on old age pension in "Jem Mace, Greatest of Early Day Ring Champions, is Dead", The Inter Ocean, Chicago, Illinois, pg. 4, 1 December 1910
  42. Buried in Anfield in "Jem Mace Buried", The Guardian, London, Greater London, England, pg. 14, 7 December 1910
  43. Worth $1,000,000 in his prime in "Jem Mace, Prize Ring Hero Dies", The San Francisco Call, San Francisco, California, pg. 10, 1 December 1910
  44. Jem Mace: an extraordinary man with a huge legacy, Eastern Daily Press, 10 June 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  45. "International Boxing Hall of Fame Members". boxrec.com.
  46. L'Amour, Louis, "Lando", (1978), ISBN 0708902219 G. A. Thorpe publishers, Ulverscroft LP, pgs. 293-294, 495

External links

  • 'Master of the Ring' by Graham Gordon
  • New Book on Jem Mace. Preview
  • Jem Mace, Champion of the World
  • Biography of Jem Mace
  • Jem Mace the Gypsy
  • Swansong for Jem of a boxer
  • Jem Mace, 'The Last Bare Knuckle Heavy Weight Champion of the World' by Jason Mace
  • Mace appearing in Sydney 1877 performing his tableaux
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