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About 1860:
Islamic jihadists in Northern Nigeria equip their infantry with flintlock muskets. They got these
firearms from the Berbers, who were then busily reequipping with percussion-capped rifles.
East African armorers start making narrow-bladed iron spears. The inspiration for this
development was evidently fashion, as the narrow-bladed weapons do not kill any better than the
leaf-bladed spears they replaced. The reluctance the same East Africans showed at adopting
firearms was also due to fashion. The Masaai and Kikuyu, for instance, viewed firearms as the
weapons of cowards and meat-hunters rather than the weapons of men.
A 60-year old man named Yang Lu-ch'an starts teaching boxing in Peking. Although Yang's
style, known as t'ai chi ch'uan or "Grand Ultimate Boxing," used soft, flowing techniques rather
than hard, linear techniques, it was quite capable of defeating first-rate Shaolin boxers. Yang was
a native of Hopeh Province, and first learned inner boxing from Ch'ang-hsing of Honan Province.
He then taught the method to his sons Pan-hou and Chien-hou, and the latter taught his sons
Shao-hou and Ch'eng-fu.
The Yankton Dakotas purchase the right to do the Grass Dance from the Omahas. Although a
dance of peace, the Grass Dance was originally associated with thunder and performed by
warriors. So white observers began calling it the Sioux war dance. And perhaps it was a war
dance, as after the Custer fight of 1876, the Dakotas changed the words to mean "Custer is your
friend/Here is his hair."
Japanese wrestlers develop nokori ai, an early type of randori ("free practice") training. In it, the
wrestlers practiced one series of techniques on a partner who could only counter with an
agreed-upon series of techniques. While novel from a Japanese perspective, the procedure greatly
improved players' ability to adapt during free situations. Japanese martial art training had
previously relied almost exclusively on prearranged sets known as kata, or "forms." While the
emphasis on forms made instruction easier and greatly reduced the risk of juniors embarrassing
seniors, it also resulted in students having trouble reacting to novel situations -- such as actual
combat. While a decision that the Japanese wrestlers reached through trial-and-error, a century
later U. S. Navy study found that "a diversion of ten percent of the operational effort into
carefully planned practice can increase the operational effectiveness by factors of two to four."
1860:
A Frenchman named Jean Lenoir builds the first carriage powered by an internal combustion
engine.
As the Tokugawa army undergoes modernization, a British diplomat writes, "The commonest
sound in Edo is the musket and artillery practice of the soldiers."
The National Rifle Association of Britain holds its first annual meeting at Wimbledon, with Queen
Victoria firing the first shot. (Her support reflected the fact that the National Rifle Association
was an amateur military organization.) The British and Commonwealth shooters, who were
gentlemen rather than soldiers or big-game hunters, favored the seated and prone positions. As a
group, they were avid tinkerers, and the modern practice of using slings to steady rifles dates to
their experimentation. The standard ranges in their matches were 800, 900, and 1,000 yards, but
there were matches out to 2,000 yards. The target was usually a 36-inch bull, and a 21-inch group
at 1,000 yards was not unknown. European shooters, meanwhile, shot at only one range 300
yards but fired standing, kneeling, and prone, and their target was a mere 10 centimeters (3.9
inches) in diameter. Finally, United States shooters fired in any position, and tended to dominate
any pre-Great War competitions they entered. (The Russians and Scandinavians have done very
well since.)
Tyler Henry and Christopher Spencer secure separate patents for lever-action repeating rifles.
Spencer's rifles, which could fire seven shots in twelve seconds, were much sturdier than Henry's
rifles, and were used in far greater numbers during the American Civil War. since Henry's rifles
could fire fifteen more powerful bullets in the same length of time as a Spencer could fire seven,
they proved more popular with Texans and Indians following that war. Accordingly Spencer went
broke in 1869, while the Connecticut shirt maker Oliver Winchester, for whom Henry worked,
became rich and famous. Despite the movies, the mechanisms of both Henry and Spencer rifles
were fragile, and dropping them carried considerable risk of setting off the cartridges in their
tubular magazines. They were also expensive weapons, costing U. S. $37 at the factory, and
several times that on the frontier.
While preparing for a London prize-fight with English champion Tom Sayers, John C. Heenan
becomes the first American boxer known to lift weights and punch bags as part of his training
regimen. While lacking much practical ring experience, Heenan was superbly fit, and could run a
quarter-mile in 56 seconds. Training during this period consisted of avoiding hard liquor, tobacco,
spicy food, and sexual intercourse; jogging and wind-sprinting two to four miles a day; and
sparring with gloves for an hour or more each day. The inspiration for the regime came from
horse racing. In the words of Francis Dowling's Fistiana, "A man put to training is like a colt to be
broken in." Viewing pugilists as human race horses is not entirely figurative, either, as managers
were not above doping fighters to ensure they lost and a majority shareholder of the race track at
Saratoga Springs, New York, was none other than former pugilist John Morrissey. Morrissey
was undoubtedly the most economically successful pugilist of the nineteenth century. Though his
fame came from boxing, his income came from organized gambling. (Morrissey was a pioneer of
pari-mutuel ticket selling, English-style bookmaking, and off-track betting.) He was also
intimately involved in Tammany politics, and his testimony helped topple Boss Tweed in 1868.
In New York City, Beadle and Adams publishes Seth Jones, or the Captives of the Frontier. This
was the first mass-market novel to successfully feature a teenage hero saving damsels in distress in
the trans-Mississippi West. While Seth Jones cost readers five cents, by the 1870s, similar novels
cost a dime. Hence the term "dime novel." To meet the demand, a handful of journalists using a
variety of pseudonyms churned out more than 2,000 sequels between 1860 and 1898. These
authors did most of their research in New York saloons, and few of them ever traveled as far west
as Chicago. Therefore their stories were wildly inaccurate. (In Deadwood Dick, for instance,
Edward L. Wheeler put Cheyenne, Wyoming, east of the Black Hills.) Of course, such trivia never
mattered to their readers, who, like their literary heroes, were mostly semiliterate youths more
interested in thrills than truth.
Some wealthy San Francisco sportsmen establish the Olympic Club. This club sponsored
prize-fights, provided gymnastics equipment and masseuses, and afforded members the
opportunity to stage reproductions of the games of ancient Greece and Rome. The most
spectacular of these galas was a full dress masquerade held at the Mechanics' Pavilion in 1895. A
local fencing club provided the gladiators, some cavalrymen from the Presidio provided the trick
riding, local boxers and wrestlers did the pankration, and dancing girls provided entertainment
during intermission.
1861:
A 150-pound Norfolk cabinet-maker named Jem Mace wins the British heavyweight boxing
championship. Known as the father of modern boxing, Mace spent much of his career teaching
others to spar with gloves rather than brawl with bare-knuckles. He learned his trade in the boxing
booths placed in English fairs, where audiences paid to watch a local bruiser try to earn a few quid
by going the distance with some pint-sized champion, or fifty pounds by knocking him out.
Under the influence of the physical culture movement, Amherst becomes the first United States
college to have a physical education department.
Feng Kue-fen introduces the term "self-strengthening" into the Chinese political lexicon. While the
phrase originally meant using European arms and manufacturing methods to defend traditional
Chinese values, by 1935, it also meant using foreign calisthenics to strengthen Chinese bodies and
spirits for military service.
1862:
Belle Reynolds, an Illinois woman who accompanied her husband into battle, describes Civil War
battlefield medicine. "The operation would begin, and in the midst of shrieks, curses, and wild
laughs, the surgeon would wield over his wretched victim the glittering knife and saw; and soon
the severed and ghastly limb, white as snow and spattered with blood, would fall upon the floor --
one more added to the terrible pile."
The Indiana inventor Richard Gatling introduces his famous crank-handled, six-barreled machine
gun. Because of its fragile carriage, the United States military does not prove especially interested
in the gun and does not adopt it until 1866. So, barring a brief appearance at the Battle of
Petersburg, the appearance of Gatling guns in books and movies about the American Civil War is
anachronistic. Following the American Civil War, Gatling's guns were popular with industrialists,
who used them as mechanical strike breakers, sailors and imperialists, who used them as
equalizers during gunboat diplomacy, and with the Russians and Turks.
The British press starts a public panic by providing sensationalized coverage to a crime called
"garroting." This involved the criminal use a sleeper hold or an armbar choke. Despite the media
attention, it was a fairly uncommon crime. Nevertheless, the media attention resulted in the
enactment of new laws aimed at controlling working class or non-white violence. In other words,
while aristocratic English rowdies were simply boisterous young gentlemen at play, working-class
Jamaican women protesting government repression were ungrateful wretches who deserved
whippings on bare buttocks with piano wire.
Peruvian slavers kidnap all but a few hundred people from Rapa Nui, or Easter Island, to work in
the guano fields of the Chincha Islands. This effectively destroys the Easter Islanders' traditional
culture. It also afforded anthropologists the problem of deciding whether the Easter Islanders
were originally Polynesians, Indians from Ecuador or Peru, or a combination of the two. While
the modern academic consensus is that the Easter Islanders were Polynesians, the Ecuadorians
have a tradition about people using balsa rafts to sail west to inhabited Pacific islands, and the
Easter Islanders shared some social practices, such as ear-stretching, with the Peruvians. So a
pre-Columbian South American influence is hardly impossible.
With the help of Henry Fugner, Dr. Miroslav Tyrs creates the Sokol ("Falcon") system of national
gymnastics in Bohemia. This system offered women a greater part than German gymnastics, and
also supported Czech nationalism better than Prussian Turnverein. Tyrs divided exercise into
various categories, such as with equipment or without equipment, or with partners or against
opponents. He argued that while physical activity could be beautiful, it represented vanity and
brutality when used for self-aggrandizement or sadistic reasons. While the system became the
Czech national method of exercise in 1918, it was replaced by the Nazi Kraft durch Freude
("Strength through Joy") movement during the late 1930s. Sokol methods influenced Czarist
Russian sport during the 1890s and Soviet sport after 1918. Internationally known graduates of
Sokol schools include wrestler Stanislaus Zbyszko and acrobat Otto Arco.
About 1863:
The United States starts producing more horsepower using steam engines than human muscles.
Great Britain had passed this point perhaps fifty years before, and by the 1840s was producing
seven times more chemical than human energy.
Despite the tendency of their projectiles to bounce off hard surfaces, tiny single-shot pistols
shooting large caliber rimfire cartridges become popular in the United States. Such pistols are
commonly called derringers, after the brand carried by John Wilkes Booth during his assassination
of Abraham Lincoln in 1865.
1863:
Toward quieting the public outcry about the morphine-addicted veterans cluttering Northern
streets, the United States War Department opens the world's first military psychiatric hospital.
After the Civil War ends in 1865, the hospital is soon closed due to budget cuts.
Richard Francis Burton, who spoke good Arabic and was the first Englishman to visit Mecca,
writes that Muslim women enjoyed more real equality than English women. His reasoning was
that customs that did not allow women to appear barefaced before strangers were not analogous
to customs that allowed a man to beat his wife or dispose of her property against her will.
1864:
In volume I of a text called Principles of Biology, the English philosopher Herbert Spencer coins
the phrase "survival of the fittest." Spencer saw nature as a state of pitiless warfare with the
elimination of the weak and unfit as its goal. People who did not read him closely soon applied
this theory to social dynamics, and called the result Social Darwinism. Social Darwinism was a
very popular theory among white-collar workers whose masculinity (and jobs) were threatened by
women and immigrants. As a result, ever-increasing numbers of middle and upper class parents
urged their sons to play combative sports like football and boxing. The competition supposedly
taught young men the value of pain, sacrifice, duty, and glory while keeping them from lapsing
into slothful consumption. Although injuries occurred, they were, in Henry Cabot Lodge's phrase,
simply "part of the price which the English speaking race has paid for being world conquerors."
Because actors, acrobats, and puppeteers commonly produced and starred in anti-government
theatricals, the Chinese government bans Cantonese stage and puppet theatricals. Meanwhile,
Southern Chinese rebels send agents to the United States to buy firearms, which were available in
China only at exorbitant prices. (In April 1862, for instance, the T'ai-p'ing rebels bought
3,000,000 percussion caps and 18,000 cartridges from one American gunrunner alone. Such
weapons were often smuggled out using the coffins that Chinese laborers had purchased in the
United States.)
A 57-year old Chinese boxer named Heung Chan begins teaching choy-li-fut ch'uan fa to Chinese
immigrants living in San Francisco. (The style was named after Heung's instructors, a Buddhist
monk called Green Leaf and a pair of Shaolin boxers named Choy Ah-fok and Lee Yau-san.)
Heung supported anti-government activities in China, and his system was notorious for teaching
people how to kill using wooden benches, iron opium pipes, and assorted farm tools. So he may
have been an enforcer for a gambling syndicate or prostitution ring rather than a priest or monk.
Oxford and Cambridge hold the world's first intercollegiate track-and-field meet. Victory was
measured using hand-held stopwatches calibrated to a quarter of a second accuracy. Yet, while
faster stopwatches and electric timers were acceptable to judges, photo-electric finishes were not,
probably they did not want to admit that the human eye consistently scored competitors as faster
than they really were.
The Germans introduce smokeless small arm cartridges. These were shotgun shells designed by a
Prussian officer named E. Schultz. The propellant was nitrated wood pulp, or the same stuff that
Alfred Nobel later called dynamite.
The Societa Ginnastica Cristofor Columba is established in Genoa. The oldest athletic society in
Italy, it taught French Classical wrestling and German gymnastics.
Captain Richard Francis Burton describes the wrestling and vajramushti exhibitions held during
harvest festivals at Baroda, India. While the Englishman remembered only blood and sweat, the
Indians drank in the dancers, drummers, and spectacle. Perhaps because they had no scruples
against eating chicken or lamb (only pork and beef), the Baroda professionals, men like Sadiqa
Gilgoo, a champion of the 1840s who was later killed by robbers, and Ramzi, who wrestled
before the Prince of Wales in 1875, were Sikhs and Muslims from Amritsar and Lahore rather
than Hindus from Gujarat. Their patron in 1864 was Maharajah Khande Rao. Their patron in
1875 was Sayaji Rao, a 10-year old peasant boy who was more agreeable to the British than the
adult brother of the recently deceased Khande Rao. The arena in which the wrestlers contested
was 300 yards long and 200 yards wide. The maharajah and his associates sat in a pavilion at the
western end of the quadrangle while everyone else watched from perches in trees or atop the
arena's candy-pink walls.
Prescott, Arizona, hosts Anglo America's first cowboy tournament, as rodeos were then known.
While emphasizing the cowboy games that Mexican vaqueros played after roundups and cattle
drives, rodeo's roots lie in the jousting games that Spanish grandees introduced in the sixteenth
century. By the 1870s, Texans both white and African American were roping, tying, and
throwing steers. By the 1880s, cowboys from throughout the American West were riding
untamed broncos. And, in 1900, Bill Pickett, a 40-year old African American brush-popper for
Oklahoma's 101 Ranch, helped popularize steer wrestling. Pickett's trick involved biting the
animal on the upper lip and downing it with his teeth. Thus the term "bulldogging," as it simulated
the way a dog downed a bull during bull-baiting. It was clearly an idea whose time had come, as a
man named Chasper Gumper simultaneously introduced steer wrestling into Switzerland. (The
English word "wrangler" comes from an Old High German verb meaning "to struggle," and
Tyrolean wrestlers are still called ranglers.) In 1908, Pickett took his lip-biting act to Mexico,
where he outraged the Mexicans by lasting eight minutes with his teeth firmly embedded in the lip
of a fresh fighting bull. Humane societies eventually banned the trick in the United States. Other
skilled technicians associated with the Miller 101 Ranch show included a trick-rider named Tom
Mix and a trick-roper named Will Rogers.
1865:
With the publication of a book called Researches into the History of Early Mankind, the English
anthropologist Edward B. Tylor becomes the first important prophet of cultural diffusion. Tylor's
premise was that ideas are only invented once, and that cultures grow by borrowing these ideas
from one another.
General James Miranda Barry, the Inspector General of the British Army Medical Department,
dies in London, and is discovered after death to have been female.
Desperate for labor Confederate prisoners of war didn't work hard enough, and Irish
roustabouts quit every time they heard of a gold or silver strike -- J.H. Strobridge of California's
Central Pacific Railroad hires a gang of fifty Chinese to help him build a railroad across the
Donner Pass into Nevada. Finding the Chinese loyal and hard-working Strobridge quickly sent to
China for more. The outraged Irish went on strike. Charles Crocker, a co-owner of the Central
Pacific Railroad, told the Irish that this wasn't a problem: "We'll let you go and hire nobody but
them." By the summer of 1865, Crocker and Strobridge had 2,000 Chinese working on the
railroad, a number that grew to 10,000 by 1869. Pay averaged $30-35 a month. (The Chinese
wanted $40, but Crocker refused to pay that much.) Avalanches wiped out whole camps during
the winter, and blasting accidents killed men by the score. (Their chief explosive was
nitroglycerin, manufactured on site by a Scottish chemist named James Hawden.) But no one ever
thought to count Chinese dead in those days.
1866:
The Amateur Athletic Club is established in London. Its purpose was to help British gentlemen
avoid practicing and competing with anyone who was, or who ever had been, a mechanic, artisan,
or laborer.
Near Seymour, Indiana, the Reno gang commits North America's first peacetime train robbery.
Toward deterring such outrages, the railroad and express companies start hiring private detectives
and special agents. The Pinkertons ("We Never Sleep") and the hard cases hired by E. H.
Harriman to track down Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch were the most famous cinder dicks. Yet it
was the agents of Wells Fargo who helped change American jurisprudence by their insistence on
orderly trials instead of lynchings.
By using black powder to blow open a vault in New York City, Langdon Moore of Natick,
Massachusetts becomes the world's first safecracker.
The Russian Army develops the first rifle bullets designed to expand when they hit flesh. Such
bullets do not become truly practical until the invention of high-powered colloidal propellants
during the 1880s, and the first practical expanding bullet was the soft-tipped Dum Dum cartridge
designed by Captain Bertie Clay of the Indian Army in 1897. (The name referred to the barracks
in Calcutta where the bullets were made.)
Japanese gangsters are reported using revolvers as well as swords during their street fights.
After United States buffalo hunters and cavalrymen reject the weapons because of their fragile
mechanisms and under-powered cartridges, the Winchester Repeating Firearms Company markets
its Model 66 lever-action carbines overseas. Early markets included Mexico and China.
United States and British patents are issued for the Berdan and Boxer center-fire cartridge
ignition systems. Boxer-primed cartridges, with their external anvils, were more expensive to
manufacture, while Berdan-primed cartridges, with their internal anvils, were harder to reload.
Therefore the British-designed Boxer primers were used mainly in the United States, where
reloading was popular, while the American-designed Berdan primers were used mainly in Europe,
where reloading was less popular.
1867:
Under the patronage of John Sholto Douglas, the eccentric eighth Marquis of Queensberry, new
rules are developed for amateur boxing. These rules required fighters to wear gloves that were in
good condition. They required a referee to move about inside the ring and all seconds to remain
outside the ropes. They outlawed wrestling and hugging. They made rounds last three minutes
each, with one minute between rounds. They gave fighters ten seconds to stand back up after
having been knocked down. And they banned boots having either springs or spikes. Queensberry
rules helped pugilism recover its lost popularity, as they reduced the visible injuries and made
fighters subject to the whims of the clock. Their actual author was probably an English amateur
named John Graham Chambers.
Box scores appear in United States newspapers. Originally designed to facilitate illegal gambling
operations, their popularity created most of the modern interest in essentially meaningless sport
statistics.
1868:
The Adjutant General of the United States reports that the desertion rate among white troops
serving in the American West has almost 57%, while the suicide rate was nearly 8%. Meanwhile,
the desertion and suicide rate among Negro troops was only 2-3%. The difference was that the
black soldiers, most of whom were recently freed slaves, were used to doing what they were told,
and being sober while they did it. On the other hand, German and Irish immigrants generally were
not.
The New York Athletic Club opens in New York City. Its purpose was to keep rich white men
from having to compete with blacks, recent immigrants, and others without the proper manners
and pedigrees.
Masked wrestling appears in Paris. The wrestler in the black mask was a male model named
Alfred, while his opponent in the red mask was Pierre the Coachman. The act was so popular that
it continued until 1870.
Amid great public controversy, the British abolish public hangings. As Britain only abolished the
death penalty in 1964, most of the uproar surrounded the loss of entertainment. (As many as
100,000 Londoners turned out for individual executions. Their merriment caused The Times to
complain in 1864 about the "loud laughing, oaths, fighting, obscene conduct and still more filthy
language" that reigned around the gallows.)
1869:
George Steadman of Ashby, East Westmoreland, wins a prize at a wrestling tournament held at
the Agricultural Hall on Liverpool Road in London, a feat that he repeats every year for the next
31 years. Despite packing 275 unto a 5'11" frame, Steadman was a fine all-rounder, and the prizes
he took were as often in sprinting, hurdles, and best-dressed as wrestling.
The Cincinnati Red Stockings become North America's professional sport club. (While earlier
clubs paid players and charged admission to games, none actively recruited players from
elsewhere, or routinely played scheduled games in distant cities.) The Red Stockings were very
successful, and equivalent clubs soon appeared in Boston, Chicago, Hartford, Louisville, New
York, Philadelphia, and St. Louis. To restrain competition, keep player salaries low, and drive out
potential rivals, the National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs is established in 1876. As
National League owners objected to beer sales, brewers like Anheuser-Busch started the rival
American Association of Base Ball Clubs in 1882. The American League charged less at the gate,
but made up the difference in beer sales. As with most subsequent professional sport leagues, the
owners were in the "game" solely for the money, and blacklisted and traded players as if they were
cattle.
The New York dime novelist Ned Buntline begins writing imaginative fictions about a
hard-drinking Irish-American roustabout named William F. ("Buffalo Bill") Cody. These fantasies
were central in creating a world in which people viewed cowboys as hairy-chested Anglo-Saxon
folk heroes rather than poorly paid Mexican or African American agricultural laborers. This
conversion happened quickly, too, to judge by the great commercial success of The Virginian, a
mainstream Western by Owen Wister published in 1902. The Virginianwent through 38 printings
by 1911, and sold over 1.5 million copies by 1938. It was also a stage play, a movie, and a
television series. Its success, says historian Elliott Gorn, was due to working-class men and boys
needing virile fantasy heroes in a world increasingly filled with "routinized work, soulless
corporations, aggressive women, smothering mothers, rich new industrialists, radical laborers,
[and] swarthy foreigners." As for the cowboy's reputed gunfighting skills, these were based on
vaudeville acts rather than coroners' reports. In 1884 a celebrated American handgunner named
Ira Paine publicly boasted of placing five carefully aimed shots into a 2-inch group at 12 yards,
and another five into a 7-inch group at 50. This feat was mediocre at best by the 1930s. (note
1)But, as it was exceptional shooting for the day, real lawmen and cowboys preferred rifles and
shotguns for almost every purpose. (Despite Hollywood, handguns were carried mostly by
gamblers and pimps. For example, Bill Hickok, Wyatt Earp, and Doc Holliday were professional
gamblers, while Luke Short was a gambler and pimp. Skill was minimal, too. Notorious
man-killers frequently fired four or five times at point-blank range without scoring any hits, and
sometimes had their weapons fall from their holsters when they tipped too far back in their
chairs.)
John Healy and Alfred Hamilton begin selling lever-action rifles and metallic cartridges to the
Canadian Blackfeet. These weapons made bows-and-arrows obsolete for both warfare and buffalo
hunting on the Northern Plains.
A Japanese general named Yamagata Aritomo travels to Europe to discover the secrets of
European military power. Impressed by the German victory in the Franco-Prussian War,
Yamagata returned home believing that gymnastics, drill, and mass conscription were the way to
instill discipline and patriotism into Japanese youth. Still, while General Yamagata liked
gymnastics, drill, and mass conscription, most Japanese youths did not. Japanese resistance to
military conscription included fifteen riots or uprisings, plus countless self-mutilations and flights
to avoid service. (As late as 1889, the Japanese government noted that 10% of the eligible male
population changed residences annually to avoid military service.)
German chemists develop chloracetophenone, or CN. Burning CN creates an irritant cloud that
irritates the eyes and upper respiratory tract. Hence its popular name, "tear gas." In high
concentrations, CN causes blistered skin and nausea, and in confined spaces, can cause pneumonia
or death. Propellant charges routinely cause burn injuries and fires, and rifle grenades occasionally
cause blunt trauma injuries. All these risks are usually considered acceptable during military
training, crowd control, and hostage situations. From a political standpoint, a major advantage of
chemical irritants during crowd control and hostage situations is that chemical clouds do not
photograph as well as cavalry, fire trucks, and armored cars, nor do they routinely kill as many
people as nervous infantry. When Sikh and Gurkha troops under the command of a British
brigadier named Reginald Dyer fired into a crowd at Amritsar in 1919, for instance, several
hundred Sikhs were killed during just ten minutes of shooting, and as recently as 1970, four
students died and eleven were injured when Ohio National Guardsmen fired into demonstrators at
Kent State University.
About 1870:
Wu Yu-hsiang combines the t'ai chi ch'uan techniques of Yang Lu-ch'an and Ch'en Ch'ing-p'ing to
create northern Wu-style t'ai chi ch'uan. (Southern Wu-style t'ai chi ch'uan is slightly different.
Wu Chien-ch'uan introduced this style into Shanghai in 1928. He learned it from his father, Wu
Ch'uan-yu, who had studied with Yang Lu-chan's son Pan-hou.) Principles of northern Wu-style
t'ai chi ch'uan include continuous, relaxed movement; a solid feeling inside; a straight body; each
arm protecting its own half of the body; the hands staying close to the body; and the inner energy
directing and guiding the bodily movement. The boxing classic attributed to Wu Yu-hsiang is
called "Expositions of Insights into the Practice of the Thirteen Postures." A sample from this
classic follows. The translation is by Benjamin Lo and his students Martin Inn, Robert Amacker,
and Susan Foe.
Be still as a mountain,
move like a great river.
Walk like a cat.
The form is like that
of a falcon about to seize a rabbit,
and the shen (spirit) is like that
of a cat about to catch a rat.
1870:
Australian street gangs, or "Larrikins," become notorious for their violence toward policemen,
Chinese, and churches. The Larrikins were working class youths from the Sydney slums, and were
identifiable by their high heeled boots, bell bottom trousers, and neck scarves.
Pope Leo XIII approves the doctrine of papal infallibility.
The United States trick shooter Fred Kemble popularizes the use of choked bore shotguns. (The
first patent for choke bored shotguns was taken out by Walter Roper in 1866.) Choke boring
improves shotshell patterns by as much as 100% at 40 yards. Choke boring was an option
available in the popular ejector shotguns introduced by the British manufacturer W. W. Greener in
1874.
Ben Thompson, a Southwestern gambler born in Yorkshire but raised in Texas, invents the
shoulder holster. The idea was to allow him to introduce large revolvers into card games.
More Olympic Games are staged in Athens. After the 400-meter race was won by a butcher, the
wrestling event by a laborer, and the gymnastics event by stone-cutter, the Greek privileged
classes changed the rules so that only university men could enter the Olympic Games of 1875.
Unfortunately, that only caused the quality of competition to decline, and resulted in no additional
Olympics being held until 1888.
In one of Britain's first international wrestling championships, the Gascon strongman François
Bonnet and his partner Dubois traveled to England to compete with the British wrestlers William
Jameson and Richard Wright. The first match was in Cumberland style, and the English won. The
second match was in the French Classical style, and the French won. A coin was tossed for the
third round, and the French won the toss and the match. Then, in a pattern that has not changed in
professional wrestling, the English champion George Steadman defeated both Bonnet and Dubois
in both Cumberland and French Classical wrestling.
Prussian military advisers make gymnastics (Turnbewegungen) part of Japanese recruit training.
Japanese university physical education departments follow suit around 1902. Meanwhile, French
military advisers make equestrian activities part of Japanese officer training. While horse-riding
soon becomes as popular as tennis and golf among Japanese aristocrats, gymnastics does not
become popular with working-class Japanese athletes until the Asahi Breweries begin sponsoring
gymnastics competitions during the 1930s.
In a world where clerks and secretaries were increasingly female, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's
novel Venus in Chains turns male clerks' terror of what Henry James called "damnable
feminization" into a fantastic story of fur-clad, whip-cracking women verbally and sexually
abusing men. Besides creating a stock figure for subsequent pornographic fiction, Masoch's
conclusion retains some validity: "Whoever allows himself to be whipped deserves to be
whipped."
1871:
An English soldier named Sir George Tomkyns Chesney publishes a tale about a nearly bloodless
German conquest of Britain called "The Battle of Dorking." This fantasy fathered a late-Victorian
literary genre and grandfathered Tom Clancy's post-modern technothrillers.
A New York physician named Jacob Mendes DaCosta reports that many Civil War veterans suffer
from panic disorders. At the time, these were diagnosed as "irritable hearts" instead of panic
disorders.
An Irish jig dancer named John H. Clark opens a combination dance studio and boxing
gymnasium on Arch Street, in Philadelphia. This arrangement was unusual, as most boxing
gymnasiums of the 1870s were the back rooms of what polite society called "sporting public
houses," and everyone else called saloons. Often run by former pugilists, public sporting houses
had a large room that was open on Saturday nights for public sparring. In Britain and Australia,
admission was about a tuppence, while in the United States it was a nickel or a dime. Smoking
and drinking were encouraged, and the first fights started at eight p.m. To keep the crowds as
long as possible, the beginners fought the undercards while more highly skilled fighters fought
later in the evening. Fights usually went three rounds, with the length of the round being a
knockdown, as the fights were conducted according to London Prize Ring rules, not Queensberry
rules. Winning amateurs took home any coins that the crowd threw into the ring. Winning
professionals, on the other hand, fought for prearranged prizes. These were around £10 in Britain,
but usually less in the United States and Australia. Specialized training for professionals consisted
of running or walking 30 miles a day when weather permitted (and skipping rope by the hour
when it did not), punching sand-filled bags, and striking the air while holding three-pound
dumbbells. Diet while in training consisted of oatmeal porridge, stale bread, raw eggs mixed in
sherry or beer, and mutton chops or beef steaks cooked rare. On the other hand, things avoided
during training included butter, sugar, pork, vegetables, water, tea, coffee, tobacco, hard liquor,
and spices except for salt and pepper.
Feuds between rival Chinese gangs erupt into violence in San Francisco and British Columbia.
Rahim Sultaniwala, a famous champion of the 1910s, starts his wrestling career at Abbotabad, a British hill station in the Punjab. Rahim's patron was Brigadier General Charles Granville Bruce, who had a wrestling pit dug near his house. Both the British and the rajahs wagered thousands of rupees on these matches, and took inordinate pride in having the strongest sides. Their wrestlers, of course, earned a few hundred rupees a month, plus room and board. While a piddling sum from the standpoint of a rajah or a general, it was still an amount equal to about seven times that paid a household servant or manual laborer.
1872:
The British Army experiments with war games fought upon a map.
The German Army adopts its first Mauser rifle. This was a single-shot bolt-action weapon firing
an 11.15x60mm bullet propelled by 77 grains of black powder. Although the rifle was improved
with the addition of a tubular magazine in 1884, its cartridge had become obsolete due to the
development of smokeless propellants. Therefore a new 7.9mm Mannlicher rifle replaced it in
1888.
The Japanese introduce mass conscription and Prussian drill. Since the conscripts didn't like either
activity, training officers soon found themselves emphasizing mindless obedience rather than
ethics. In 1882, for example, the old bushido was replaced by tokuho, or "the Soldiers' Code."
After making some additional changes that emphasized the primacy of the emperor, the "Soldiers'
Code" was renamed bushido, or "the Way of the Warrior," in 1909. The brutal excesses of the
Greater East Asian War, as the Japanese call World War II, are therefore owed to these Meiji-era
military codes rather than the Neo-Confucian bushido of the Tokugawa-era samurai.
French Classical wrestlers travel to Germany, where they usually win, to the great joy of the
French, who were still reeling from their defeat during the Franco-Prussian War. These French
heroes included Fournier, Christol, Rigal, and Joseph Doublier, while their opponents included
Carl Kemp, Adolf Grün, and Lepp. This said, the first famous German wrestler was Karl Abs, a
hard-drinking carpenter from Mecklenburg who started wrestling professionally in 1881 at the age
of 31.
1873:
John W. Draper, a British-born professor of chemistry and biology at New York University,
writes The History of the Conflict between Religion and Science. In this popular book -- it went
through fifty printings over the next fifty years -- Draper argued that natural science was
synonymous with progress while organized religion was synonymous with repression. A believer
in progress, Draper believed that science was bound to win. This viewpoint subsequently becomes
dogma for disciples of the secular faiths called "pragmatism" and "scientific realism."
The Japanese government adopts the Gregorian calendar for all official purposes. The old lunar
calendar remained in use for most private and religious purposes.
While taking control of the gambling houses, opium dens, and bordellos of Kuala Lumpur, a
Chinese organized crime boss named Yap Ah-loy spends a million dollars paying hired toughs, or
samseng, to fight for him. While the 36- year old Yap was as strong as an ox and an expert at
Chinese boxing, his hatchet-men fought using swords, knives, clubs, and flintlock muskets rather
than fists and feet. Roots of the violence included a hard-drinking bachelor subculture in the
Chinese immigrant communities.
Impressed with the speed with which men on horseback could fire them, the Chinese government
buys lever-action Winchester carbines for its cavalrymen. Meanwhile, the United States
government decides to reequip its own cavalrymen using single-shot "Trapdoor" Springfield
carbines for long-range shooting and .45 caliber single action revolvers for short-range shooting.
Who was right? While many historians say that the Chinese were, and cite what happened to
Custer at the Little Big Horn in 1876 as evidence, that conclusion is not certain, given what
happened to the Plains Indians and Chinese.
"Fear not, fair maid! By heavens, you are safe with Wild Bill, who is ever ready to risk his life
and die, if need be, in defense of weak and defenseless womanhood!" So cried the notorious
Kansas gunman Wild Bill Hickok from the boards of a New York stage. (To Hickok's credit, only
his appreciation for an attractive fellow thespian called Mademoiselle Morlacchi kept him at it.)
Champion prizefighters also appeared in touring stage plays. The reason was that these plays
allowed the boxers to hold sparring exhibitions in towns where prizefights were illegal. Although
they paid well a champion could make $200 a week -- the crowds could be rough. There was
merriment in Seattle during the 1880s when a wit from the gallery responded to John L. Sullivan's
entrance line, "I'll save you, mudder," with "Save her? You can't even pronounce her!" And there
was equal merriment in Philadelphia in 1904 when a horse kicked Bob Fitzsimmons in the groin.
(In addition to sparring three rounds, Fitzsimmon's act included shoeing a horse).
1874:
Impresario P.T. Barnum refurbishes an old New York and Harlem Union Railroad depot and calls
it Madison Square Garden. The first boxing match held at the Garden was a four-round glove
contest between John L. Sullivan and the English fighter Tug Wilson in 1882. Three other
buildings have held the name since.
Joseph Glidden and Isaac Elwood introduce machine-made barbed wire. By 1880, smooth-talking
drummers like John W. ("Bet-a-Million") Gates have sold 80 million pounds of double-strand
barbed wire in the American West, and causing open-range ranching to join the American bison
and the passenger pigeon on the endangered species list.
About 1875:
Viro Small, a former slave from Beaufort, South Carolina, becomes North America's first known
African American professional wrestler. Small's training involved hauling beer kegs and
sauerkraut barrels around New York City. His venue was a tavern named the Bastille of the
Bowery. Owned by a former pugilist named Owney Geoghegan, the Bastille of the Bowery filled
a two-story building. Both floors had twelve-foot square prize-rings that were constant use day
and night. Said one visiting muckraker of the hard-drinking crowd, "The faces around us are
worse than those seen in a bench show of pugnacious dogs, and instinct teaches us to have a care
for our nickels, for our pockets are in imminent danger." And this description was probably true,
as Geoghegan had himself won a decision over Con Orem in 1863 by dint of having his seconds
point a gun at the referee's head.
1875:
As part of efforts aimed at modernizing its military, the Ch'ing Dynasty establishes the Nanking
Military Academy. This was the first school in China to teach athletic activities to young
aristocrats. These activities included German drill and gymnastics, usually with Japanese
instructors. Indicative of their military nature, they were called t'i ts'ao, a phrase meaning
"exercises" rather than t'i yü, meaning "sports."
Parisian street gangsters are reported shaving their heads and dressing in metal-studded leather
jackets. The press responded by called such people "Apaches." This name referred to a Belgian
pepperbox revolver of the same name that had a blade under its barrel and a knuckle-duster in its
butt rather than the Athabascan people of the American Southwest. Around 1890, the Apache
name also began to describe a sadomasochistic dance genre in which tattooed, scarred women
fought knife or saber duels while stripped to their underclothes, or smiled while men slapped them
around.
After studying in Germany for a decade, Mauritz Waenerberg establishes the first gymnastic
society in Finland. Wrestling was not originally a major portion of Waenerberg's program, as he
believed that athletics should develop the mind more than the body. Therefore French Classical
wrestling did not become popular in Finland until 1897, when a Polish circus wrestler named
Ladislaus Pytlasinsky began teaching French-style groundwork in Helsinki.
The Sharps Rifle Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut introduces three new cartridges in .50
caliber for its custom-made Model 1874 hunting rifles. Although advertised as buffalo guns, these
rifles cost $118 from the factory. Therefore they were hardly as common on the American
frontier as subsequent adventure novels would have you believe. Instead, the .50 caliber Sharps
rifles that slaughtered the bison herds and made the amazing 1,400 yard shot that ruined the war
magic of the Comanche war chief Eeshatai at the Battle of Adobe Walls in 1874 were military
surplus Model 151 rifle-muskets converted to percussion cap ignition systems and rebored to
shoot .50-70 Government cartridges.
Mary Baker Eddy publishes Science and Health. Four years later, the First Church of Christ
Scientist is established to teach the doctrines contained in this book. These doctrines taught that
illness was error, and that evil was imaginary, as the physical world was illusory. Theological
influences included Calvinism, Swedenborgianism, and nineteenth century millenarianism.
The Russian mystic Helena Blavatsky and the American lawyer Henry Olcott establish the
Theosophical Society in New York and London. While Blavatsky was something of a charlatan,
and Olcott was important mainly for supporting Sri Lankan Buddhism during a time of profound
Christian oppression, together they were among the first Europeans or Americans to
systematically mine Vedic and Buddhist philosophies for religious truths. The Theosophists'
purported universalism was hardly universal, as Theosophists downplayed orthodox Christianity
and Judaism, scorned Confucianism, Islam, Sikhism, Taoism, and ignored animism. Theosophist
Katherine Tingley introduced yoga into Southern California in 1899.
1876:
Scottish rifle designer James Paris Lee patents the spring-loaded, removable box magazine. These
eliminated the problem of sharp-nosed bullets setting off the primers of the cartridges in front of
them, plus increased sustained rates of fire. (The still-standing world's record for a manually
loaded rifle was set in 1914. Using a magazine-loaded Lee-Enfield rifle, Sergeant Snoxall of the
British Army's School of Musketry shot 38 rounds into a 12-inch bulls-eye set 300 yards away in
just one minute.) Nevertheless, this excellent design was not incorporated into a military rifle until
1888, largely because military leaders doubted that an increased rate of fire was necessary.
The United States Marine Corps begins carrying the Stars-and-Stripes into battle instead of
regimental colors. The United States cavalry follows suit eleven years later. The reason for the
change was that officers thought that the flags would help ensure the loyalty of the immigrants
who filled the United States military. The equally jingoistic practice of playing the national
anthem and saluting the flag at the beginning of sporting contests dates to World War II. While
bands sometimes played the national anthem during the seventh inning stretch as early as 1918,
this was more spontaneous than expected.
An Italian traveler named Edmondo de Amicicis describes Moroccan stick-and-sword dancing as
"high leaps without object, contusions, leg-actions, and blows, announced a whole minute before
by an immense sweep of the arm. Everything was done with a holy phlegm which would have
allowed one of our experts to have distributed . . . a volley of blows without the least risk of
receiving one." The problem was that the traveler mistook sword dancing, whose purpose was
symbolic and entertaining, for sword fighting, whose purpose was pragmatic and lethal.
According to Gary Lind-Sinanian of the Armenian Library and Museum in Watertown,
Massachusetts, sword dances remain common throughout the Arab world. In Lebanon and Syria,
the dance is a stylized combat between two men armed with swords and bucklers. Training began
when the dancers were children. To minimize injuries, sparring was done only with original
partners. (Dancers typically retired or danced solo if their original partner moved, died, or
retired.) Sword dances were done at funerals, weddings, circumcisions, and other family
gatherings, and symbolized the dancers' readiness to fight for their friends. Musical
accompaniment (flute and drum, typically) was normal. As firearms became more common,
emphasis turned away from combat efficiency, and toward athletic spectacle. The modern form,
says Lind-Sinanian, "is more impressive-looking, and features a more erect carriage, poses
emphasizing strength, elaborate dance steps, and frequent clashes of the sword on the dancer's
own shield and his partner's shield. The older combat form is virtually extinct."
An Irish journalist named Richard Kyle Fox takes control of a bankrupt New York true crime
paper called the National Police Gazette. Fox adds woodcut drawings of burlesque stars in
revealing costumes, a sport section whose motto was, "Be as truthful as possible, but a story's a
story," and free advertisements for the hotels, bars, and barber shops that subscribed to his
publications. And, to stir controversy and boost sales, he also created the first sports heroes,
starting with the boxers Paddy Ryan and Joe Goss in 1880.
"Every month or so," says a sportswriter for the Virginia City, Nevada Gold Hill News, "the
prize-fighters favor us with a mill, which we all go see and then indict the fighters, as a sort of
concession to the Puritanical element." Such bouts were usually on Sundays, and pitted the men
from one camp against another. Cornish jacket wrestling was also a popular spectator sport in the
Western mining towns. Although violence was always a possibility, referees were usually local
saloonkeepers. Therefore, as an anonymous Virginia City reporter of the 1860s whose turn of
phrase suggests the young Mark Twain said, referees "usually failed to be killed." Instead, the
audience was at risk: five men were shot, one fatally, during a riot following a disputed decision at
Virginia City's Washoe Track in 1863. Violence was most likely following fouls, as many
gamblers did not feel obligated to pay up following a fight won by foul means. Virginia City's
other major venue for boxing was Leviathan Hall. Colorado's Con Orem fought Hugh O'Neal to a
185-round draw at Leviathan Hall in January 1865. The purse was $1,000 in gold plus a share of
gate receipts. As Leviathan's owner J.A. Nelson recouped his prize-money selling liquor to the
audience, one suspects that Orem and O'Neal may not have been in any hurry to knock the other
one out. This linkage to liquor sales may partly explain the hundreds of rounds typical of late
nineteenth century prize-fights. Even so, London Prize Ring rounds rarely lasted more than a
minute, and were often less. Typically a fighter would fall down immediately following a good
blow to take his 30-second rest, or fake a slip to avoid a counter.
Inspired by the success of the YMCA at providing urban youth with an attractive alternative to
saloons, the Wilson Mission establishes the Boys Club of the City of New York. To attract
Catholic and Jewish youths, active Protestant proselytizing was minimal. Rich sponsors like
railroad baron E. H. Harriman supported such organizations because they were believed to reduce
street crime.
1877:
During the Satsuma Rebellion, where Imperial conscripts used rifles and artillery to shoot down
tens of thousands of sword-wielding samurai, the exclamation "Banzai!" enters the Japanese
political lexicon. (While the expression literally means "Ten thousand years!" it is better translated
as "Long live the Emperor!") During this same rebellion, the Japanese yakuza gangs also bought
themselves a vast amount of political goodwill by giving their military and financial support to the
hard-pressed Imperial forces. The Japanese government repaid this debt following the war by
allowing the gangsters to organize and control the Japanese longshore, construction, and rickshaw
taxi companies. This mob control over Japanese rickshaw taxi companies is noted because
prostitution was not a big business in Okinawa prior to the arrival of the Japanese in the 1880s.
(note 2)
The residents of the English village of Sutton, near Hull, give a wife-beater a ride on the stang.
This involved mounting the miscreant on a sedan chair and then carrying him about town while
local wits debated his manly virtues. The practice dated to the fifteenth century, and was usually
done in May or December.
While touring Australia and New Zealand, the English pugilist Jem Mace popularizes three and
four-round gloved bouts fought according to Queensberry rules. Antipodean fighters who
benefited from Mace's tour included the Australian welterweight Larry Foley, who became a
prominent Sydney trainer following his retirement from the ring in 1879, and New Zealand
middleweight Bob Fitzsimmons, who eventually became world champion at three different
weights. Because Queensberry rules fights were held indoors, with gloves, under close
supervision, they usually circumvented local ordinances against prizefights. Their bans on
wrestling, meanwhile, protected the traveling professional from most accidental injuries. Further,
if the traveling professional were a media favorite, as was Mace, then fans would pay high prices
to see the great man in the flesh. Best of all, such bouts could be held indoors after working
hours, which meant that prize-fights no longer interrupted the work day.
While preparing for a prize-fight with William C. McClellan of New Brunswick, middleweight
boxer Mike Donovan of Troy, New York, places a football inside a canvas cover and ties it to the
ceiling and the floor. In 1886, he tries to patent the idea so that he can market double-ended and
speed bags. The Patent Office told Donovan that he had waited too long, and that the idea was in
the public domain. Which was probably just as well, as Donovan claimed to have created just
about every move in boxing. In 1904, for instance, he even claimed to have invented Bob
Fitzsimmons' famous shift during a rematch with McClellan held in San Francisco in 1878.
The Scottish strongman Donald Dinnie tours Europe and North America. An enormously
powerful man he once carried a rock weighing 340 pounds in one hand for 20 yards.
(Obviously, the rock had a handle. A photograph in the July 1996 National Geographic shows
Goenaxto II, a modern Basque stone-lifting champion, struggling to lift a 350-pound boulder
without handles.) Dinnie earned a very comfortable living touring (his standard fee was £300,
about $2,500, a match.) Rules disputes were an essential part of pre-match advertising, and, as in
boxing, the really big money rode on the side bets.
Toward giving the sport a less savage reputation, J. Charlemont introduces new rules to savate.
Direct kicks with the toe of the foot, hitting the opponent's head while holding it, hitting with the
elbow, knee, head, or wrist, and striking anywhere between the groin and navel were prohibited.
There were three rounds of three minutes each, and ties were settled during a sudden-death fourth
round. Wrestling was also strongly discouraged, and in 1911, outlawed altogether.
Violent railway and mining strikes caused by unsafe, poorly paid working conditions inspire the
creation of volunteer militia units throughout the United States. Known collectively as the
National Guard, these paramilitary organizations introduced thousands of young Americans to the
joys of handling obsolete firearms and drilling to martial music. Military drill also became popular
in United States high schools after 1893, although not without opposition from physical educators
like Dudley Allen Sargent of Harvard, who argued that youths should learn coordination and
balance using free rather than mechanical movements.
1877-1878:
By washing his hands and cleaning his saws between amputations, a Russian physician named von
Bergmann introduces asepsis to military medicine. This is important because more soldiers
historically died from disease than wounds or enemy action.
1877-1890:
During one of the largest mass migrations in human history -- the twentieth century East Asian
migration into Manchuria may have involved more people -- fifty million European, Asian, and
African American settlers pour into Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, and North America.
Why? Mainly, says historian Alfred Crosby, because life in those lands promised lots of land,
political freedom, and meals with meat several times a week. And how did these people know that
these things awaited them in America or the Antipodes? Because railroad and steamship company
advertisements told them so.
1878:
Nicholas August Otto and Eugen Langen make the first high-speed, four-stroke, internal
combustion engine. In 1885, the German engineer Gottlieb Daimler mounts a half-horsepower
version on a bicycle to create the first motorcycle, while another German engineer named
Karl-Friedrich Benz mounts a .85 horsepower version on a three-wheeled carriage to create the
first modern automobile.
Pacific Northwest Coast Indian warrior societies are described as waging dance battles instead of
gun battles. The Indians' reasoning was that the side with the fittest dancers and strongest war
magic would win the contest -- and by extension, the war. Similar dance battles also have been
reported in Indonesia, and are a staple of Hollywood and Hong Kong musicals.
During its most violent year as a cow town, Dodge City, Kansas, witnesses the shooting deaths of
four gamblers and two sporting ladies. (note 3) While this caused Dodge City's homicide rate to
temporarily approach the sustained homicide rates of the Bowery and the Barbary Coast, it was
also an aberration. For one thing, the shooting victims were white instead of African American,
Mexican, or Chinese. For another, several of the victims were carrying guns at the time of their
death. (Western gunmen invariably preferred shooting unarmed men to shooting armed men, and,
due to the unequal homicide laws of the day, usually tried to shoot blacks or other minorities
rather than English-speaking white men.) And for another, Dodge City did not report another
homicide for the rest of the decade. (Western novels and movies notwithstanding, alcoholism,
suicide, and smallpox were the biggest killers on the American frontier.)
Sam, the 220-pound Negro cook of a Texas cattle outfit, is reported wrestling with the white
drovers. The bet was that no man in the outfit could ride him without spurs. Sam won his bet.
Black cowboys were also observed wrestling with white cowboys in the Black Hills in 1883. In
1884, a giant black man named Jim, a rider for John G. Slaughter's outfit, boxed with John L.
Sullivan in Tombstone. (Jim went down in one.) Meanwhile, other African Americans were
reported fighting one another with bullwhips for prize money. During a match held on Dodge
City's main street in 1877, "Blood flowed and dust flew and the crowd cheered until Policeman
Joe Mason came along and suspended the cheerful exercise."
The New York Athletic Club hosts the United States' first amateur wrestling championship. While
the style it patronized was Irish collar-and-elbow wrestling, the patriotic New Yorkers said the
style came from Vermont and New Hampshire rather than Ireland. The club also sponsored the
United States' first national amateur boxing championship. The club trainer was former
middleweight champion Mike Donovan. Professionals routinely gave boxing lessons to wealthy
businessmen and lawyers. Jake Kilrain gave lessons at Boston's Cribb Club during the 1880s, for
instance, while James J. Corbett gave lessons at San Francisco's Olympic Club during the 1890s.
The reason was that newspaper columnists claimed that pugilistic training would help old men
lose weight while simultaneously sustaining or even increasing their will power, fortitude, and
courage.
Maurice and Will Thompson, two former Confederate soldiers who had lived for a time as
survivalists in the Everglades, establish the National Archery Association in Crawfordsville,
Indiana. The idea catches on, and a year later, the National Archery Association holds its first
tournament at White Stocking Park in Chicago.
J. R. Headington argues in the American Christian Review that female athletics represented a
nine-step path to ruin. For example, a croquet party led to picnics, picnics led to dances, dances
led to absence from church, absence from church led to immoral conduct, immoral conduct led to
exclusion from church (no forgiveness here!), exclusion from church led to running away, running
away led to poverty and discontent, poverty and discontent led to shame and disgrace, and shame
and disgrace led to ruin. While many middle-class women heeded Headington's advice, fewer
upper-class women did, causing female athleticism, especially in golf, tennis, and cycling, to
become increasingly common throughout the late nineteenth century.
1879:
An Anglo-Irish philologist named John Mahaffy invents the myth of ancient Greek amateur sports.
Mahaffy justified this theory, which argued that Hellenic athletes, unlike their Hellenistic
successors, competed solely for honor and pride. To support this theory, Mahaffy provided some
out-of-context translations from the classics. The invention was designed to keep white-collar
workers and their children from having to compete against working class workers and their
children. Mahaffy also invented the idea of "the intrinsic pleasure of sport for its own sake," again
as a way of excluding working class athletes from competing with middle and upper-class
athletes. In fairness to Mahaffy, he was a man of his times, and his ideas were outgrowths of late
Victorian philosophy rather than eccentric bigotry.
The Vatican responds to the intellectual challenges provided by Marxism and Darwinism by
affirming that Hell is eternal and that the Devil is real. While most Protestant theologians
denounced such literal interpretations of the Bible, an evangelistic North American sect known as
the Fundamentalists also adopted them during the 1920s.
The Argentine dictator Julio Roca opens Patagonia to European sheep ranching. Roca forgot to
tell this to the Tehuelche and Mapuche Indians, and a war erupted. In 1883, Roca declares the
"Conquest of the Desert" complete, saying that "the wild Indians, then, have disappeared, with no
danger that they can return." Once again, he forgot to tell the Indians, and a band swooped down
and killed eight German ranchers and took their 3,000 cattle. So, in reality, it was not the
Argentine army and its Remington rifles but a smallpox epidemic that did in the Patagonian
Indians.
1879-1889:
The Italians report 2,759 duels. All but about 200 were fought with swords rather than pistols,
and fewer than 50 combatants died.
1879-1899:
After militarily annexing the Ryukyu Islands in 1879, the Japanese introduced new laws and taxes
to the archipelago. The Japanese also brought land reform and ended subsidies to members of the
local aristocracy. Occasionally, Ryukyuan youths would get into fistfights with Japanese tax
collectors, some of whom were former Satsuma samurai. These brawls were probably one root
for the subsequent stories about unarmed Okinawan peasants using their karate against armed
Satsuma samurai.
About 1880:
Korean urban males combine a popular kicking game called gakhui, or shuttlecock, with a
hand-clapping game called subak. The result is a new activity called tae kyon. In tae kyon, the feet
swept opponents who kicked too high or kept their balance too far forward, and the hands were
used mainly for blocking and balance. Little movement was allowed, and the rules allowed players
to move only one foot out of the starting position. Thus, for practical purposes, players took turns
attacking and defending. The object of the game was to cause the opponent to fall. There were
three ways this could be achieved. The least impressive was sweeping the opponent's feet from
underneath him. A more impressive method involved standing flat-footed and kicking the
opponent in the chest or shoulder. The most impressive involved jumping up and kicking the
opponent in the head. There was no great spiritual value attached to the activity, and spectators
often bet on the outcome of matches. With its emphasis on high circular kicks, during the 1960s
the game may have influenced the development of competitive taekwondo. That said, nineteenth
century Korean farmers practiced another, much bloodier, combative sport called pakchiki. In this
game, the competitors butted their foreheads together until one or the other became unconscious
or quit.
Nilotic peoples throughout the Southern Sahara are reported fighting with sharpened wrist
bracelets. The object of this fighting was to cause cuts to the head, as the bloodshed supposedly
guaranteed bountiful harvests. The blood that ran during such duels was considered virtuous, and
the sick often tried to touch it. While the symbolic value of these weapons is indicated by their
Shangan name, bagussa, meaning "things that cause fear," Europeans thought that the Africans
wore these sharpened bracelets for self-defense against Swahili slavers.
Commercially rolled cigarettes become popular in the United States. The cigarettes were popular
mainly with urban youth. Tobacco-chewing moralists were outraged, saying, "Begin smoking at
10, mind shattered by 14!" And how had these urban youths acquired the smoking habit? Probably
by taking jobs stripping tobacco and rolling cigarettes in squalid New York City sweat shops.
1880:
In deference to the political Left, the French government makes Bastille Day the French national
holiday. While the urban proletariat liked the idea (the 12-hour work day was standard in France
until 1904, and the six-day work week was not introduced until 1906), French landowners and
manufacturers did not, as they feared that workers with too much time on their hands would get
drunker than usual and start riots.
To facilitate newspaper sales -- the more championship bouts, the more papers sold -- Richard
Kyle Fox's National Police Gazette begins ranking boxers. The Gazette's sporting editor, William
Edgar Harding, also worked to repair pugilism's increasingly unsavory reputation.
(Pistol-whipping referees and fixing fights had been rife during the 1870s.) To do this, Harding
wrote several books extolling the virtues of pre-Civil War ring heroes like Tom Hyer, and urged
his youthful readers to return pugilism to the "honesty" of pre-Civil War times. Gloved bouts
fought under Queensberry rules were suggested as a way of achieving this.
Middle-class London sportsmen establish the Amateur Boxing Association. This organization set
the international amateur standards until 1946, when the Amateur International Boxing
Association was created to replace it. The English rules emphasized style rather than knockout,
and caused amateur boxing to become a modern combative sport rather than a practical
self-defense.
By defeating Thiebaud Bauer of Germany, William Muldoon becomes the United States' first
famous wrestling champion. An avid physical culturalist, Muldoon also had done some prize
fighting. He preferred wrestling, though, as the purses were larger: seven dollars to the winner
and three to the loser, instead of three dollars to the winner and two to the loser.
Battle Studies by Charles Ardant du Picq teaches three generations of French and Japanese
soldiers that sufficient élan during the attack can neutralize an enemy's technological superiority.
While this is probably true when the resolve of the side with the technological advantage is weak
(witness the outcome of the Algerian and Vietnamese wars of national liberation), it is not true
when both side's resolve is equally strong (witness World Wars I and II).
1881:
Treaties and smallpox end 300 years of warfare between the Chileans and the Mapuche Indians.
This opens south-central Chile to European settlement and economic exploitation.
In Tucson, Arizona, saloonkeeper George Hand notes in his diary that the body of a stranger was
found alongside the railroad track. "A coroner's jury was summoned and they found both of his
legs cut off and both arms cut off. His back was broken and the bone was sticking out. His liver
and heart were torn out and lying beside the body. The jury said he was dead." A year later, the
bullet-riddled body of Frank Stilwell was found near the same railroad tracks. Although he was
never charged for Stilwell's murder, Wyatt Earp later said that he did it. This is likely true, as
Stilwell had been implicated in the murder of Earp's brother Morgan three days earlier. "Stilwell's
guns were in plain sight and I figured he'd jerk them," Earp told Stuart Lake fifty years later. "As I
got closer, his right hand started down, but quit halfway and he stood as if paralyzed... I've never
forgotten the look in Frank Stilwell's eyes... [as] I let him have it." Although Earp attributed
Stilwell's sudden paralysis to cowardice, one suspects that his being shot twice with Earp's
ten-gauge shotgun and four times by Doc Holliday's rifle played a greater role.
Korea's King Kojong hires a Japanese soldier named Horimoto Reizo to train the Pyolgigun, or
Special Skills Force, to march and shoot in the European fashion. The Korean royal bodyguard
was not amused by this threat to its existence, and had Horimoto killed and his Special Skills
Force disbanded in 1882. Payback came in 1910, when the Japanese Army disbanded the Korean
royal bodyguard and ordered its surviving members returned to their home provinces. According
to the traditions of a modern Korean combatives system known as the Kuk Sool Won, a former
bodyguard named Myung Deuk Suh subsequently began teaching koong joong mu
sool("aristocratic martial arts") to his grandchildren as a way of preserving the old ways. Cynics,
however, say that the leader of the Kuk Sool Won, In Hyuk Suh, trained in hapkido during the
1940s, and only came up with the story of his grandfather having been the sixteenth generation
master of the Kuk Sool Won after opening a chain of commercial martial art academies in 1961.
Japanese ultra-nationalists establish the Black Ocean Society in Tokyo. Killers associated with this
organization assassinated the Korean queen in 1895, and as late as 1931, Prince Saionji
Kimmochi described them as "villains and roughnecks." The society had strong underworld
connections. This was partly because military intelligence could be collected in whorehouses and
gambling dens, and partly because the Japanese subsidized the expenses of their Chinese
adventures by selling thirty tons of Iranian opium a year. Japanese martial art instructors whose
lives intersected with this society or a successor known as the Amur River Society include
Shorinji kenpo's Doshin So, aikido's Ueshiba Morihei, and Goju Kai karate's Yamaguchi Gogen.
A Swedish woman named Martina Bergman-Osterberg becomes the Superintendent of Physical
Education for London's public schools. By 1886, she had trained 1,300 English school teachers in
the methods of Swedish gymnastics. "I try to train my girls to help raise their own sex," said
Bergman-Osterberg, "and so accelerate the progress of the race."
Charlotte Perkins Gilman of Providence, Rhode Island, becomes the United States' first known
female body-builder. Besides lifting weights, Gilman ran a mile a day and boasted of her ability to
"vault and jump, go up a knotted rope, walk on my hands under a ladder, kick as high as my head,
and revel in the flying rings." By 1904, fencing was also popular with Rhode Island society
women. The instructor was Eleanor Baldwin Cass. Students included Marion Fish and Natalie
Wells.
By defeating the Austrian strongmen Franz Stahr and Georg Jagendorfer, a French Classical
wrestler named Joseph Doublier popularizes Greco-Roman wrestling in Austria. ("Greco-Roman"
was what French Classical wrestlers called their style when wrestling in Germany and Austria.
The style itself was doubtless introduced into Austria by Gypsy circus wrestlers, but those
matches never received the publicity of these "international" matches.)
The National Police Gazette coins the phrase "the championship of the world." The idea was to
sell newspapers describing a bare-knuckle bout between the Irish-born Paddy Ryan and the
Boston-born John L. Sullivan. According to the Cuban poet José Martí, who witnessed the fight,
the rules included Sullivan and Ryan agreeing to "fight on foot, without rocks or irons in their
hands . . . It is agreed, with an eye to decorum, that this time there will be no biting or scratching,
and that no blows are to be struck while an opponent has a knee and a hand touching the ground,
nor while he is held by the neck against the ropes or ring posts." Oscar Wilde was also present at
this fight, which was the first sporting event to be widely covered by the international press.
1882:
The Japanese government decides that the four overriding principles of public education were: (1)
to form a strong constitution through physical exercise, (2) to fill students' hearts with loyalty and
patriotism, (3) to inculcate necessary knowledge, and (4) to produce the strength necessary for
military men. Toward making these things happen, Kano Jigoro, a 22-year old teacher at the
Peers' School at Shitaya (the future Gakushin University), starts teaching his young charges, all
eight or nine of them, to wrestle. (While attending the Imperial University from 1877 to 1881,
Kano had studied Tenjin-Shinyo Ryu jujutsu under Fukuda Hachinosuke and Iso Masatomo.
Kano also studied Kito Ryu throwing techniques and kata under Ikubo Tsunetoshi until 1885.)
Kano believed that wrestling built character as well as fitness. (Kano spoke English well, and his
influences included German gymnastics, English Muscular Christianity, and his father's
Shintoism.) Because he was more interested in health than combat, Kano took pains to eliminate
obviously dangerous moves. To reflect this break with tradition, Kano called his new method
Kodokan judo, a phrase meaning "the Imperial Method for Learning the Flexible Mind Necessary
to Gain Final Victory." There were still many traditional aspects in Kano's training program. For
example, students were required to live according to Buddhist monastic principles and swear
blood oaths. These oaths affirmed that students would never quit judo without reason, dishonor
the training hall through misconduct, teach others without permission, or break with the style after
receiving permission to teach.
Peter Jackson fights his first bare-knuckle bout in Australia. Because Jackson was a black man
from the West Indies, his camp was located away from the white sections of town. His trainers,
on the other hand, were white, and included the Bakers of Lane Love River and the M'Mahons of
Stoney Creek Corner. Jackson's usual venue was Larry Foley's White Horse Saloon in Sydney.
Foley's ring was located in his cellar, and the risk of boxers hitting their heads on the concrete
floor caused the Sydney police to close the place in 1893.
Stretched canvas floors are added to Coney Island boxing booths after a man named Fred Johnson
dies from hitting his head against a wooden floor.
William F. Cody convinces his hometown of North Platte, Nebraska, to hold an "Old Glory
Blowout" each Fourth of July. Entertainments included the riding and roping tricks that later
formed the basis for Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and Congress of Rough-Riders.
About 1883:
Kano Jigoro introduces a colored belt ranking system to judo. The original colors were white,
brown, and black. These colors were symbolic, as white represents base metals in East Asian
metaphysics while black represents finished steel. The ranking system was innovative, as Japanese
martial art schools traditionally awarded rank using scrolls (menkyo) rather than colored belts.
Reasons for the change included German sport pedagogy, which urged educators to classify
athletes by ability and achievement, and the Japanese honorific language, which does not allow
people to easily talk to one another without previously knowing each other's social status. In a
Japanese setting, the use of color belts also encouraged wa (a Japanese concept meaning "mutual
cooperation"), as it helped weaker players learn and experiment without loss of face. (Explained
historian Carlin Barton aptly, although in a different context, "The more anxiously competitive the
situation, the more importance attached to victory, the more likelihood of collusion -- of those
who risk a loss of status -- in the formation of elaborate status differentiations. The average
athlete, for instance, is willing to put the extraordinary one 'in a class by himself.' The third-grader
is willing and happy to be 'outclassed' by the sixth-grader against whom he or she would
otherwise be compelled to compete. The more fierce the competition, the more numerous the
statuses accepted voluntarily. Clear and distinct differences in class and category can be a relief,
allowing one to remove oneself, without loss of face, from an unhappy comparison of skills.")
1883:
Due to increasing numbers of crimes involving firearms, the constables of the London
Metropolitan Police are told that they can carry firearms for defense. Most constables continued
to prefer truncheons, in part because they received no firearm instruction until 1966.
Nevertheless, in "The Adventure of the Speckled Band," Sherlock Holmes observed that
revolvers provided an excellent argument against gentlemen who could twist steel pokers into
knots. In "The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet" Holmes also noted that clapping pistols to
suspects' heads made them so much more reasonable during questioning. Pockets were obviously
stout in those pre-civil rights times, too, as the weapon Holmes carried was Watson's Army-issue
.476 caliber Adams revolver loaded with Eley's Number 2.
The New Orleans Picayune describes professional wrestling as "the most commendable of athletic
exhibitions as there is but little brutality connected with it, and agility, coolness, strength and
science are the winning points." This was in contrast to boxing, where in 1892 a writer for the
New Orleans Weekly Times-Democrat saw a boxer's nose, mouth, and eye "disfigured past
recognition and hear the ugly half-splashing sound as [the other boxer's] blood-soaked gloves
again and again visited the bleeding wounds that had drenched them." The reason for the detailed
description was that the loser was a white man and the winner black, and the writer did not think
that such mixed-race fights should be allowed in the future.
1884:
Hiram S. Maxim, an American living at No. 57 Hatten Garden in London, patents his first belt-fed
machine gun. While an eminently practical design, navies liked Maxim guns more than armies.
This was mostly due to expense. In other words, while a cruiser captain might feel well-equipped
with a handful of Maxim guns, an infantry battalion commander required dozens, and one gun,
without cart or spare parts, cost $1800, plus another $25 per minute to shoot.
The patronage of the Emperor Meiji brings professional sumo out of its twenty-year economic
slump. (While the Japanese public liked sumo, the Meiji-era aristocracy preferred Western sports
like baseball and golf, and the new mercantile class was not yet rich enough to squander huge
sums of money on stables of sumotori.)
The British polymath Captain Richard Francis Burton publishes The Book of the Sword. This
was a still unsurpassed discussion of the edged weapons of Western and Mediterranean Europe,
North Africa, and the Middle East. While Burton originally intended to produce a trilogy that
described swords in all cultures and all times, The Book of the Sword sold poorly, so he never
completed the planned second and third volumes. This is unfortunate, as the research Burton did
was impressive. (It included a close study of nearly 14,000 artifacts in the collection of Augustus
Lane-Fox, the wealthy soldier who headed the Anthropological Society, as the Royal
Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland was then known.) A man of far-flung
interests and abilities, Burton delighted in esoteric footnotes. One of these mentioned that the
Chinese enjoyed betting on fights between praying mantises. I suspect, but cannot prove, that
these insect battles, which Burton compared to battles between human saber fencers, were a likely
source of inspiration for the Chinese martial art known as t'ang-lang ch'uan, or northern Praying
Mantis. While tradition says that this style was created by a Shantung master named Wang Lang
during the late seventeenth century, there is no documentary evidence of the style's existence
before the 1850s. Modern Praying Mantis has several major sub-schools, including the Six
Harmonies Style, the Eight Steps Style, and the Seven Stars Style.
The British scientist Sir Francis Galton tests 500 men and 270 women to see how fast they could
punch. He found that the men averaged 18 feet per second, with a maximum speed of 29 feet per
second, while the women averaged 13 feet per second, with a maximum speed of 20 feet per
second. In other words, while some women could hit harder than the average man, most women
could hit only 55% as hard.
British missionary activity near Cape Horn causes the Argentines to annex the eastern portion of
Tierra del Fuego. The annexation outraged the Chileans, who had been active in the region since
1843, and caused friction and armed border disputes until 1978. Other than nationalist pride, the
main use either side had for the desolate area was housing penal colonies.
The German Army becomes the first major European military to issue repeating rifles to its
soldiers. This was a bolt-action Mauser rifle loading 11mm bullets from a tubular magazine.
After a white boxer named Alick Ager dies of injuries received while fighting an African American
boxer named Jimmy Lawson, bare-knuckle boxing is banned in Melbourne, Australia.
In Bodie, California, "Some sport was had in Joe Rowse's back parlor between two well-known
businessmen of Bodie. An Irishman thought, $20 worth, that he could throw a certain French
gentleman twice out of three times, catch as catch can. He was right."
A 20-year old American woman named Etta Hattan adopts the stage name of Jaguarina, and bills
herself as the "Ideal Amazon of the Age." Whether Hattan was all of that is of course debatable,
but she was certainly Amazon enough to defeat many men at mounted broadsword fencing during
her 15-year professional career.
1885:
Professor Edmond Desbonnet establishes a school of physical culture at Lilles, France. Glove
boxing, wrestling, gymnastics, and weight training were among the activities offered. In 1910,
Desbonnet also published a history of nineteenth century French Classical wrestling called Les
Rois de la Lutte, or "The Kings of Wrestling."
A Russian physician named V. Krajewski establishes a Heavy Athletics Club at St. Petersburg so
that he could examine the effects that weight lifting and wrestling had on the human physique.
The wrestling style featured at his club was Greco-Roman wrestling, probably because it was
foreign, therefore "better." (Most Russians practiced collar-and-elbow wrestling, while most
Turks practiced belt wrestling.) While the most famous wrestler to come from Krajewski's school
was George Hackenschmidt, other athletes who trained at Krajewski's club included Ivan
Padoubny, who advertised himself as a Cossack, and the Polish wrestlers Stanislaus and Wladek
Zbyszko. Except for Padoubny, who was a plank-carrier, most of these athletes were from the
landed classes. The reason was that working-class men worked 12 to 14 hours a day, six days a
week, and had neither the time, money, or energy to devote to body-building. The government
also did not support working-class sport clubs, as it feared that they would become hotbeds of
sedition.
Japanese sugar cane workers stage a sumo match for King Kalakaua of Hawaii. The players were
local, and ranked sumotori do not give exhibitions in Hawaii until 1914.
Karl Abs of Germany defeats William Muldoon of the United States for what the American press
billed as the heavyweight championship of the world. Of course, no Sikhs, Muslims, or Japanese
were invited.
A 24-year old exhibition shooter from Ohio with the stage name of Annie Oakley (her birth name
was Phoebe Ann Moses, and she called herself Mrs. Frank Butler) joins Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild
West Show. Although the charismatic Oakley preferred shooting .22 caliber rifles, she also fired
double-barreled shotguns during her shows, not because she needed help, but because light shot
was less likely to break windows or injure bystanders.
A French engineer named Paul Vielle patents the first colloidal single-base propellant. (In
less-technical terms, this means high velocity, smokeless gunpowder.) Meanwhile, a Swiss officer
named Rubin was marketing a nickel-copper coating that did not strip off at 1,800 or 2,000 feet
per second that he had invented two years earlier. The result was a European small arms race. The
French led this race by introducing the 8mm Lebel cartridge in 1886, while Britain, Austria, and
Germany followed suit by introducing their .303 Enfield, 8x50Rmm, and 7.9x57mm Mauser
cartridges in 1888. The United States (which was still just a third-rate power) fielded the
comparable .30-40 Krag-Jorgenson rifle following the Spanish-American War of 1898. (Before
the war, American soldiers believed that the .45 caliber Springfield was more lethal than the
smaller, faster Mauser cartridge. But fights with the Spanish soon convinced them otherwise.
First, smokeless powder did not reveal hidden positions. Therefore it was more useful during
ambushes. Second, it did not obscure officers' ability to see enemy lines. Therefore it was more
useful during sieges. Finally, a soldier wounded was, in the words of the New York World, "more
of a burden to his comrades than a dead one. In the latter case no attention is paid to the man till
after the conflict, when he receives proper burial. In the former case it requires the services of one
or two men to carry the man off the field.") (note 4) Judging range was considerably harder with
the new rifles, though, as bullets would pass harmlessly overhead if the shooter guessed wrong.
To correct this problem, marksmanship instruction was greatly increased, and new rules of thumb
were developed. For example, British instructors said, "At 600 yards the head is a dot, the body
tapered. At 300 yards, the face is blurred. At 200 yards, all parts of the body are distinctly seen."
They also noted that ranges were likely to be overestimated when the enemy was kneeling or at
the end of a long straight road, and underestimated when the shooter viewed his target over level
ground, across a chasm, or up or down a hill.
The United States Government Printing Office publishes The Soldier's Handbook. This reassures
the Indian-fighting cavalryman that dying from arrow wounds was not so horrible. After all, the
soldier shot through the abdomen with an arrow generally "lives a day or two, with perfect
clearness of intellect, and often not suffering greatly." The Army's observation (which was
actually a lie, since most Indian war arrows were made of chipped flint or barbed steel for
maximum effect) had its basis in the opiate analgesic peptides that the human body releases under
extreme stress. For example, one 1946 study on wounds found that 57% of the United States
Army casualties in Italy during World War II reported little or no pain from their battlefield
wounds when questioned about them within 12 hours of their occurrence. There are also
psychological factors to consider. For example, during World War II, the United States Army sent
its wounded soldiers home to recuperate. (Unless they were horribly disfigured. Then it sent them
to a hospital in Greenland to die. But the Army didn't publicize that.) Therefore receiving serious,
but not crippling, wounds sometimes was cause for celebration. Finally, a warrior's courage was
traditionally measured by the number of wounds he survived. As late as the 1880s, old soldiers
happily showed their sons the tables or houses where their limbs had been amputated during some
earlier war, and in 1910, the obituary of the British fencing master Alfred Hutton reported that
relatives included a brother "twice wounded at the Charge of Balaclava". Yet those same heroes
just as often complained bitterly about toothaches or cold feet. So all this is to say that pain is a
sensation that requires interpretation, and that those interpretations depend almost entirely upon
the situation and the culture to which the victim belongs or identifies.
1885-1886:
Driven by fears that their members would lose jobs to Chinese labor, white labor organizers use
violence and terror to drive the Chinese out of the West. While a few brave politicians backed by
Federal troops blunted the worst of the violence in Seattle, Welsh miners in Rock Springs,
Wyoming, killed about 30 Chinese, and wounded scores more. There was similar anti-Chinese
violence in British Columbia and California, and organized labor's fear of the Yellow Peril ensured
that the Chinese martial arts were not publicly practiced in North America until the 1960s.
1886:
Belgian gunsmith Charles François Galand spurs handgun sales to French bicyclists by advertising
his hammerless 5.5mm (.22 caliber) centerfire revolvers as the perfect cure for pursuing dogs.
(Actually, the weapons had hammers, they just were enclosed within the frame. The advantage of
this was that the weapons were less subject to snagging upon being quickly pulled from a pocket.)
The French Académie d'Armes contributes to the continuing stylization of European fencing by
introducing the grand, or formal civil, salute.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Police host a tournament meant to resolve the question of which was
better, Kano Jigoro's Kodokan judo club or a Yoshin Ryu jujutsu school headed by Totsuke
Hikosuke. By winning 13 of their 15 matches and drawing the other two, the Kodokan athletes
firmly established their primacy. A 1943 Kurosawa movie made Saigo Shiro the most famous of
the early Kodokan wrestlers. Saigo's favorite technique was the yama arashi, or mountain storm,
of Daito Ryu aiki jutsu. Yokoyama Sakujiro was another powerful Kodokan judoka, and his
55-minute bout with Nakamura Hansuke during the 1886 police tournament remains the longest
judo match on record. (Modern matches only go 20 minutes, with the possibility of a 10-minute
extension.) Uniforms of the era were similar to modern uniforms except that sleeves and trouser
legs were much shorter. The dignified silence that the wrestlers and their fans maintained greatly
impressed foreign visitors.
About 1887:
The J. Stevens Arms & Tool Company develops the .22 Long Rifle cartridge. This quickly
became the most popular rimfire cartridge ever made.
1887:
Winchester Repeating Firearms introduces its first repeating shotgun, the lever-action Model
1887. While most hunters saw little value in the weapon, it did find some popularity among peace
officers and railroad guards. So the first important martial shotgun was Winchester's pump-action
Model 1897, which became enormously popular with United States Marines during World War I
and moonshiners during Prohibition.
Circus magnate P. T. Barnum hires wrestler Ed Decker, the Little Wonder from Vermont, as a
sideshow attraction. Barnum offered to pay $100 to anyone who could pin Decker, and $50 to
anyone who could avoid being pinned within three minutes. Despite weighing only 150 pounds
and standing only 5'6" tall, Decker reportedly never lost to a paying customer. Of course, some
matches were harder than others, and as a British sideshow boxer told a reporter year later, "I still
pray, 'Oh, Lord, let me win the easy way.'" Women also fought as booth boxers. According to
Ron Taylor, a Welsh sideshow promoter of the 1960s, "My grandmother used to challenge all
comers. She wore protectors on her chest, but she never needed them. Nobody she ever went up
against could even come close to hitting her." The most famous of these British fairground
pugilists was probably Barbara Buttrick, who was the women's fly and bantamweight boxing
champion from 1950-1960. This said, not all the female pugilists were female. For instance, a
carnie shill named Charles Edwards told A. J. Liebling about a turn-of-the-century Texas circus
that had a woman stand in front of the tent promising $50 to any man who could stay three
rounds with her. Once inside the dimly lit tent, the mark then found himself boxing a
cross-dressing male look-alike.
According to Ring historian Nat Fleischer, wrestler William Muldoon body-slams boxer John L.
Sullivan to settle the old argument about who would win a fight between a boxer and a wrestler.
While there is scholarly debate about whether this match ever occurred outside Fleischer's
imagination, the outcome is plausible. For instance, Martin "Farmer" Burns pinned Billy Papke in
1910. Ray Steele pinned Kingfish Levinsky in 1935. And Nature Boy Buddy Rogers pinned Jersey
Joe Walcott in 1956. "Which proves," said Charles B. Roth in a related article in the June 1949
Esquire, "if it proves anything -- that boxing, far from being the best system of self-defense, is
actually the worst."
A long-haired Arizona sheriff named Commodore Perry Owens shoots three men and a boy in a
matter of seconds during what was arguably the territory's wildest Old West shoot-out. These
killings, which were part of the larger Tonto Basin war, later became a staple of cowboy movie
lore.
The memoirs of a retired New York police chief named George Walling turn the phrase "the
third-degree" into a euphemism for police brutality. Explained Thomas Byrnes, New York's
superintendent of detectives, "I believe in any method of proving crime against a criminal." Tools
of the policeman's trade included water torture, rubber hoses, and crank-handled electric
telephones.
1888:
British and Canadian missionaries introduce Western sports into China.
James Sullivan establishes the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) in New York City. While the
organization claimed that it protected athletic amateurism, what it did in practice was discriminate
against non-whites and recent immigrants. To circumvent this problem, African American
educators establish the Interscholastic Athletic Association in 1905 and the Colored (now Central)
Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1912.
The AAU hosts its first national wrestling championships. Because the tournament had no cash
prizes and excluded foreigners, exactly four men participated.
Toward helping Greco-Roman wrestling gain approval in Britain and the United States, wrestlers
were ordered to wear shirts and tights. But, sniffed the English wrestlers Walter Armstrong and
Percy Longhurst in 1912, Greco-Roman was perhaps "productive of some excitement when
witnessed by the uninitiated; but apart from that it may be asked, 'What useful purpose does it
serve?,' for, instead of being the art of standing up against an adversary, it is simply the art of
getting down in a certain position, so as to avoid being thrown in a backfall." Most
Anglo-American sportswriters agreed with them, and Greco-Roman wrestling never became
especially popular off the Continent.
The Maharajah of Jodhpur holds a contest to see who can do the most deep knee-bends. (note
5)The winner, who remained bed-ridden for a week afterward, was the future Gama the Great, a
Punjabi boy named Gulam Muhammad. Gulam's exact age at the time of this contest is not
known, but was between six and ten. While Gulam was not sure how many squats he had done,
he thought it was over 2,000. (The guess seems reasonable, too, since the modern record stands
at about 3,200 in an hour.) Since the current Maharajah was a child, the wrestlers' patron was
probably Sir Pratap Singh, the Rajput cavalry general who introduced Jodhpur breeches to
London in 1887. Pratap Singh's guru was Swami Dayananda Saraswati, who reassured his martial
followers that killing tigers and eating meat would not exclude them from heaven.
Because no white American fighter worth his salt would fight him, Peter Jackson of Australia
fights George Godfrey in San Francisco for what the Police Gazette called the "Colored
Heavy-Weight Championship of America." Jackson won the fight in nineteen rounds, and
probably ruined Godfrey as a boxer, as Godfrey lost most of his subsequent fights by knockout.
Jackson's style was essentially defensive, and featured a short left jab followed by straight rights.
"Be a gentleman, you son-of-a-bitch!" cries John L. Sullivan after the British boxer Charlie
Mitchell repeatedly drives his spiked shoes into Sullivan's foot during a 39-round London Prize
Ring fight fought near Chantilly, France.
After discovering that sexually-transmitted diseases caused 37% of the Indian Army's hospital admissions, the British Women's Christian Temperance Union starts a "just say no to sex" campaign. After this experiment fails, (note 6) the British turn to licensing brothels. This causes British hospital admissions due to venereal diseases to drop to a more acceptable 7% by 1905. Since gonorrhea is the most common bacterial infection in the world, the problem of soldiers becoming unfit for service due to sexually-transmitted diseases was not really resolved until the introduction of penicillin in 1944. Then, just as the problem appeared resolved, a 25-year old British sailor became the first European to die from the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, or AIDS, in 1959. The licensed brothels were hardly a perfect solution, either, as they dehumanized everyone involved and encouraged the spread of organized crime.
1889:
Hooks become common in Australian and North American boxing, as do corkscrew punches and
combinations of three to five punches thrown in rapid succession. Queensberry rules were the
reason. Padded gloves protected knuckles and thumbs from breaking on the opponent's head,
while 10-second knockouts and rounds that did not end when a player fell to the ground
encouraged boxers to throw flurries rather than carefully aimed single shots.
Female boxing becomes popular throughout the United States. Champions included Nellie
Stewart of Norfolk, Virginia, Ann Lewis of Cleveland, Ohio, and Hattie Leslie of New York. The
audiences were male, and the fighters sometimes stripped to their drawers like men. Savate fights
in which kicking was allowed were also popular. Girls as young as 12 years headed the bills. Cuts
were stitched on the spot, and the women often fought with broken noses, jaws, and teeth. There
were occasionally matches between female boxers and female savate fighters. In 1902, for
instance, a Mlle. Augagnier beat Miss Pinkney of England during such a bout. Pinkney was ahead
during the first ninety minutes, but then Augagnier managed to kick Pinkney hard in the face, an
advantage which she immediately took to send a powerful kick into Pinkney's abdomen for the
victory. There were even a few mixed-gender bouts. For instance, when a drunken John L.
Sullivan stomped into San Francisco's Midway Plaisanceon vaudeville saloon and cried, "I can lick
any son-of-a-bitch in the house!" bartender Bessie Hall walked around the counter and laid him
out. (A gentleman didn't swear in Bessie Hall's bar.) (note 7) Meanwhile, female wrestling
becomes popular in France and England. Masha Poddubnaya, wife of Ivan Poddubny, claimed the
women's title. Said journalist Max Viterbo of a women's wrestling match in the Rue Montmartre
in 1903, "The stale smell of sweat and foul air assaulted your nostrils. In this overheated room the
spectators were flushed. Smoke seized us by the throat and quarrels broke out." As for the
wrestlers, "They flung themselves at each other like modern bacchantes -- hair flying, breasts
bared, indecent, foaming at the mouth. Everyone screamed, applauded, stamped his feet."
During the last nationally ranked London Prize Rules fight in the United States, John L. Sullivan
beats Jake Kilrain. The media circus surrounding the fight (which featured Bat Masterson as a
timekeeper and a future mayor of New Orleans as the referee) established Sullivan as America's
first sports icon. The fight itself lasted 2 hours, 16 minutes, and was distinguished by more
hip-throws, foot-spiking, and name-calling than clean punches. Put another way, "Mr. John
started a-sweatin' about the second round," said a witness named Miss Mattie many years later.
"He grunted and snorted a heap. Mr. Jake danced like a bridegroom at his weddin' dinner. Finally
Mr. John hit Mr. Jake so hard Mr. Jake just didn't get up and that all it was to it."
Under the direction of Florenz Ziegfeld of Ziegfeld's Follies, a Prussian strongman called Eugen
Sandow (his birth name was Friedrich Müller) becomes the first modern strongman to make his
living from homoerotic showmanship. Sandow allowed small groups of paying customers to touch
his bulging pectorals. "These muscles, madam," Sandow told one customer in 1894, "are hard as
iron itself, I want you to convince yourself of the fact." Sandow then took the woman's gloved
hand and ran it across his chest. "It's unbelievable," she gasped before fainting. Or so goes the
story published in the National Police Gazette, which ignored the fact that most of the people who
ran their hands across Sandow's chest were male. Sandow is also remembered for devising a
training program that isolated and perfected individual muscle groups. Charles Édouard
Brown-Séquard, a contemporary French physiologist who believed that injections of serums made
from bull testicles could increase physical performance, was ultimately as important to twentieth
century body-building. The reason was that Brown-Séquard's research led to the development of
synthetic testosterone in 1935.
Toward encouraging working class British youth to engage in middle-class games like cricket
instead of working-class games like football and boxing, Sir William Fraser creates the Duke of
Wellington's famous dictum about Waterloo having been won on the playing fields of Eton.
Wealthy Americans viewed sport similarly. Henry Lee Higginson, for example, donated the
money to build Harvard's "Soldiers' Field" in 1890, and Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes, Jr. said in 1895 that to learn heroism, one must practice heroism, and that the occasional
broken neck "was a price well paid for the breeding of a race fit for headship and command."
Broken necks were common in late nineteenth century American football, a game in which
unnecessary roughness meant hitting another player with the fists more than three times. The
modern game, with its highly ritualized violence, dates to the 1880s. Its pioneers were Walter
Camp of the New Haven Clock Company and sportswriter Caspar Whitney. Whitney created the
"All-American" category in 1889, and Camp believed that American college football was "the
best school for instilling into the young man those attributes which business desires and demands."
In other words, the ability to do mindless, repetitive tasks for low pay under the watchful eye of a
verbally and physically abusive supervisor.
In response to a question from a New Zealander about the morality of killing prisoners of war, an
elderly Maori warrior replies that letting prisoners live was "a wasteful expenditure of strength
and science, and a future source of trouble." Instead, he said, "If ever you go to fight, fight for
results; if not, stay at home and do not make a fool of yourself." Originally Maori women used
war prisoners' bones for making flutes and sewing needles, while Maori men used war prisoners'
skulls for bailing their boats. This said, most of the heads bought by Australians during the
nineteenth century were collected solely for the tourist trade.
After spending a summer picking hops for Shaker farmers in the Pacific Northwest, the Paiute
prophet Wavoka travels in a dream to the Christian heaven, where he learns that Jesus is not a
stuffy old white man, but an Indian who liked to dance and sing. On his return to his home in
Walker Lake, Nevada, Wavoka then establishes the Native American religion known as Ghost
Dancing.
About 1890:
An Okinawan rice-basket maker called Kanryo Higashionna establishes the Shorei, or
"Enlightened Spirit" school of karate at Naha. Higashionna taught a form of southern Shaolin
boxing at this school, the exact style of which is unknown. Nevertheless, Higashionna's teaching
in Naha, Okinawa provided the basis for the subsequent Goju Ryu and Shito Ryu karate styles,
and is responsible for popularizing the breathing kata called sanchin (literally, "Three Straight,"
but usually translated as "Three Battles"). Higashionna's emphasis on physical conditioning
probably owes something to the techniques of Chinese rice-basket making, which required
enormously strong fingers and wrists. Still, this emphasis on extraordinary muscular tension may
have led some subsequent karate students down the wrong path, as such extraordinary muscular
tension has been linked to hypertension and hemorrhoids, while medical studies done during the
1920s by the United States physician Edmund Jacobson showed that people whose muscles were
tensed were less responsive to unexpected stimuli than people whose muscles were relaxed.
Despite complaints that they were too strenuous for girls, active sports such as field hockey, golf,
lacrosse, and tennis replace gentle calisthenics in British and North American girls' schools.
Pioneers included Rhoda Anstey and Margaret Stanfeld in Britain, Amy Morris Homans and
Senda Berenson in Massachusetts, and Genevra Magee in California.
The victories of a Danish professional wrestler named Bech-Olsen popularizes Greco-Roman
wrestling in Scandinavia. Bech-Olsen was primarily a strongman, and amateur wrestlers like S.
Ahlqvist were behind the spread of good technique into Scandinavian amateur wrestling.
1890:
Bull-fighting is banned in Paris. The sport remained popular in the northern provinces into the
1930s, and along the Spanish border into the present. The French sport differed from the Spanish
sport in that the bull was not usually killed in the ring.
A criminal known as Oakland Tommy becomes the first person to use an oxyacetylene torch to
break into a safe.
The Brazilian government bans capoeira. This was partly to keep young gentlemen from
associating with working-class men and mainly to keep urban street gangs from breaking up
government-sponsored political rallies. The game survived, though, perhaps because so many of
Salvador's working class men rowed or sailed boats to work from homes in the less-patrolled
Bahian bush.
A Finnish physician named Axel Heikel observes a Mongol national wrestling meet at Urga. The
contest lasted a week, and was held near a Buddhist temple. The wrestlers wore only trousers,
and they began the contest with a series of little jumps. Their method was strictly standing
wrestling, with no leg attacks allowed. Once the two players closed, the first one whose hand
touched the ground lost. The competition was single elimination, and the grand champion was
rewarded with horses, sheep, and other valuable prizes.
1891:
A Swiss cutler named Karl Elsener persuades the Swiss Army to buy its pocket knives from his
firm. Elsener's knives featured a punch, screwdriver, can opener, and a single blade, and are still
sold as the Victorinix model 5720.
The Imperial German Army learns how railway field messes should work by observing the
logistical support used by Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. (Cody moved 200 people, 150
horses, and 20 bison like clockwork, so the Germans were correct in appreciating the
organizational skill involved.)
A Prussian staff officer named Emilio Körner introduces the Chilean army to German military
theory and training.
Under the guidance of Rudolf Bredemeyer, the Deutschen Athleten Verband ("German Athletes'
Association;" it only later became known as Deutscher Athletik-Sportverband von 1891, or
"German Athletic Sport Association of 1891") is established at Duisburg and Cologne. A national
organization designed to encourage greater skill and less brute force, its patronage caused
Greco-Roman wrestling to replace the old Turner-Ringkampf in most German schools.
Richard Kyle Fox and the National Police Gazette sponsor a women's championship wrestling
match in New York City. To prevent hair pulling, the women cut their hair short, and to keep
everything "decent," the women wore tights. (Not all matches were so prim, and in 1932,
Frederick Van Wyck recollected some matches of his youth that were between "two ladies, with
nothing but trunks on.") Fox's wrestlers included Alice Williams and Sadie Morgan. The venue
was Owney Geoghegan's Bastille of the Bowery.
By knocking out Cal McCarthy in a fight lasting 22 rounds, featherweight boxer George Dixon of
Halifax, Nova Scotia, becomes the first black man to hold an American national sporting title. In
1892, Dixon was also the first black boxer to beat a white boxer (amateur Jack Skelly) before a
paying audience in New Orleans. Said the New Orleans Times-Democrat the next day, "It was a
mistake to match a negro and a white man," and a week later, New Orleans' Olympia Club
decided to permit no more interracial fights. Why? Explained the Chicago Tribune, "A darky is
alright in his place, but the idea of sitting quietly by and seeing a colored boy pommel a white lad
grates on Southerners."
The California Athletic Club introduces electric gongs to boxing. The occasion was a
Queensberry Rules fight between Peter Jackson of Australia and Gentleman Jim Corbett of San
Francisco, California. Although the bout ended in a draw and left fans sleeping in their seats, it
still gave Corbett the reputation that he needed to challenge John L. Sullivan for the world title.
(Sullivan refused to fight Jackson, probably because he feared losing his rabidly racist fans.)
1892:
According to an article in Outing written by Robert Denig, the yaba, or place for Japanese
archery, was usually attached to a Shinto temple. Its caretaker was usually an elderly woman
assisted by younger women who brought tea and flirted with the patrons. These women were
often competent coaches, too, and their advice was not to be ignored.
During the first Gotlandic Pentathlon held at Wisborg, Sweden, the final event was a wrestling
match between the leaders. The style was a variation of the old Norse Hryggspena, and was
known as Bondetag in German and Ryggtag in Swedish. (Both names translate roughly as
"Backhold.") The method assumed that the two men had lost their swords, and were fighting for
battlefield survival. The loser was he whose shoulder hit the ground first. To ensure crowd appeal,
matches were limited to 15 minutes. The Swedish heavyweight champion was for many years
Arvid Anderson of Stockholm. Similar wrestling matches are still held during the North and South
Uist Highland Games in the Hebrides, where they remain the final event of the games.
The first amateur Greco-Roman wrestling championships are held at Duisburg, Germany. These
championships move to Prague in 1895, then Vienna and Paris in 1898, and become annual events
after 1904. The Swedes and Finns dominated the sport before World War II, while the Eastern
Europeans and Japanese dominated the game afterwards.
The British national wrestling champion Tom Cannon tours India. Although he won matches
against unknowns in Patiala, Calcutta, and the Punjab, Cannon lost his only known match against
a top-drawer Indian wrestler (the young Karim Bux). Cannon's defeat was partly a
misunderstanding of the rules. In European professional wrestling, the wrestler's shoulders had to
touch the ground for a fall to count. Therefore a neck bridge was a very proper defense. In Indian
wrestling, on the other hand, simply being turned upside down on the ground constituted a fall.
So while Imam Bux was probably a good enough wrestler to have beaten Cannon under any rules,
having explained the rules to both fans and players before the match would have resulted in fewer
hard feelings in the end.
During the world's first gloved heavyweight championship fight, Gentleman Jim Corbett beats
John L. Sullivan by knockout. Although Corbett feinted and jabbed exceptionally well, Sullivan
lost because he was out-of-shape, overweight, and chronically drunk rather than because he
couldn't fight while wearing gloves. Indeed, Sullivan wore gloves whenever he could, as he
believed (correctly) that gloves let him to hit harder with less risk to his knuckles. Legend aside,
the Sullivan-Corbett fight is of importance mainly because it was the first prize-fight to be
organized like a business and presented as wholesome athletic theater. While moralists
complained that showed a decline in public morality, it was actually due to newspaper publishers
like William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer realizing the enormous profits to be made
pandering to working-class tastes.
Gunmen hired by the Wyoming Stock Grower's Association shoot to death two cattle rustlers
named Nate Champion and Nick Ray. This killing, part of a war between Cheyenne cattlemen
and Johnson County grangers, provided the background for the Western novel called Shane, first
published in 1949 and turned into an archetypal Alan Ladd movie in 1953.
The United States Army replaces its .45 caliber single-action revolvers with new double-action
revolvers chambered in .38 Long Colt. The new weapons proved unpopular with the troops. In
the words of Captain J. M. Munro, Third United States Cavalry, they were "not only ineffective
as to shock [that is, they would not reliably incapacitate an attacker within 30 seconds of
wounding him], but defective as to mechanism. Not one of these pistols in ten [would shoot
where aimed]; the mechanism consists of so many delicate parts, especially small springs, that in a
single season firing from six to a dozen pistols in a troop go out of action and have to be
consigned to the store room. Fully 30 per cent. of them 'shave lead' a defect which causes more
horses to become incurably gun shy than any other one thing." Such complaints caused the Army
to replace the weapons with new handguns chambered in .38 Special and .45 ACP during the
1910s.
1893:
Theodore Roosevelt declares that increased emphasis on "vigorous manly out-of-door sports"
would revitalize the United States and build a new Anglo-Saxon super-race. Bare-knuckle
pugilism was not one of Commissioner Roosevelt's manly sports. Prize-fighting, said Roosevelt in
1890, was brutal and degrading, adding, "The people who attend it hover on the borderlines of
criminality; and those who are not are speedily brutalized, and are never rendered more manly."
Ironically, Roosevelt was simultaneously a fan of amateur boxing.
Twelve masked members of the Women's Christian Temperance Union flog some dance hall girls
through the streets of Osceola, Nebraska. Such vigilantism was called "whitecapping" after the
pillow cases the vigilantes wore over their heads for courage, and part of a violent anti-foreign,
anti-Catholic, and anti-Negro movement that started in Indiana in 1877 and culminated in the
Supreme Court's infamous Plessy v. Fergusondecision of 1896. (That was the one that said that
"separate but equal" did not extend to railway cars or employment.) Of course, the whitecappers
were rarely as powerful as their propagandists claimed, and as early as 1885, an African American
newspaper editor named John Mitchell Jr. observed that "the best remedy for a lyncher or a
cursed midnight rider is a 16-shot Winchester rifle in the hands of a Negro with nerve enough to
pull the trigger."
Winchester Repeating Firearms produces its first rifle designed to shoot smokeless powder
cartridges. This was a High Wall single shot rifle chambered in .30-40 Krag. (John Moses
Browning's better remembered Model 1894 lever-action rifle in .30-30 Winchester was not
introduced until 1895.)
Berlin's Ludwig Löwe firearms factory (the World War-era Deutsche Waffen und
Munitionsfabrik) introduces the 7.65mm Borchardt M93, the first self-loading, or automatic,
pistol to sell in any numbers. (About 3,000 Borchardts were made.) Additional design work by a
Löwe engineer named Georg Luger created the toggle-locked Mauser Parabellum, the first
self-loading pistol that was attractive enough to appeal to the brandy-snifter set. While the
Parabellums had creepy triggers, awkward safeties, lousy sights, and worse pointing
characteristics, they looked wonderful, and, since more pistols live in drawers than holsters, Luger
Parabellums became the first popular self-loading pistol.
Charles Charlemont establishes the Academy of French Boxing and the Cane in Paris. Associated
schools included the ones of the Desruilles brothers in Lille and Roubaix, Allart in Marseilles,
Boucher in Amiens, and Petit in New Orleans. Charlemont called his method la boxe Française.
While it borrowed many techniques from savate, French boxing did not enjoy the same sleazy
reputation. Therefore it became popular with military officers, who viewed it as a non-lethal
substitute for dueling.
Gulam Muhammad, the youthful Punjabi knee-bend champion, starts wrestling professionally.
Gulam's attention to training increased rather than decreased with age, and within five years, he
was an All-India champion known as Gama the Great. As with most Indian professionals, Gama's
training regimen consisted of raking the pit, wrestling with other professionals, lifting
wood-and-stone weights, and doing 5,000 deep-knee bends and 3,000 dipping pushups a day. It
also involved eating yakhni (a boiled-down meat soup), plus several pounds of chicken, mutton,
and bread every day, a feast that few other working men could imagine, let alone afford.
1894:
In response to riots that threatened Japanese economic interests in Seoul, the Imperial Japanese
Navy lands 7,000 Japanese soldiers at Inchon. This example of the Japanese taking up what the
Nitobe Inazao later called "the Brown Man's Burden" starts a power struggle between the
Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, and Russians that remains unresolved a century later.
Gaming naval battles on gymnasium floors becomes popular at the United States' Naval War
College at Newport, Rhode Island. Of course, the games were only as good as their
tradition-bound rules, and they failed to predict the role that submarines and flying machines
would play in future wars.
On June 14, Thomas Edison of West Orange, New Jersey uses his new Kinetograph camera to
film Mike Leonard knocking out Jack Cushing. He then sold copies of the films to Holland
Brother's Arcade in New York, where fight fans paid 10¢ a round to see the fight. Although the
novelty of seeing moving pictures was fine, the price was too high for a fixed fight between
no-names in a short-round fight. (In Edison's films, rounds lasted just 1½ minutes each, as that
was how long a film reel lasted. Edison also shrank the ring to 12 feet square to keep the fighters
in focus.) Therefore on September 8, Edison filmed Gentleman Jim Corbett knocking out Peter
Courtney in six, and Holland Brothers dropped the price per round to a nickel. As this second film
made a lot of money, it is often called the first fight film. Over 100 fight films were made between
1894 to 1915. The outcomes of Edison's studio fights were prearranged, and were filmed in
smaller-than-normal rings so that one fixed camera could cover all the action. Although despised
by religious leaders due to their "brutal and degrading performances," such films were among the
first multi-reel entertainments.
Upon being asked the qualifications of a dead shot, the American trick shooter Annie Oakley
replies, "I suppose it's a gift, though practice helps." (Oakley regularly fired about 40,000 shots a
year from shotguns, plus several thousand more from rifles and pistols.) Physical fitness helped,
too. Oakley could run 100 yards in 13 seconds, and her training regimen included walking,
swimming, horseback riding, bicycling, fencing, and weight-lifting.
French colonial newspapers describe moringue ("take him") as a cartwheeling martial art practiced
by the day laborers of Madagascar, the Comoros, and Reunion. Bouts were held at night or on
holy days, and accompanied by drummers whose enthusiasm mirrored the action. While juvenile
players were urged to shake hands and fight fair, adult players were free to strike groins, bite,
throw sand, or spit. This said, players could quit the match at any time, and did not have to accept
challenges from anyone noticeably bigger than themselves. Pre-fight activities consisted of
dancing, drinking, boasting, and obtaining protective charms or amulets. As for why the men
fought, it was for all the usual reasons, namely honor, reputation, and the love of the ladies.
Under the promotion of Joseph Doublier, a giant (6'2", 240 pounds) Turk named Yousouf
Ishmaëlo takes up professional wrestling in France. Although technically crude (in his obituary,
the New-York Daily Tribune said he fought more like a prize-fighter than a wrestler), he lost but
once in his career, and that was on a foul that was probably faked by the other wrestler (Ernest
Roeber of New York). Yousouf died in a shipwreck in July 1898. From here the story gets
confused. For example, legend says that he was dragged to the bottom by the weight of some
$10,000 in gold coins that he wore in a money belt. While it is true that Yousouf liked to be paid
in gold, he probably did not have $10,000 on him. After all, his pay in New York was only $20 a
week, and he had been spending that much on clothes and food. Further, it has been said that he
tossed women and children overboard in his haste to reach a lifeboat. While the crew of the
doomed Bourgoyne did throw women and children overboard, I've seen no contemporary reports
of giant passengers from steerage tossing women and children overboard. So this was probably a
tale created by sportswriters. Finally, historians Graeme Kent and Joe Jares have said that
Yousouf Ishmaëlo was not Turkish, but French. They are probably wrong. For one thing, the
name suggests that Yousouf was a Lebanese or Syrian who had moved to Marseilles for job
opportunities. While this doesn't make him a Turk, it does make him an citizen of the Ottoman
Empire. More importantly, the Turks still revere the man. (Comic books about "Papa Yusuf"
appeared in Turkey into the 1960s.) Surely the Turks know who was a Turk and who was not.
Yet such cynicism is hardly surprising. While several turn-of-the-century "Terrible Turks" were
Ottoman citizens, most twentieth century "Turks" have been Armenian Americans like Charles
Manoogian and Harry Krikor Ekizian. And promoters still tell tales.
1895:
Stephen Crane publishes The Red Badge of Courage. This novel creates the genre of realistic war
stories told from a private's perspective. The alternating bouts of fear and courage that Crane so
vividly described were based on his experiences working as a newspaperman in New York City.
Theodore Roosevelt hires the New York Police Department's first female employee. The reason
was that Minnie Kelly did more work for less money than the two male secretaries she replaced.
In 1896, Commissioner Roosevelt also gave uniforms and badges to the women who processed
female prisoners at police stations. Excepting meter maids and secretaries, police departments
used women mainly as matrons and vice detectives until 1968, when the Indianapolis police
pioneered the use of female patrol officers.
Captain Alfred Hutton of London establishes a fencing branch in the British Amateur Gymnastic
Association. In 1902, the fencers separated from the gymnasts to form the Amateur Fencing
Association. Hutton had served with Hussar regiments around London during the 1860s, and his
methods were based on French theory. He stressed thrusting with the point rather than slashing
with the edges, and was one of the first fencers to design a system for fighting with military
bayonets. Although Hutton was outraged, the British Army ignored his system, and instead
adopted an Italian saber fencing system designed by Ferdinando Masiello of Florence. (With
recent experience fighting Zulus and Sudanese, British infantry put more faith in firearms than
cutlery.)
The Great Japan Hall of Martial Arts Virtue (Dai Nihon Budokukai) is established at Kyoto. A
department of the Ministry of Education, its original purpose was to foster patriotism and
discipline among Japanese schoolboys. Its first leaders included a royal ruler, the mayor of Kyoto,
a Shinto bishop, and the head of the Kyoto Chamber of Commerce. Toward this end, it
patronized judo and kendo. By 1942 the Budokukai had become little more than an organ of
Japanese right-wing nationalism, and its leaders included Prime Minister Tojo and several
notorious yakuza bosses. Moreover, the martial arts offered under its auspices had evolved from
sports like judo to military activities like glider repair, grenade throwing, and bayonet fighting.
Therefore the Allies closed the Budokukai in 1946.
Korean guerrillas calling themselves uibyong, or "Righteous Armies," attack the Japanese from
bases located in Manchuria and the Russian Maritime Territory. Because the Russians didn't want
to provoke a war with Japan, they provided the Koreans with rifles but no ammunition, few
explosives, and no artillery. On the other hand, to keep the Koreans occupied, they provided
considerable training in close order drill, bayonet practice, and belt wrestling. After 1917, Turkish
and Mongol soldiers serving in the Red Army also used belt wrestling as a military gymnastic. In
the Turkish game, the contestants met in the ring, shook hands, then grasped their opponent's belt
with both hands. While the players could not twist the other's sash or trip him, they were
otherwise free to do pretty much what they wanted. (The most famous historic exponent of
Turkish sash wrestling was Hafiz Baraz. Modern masters include the Olympic champions Safin
and Hisamutdinov.) In 1923, a Kodokan judo 2-dannamed B. S. Oshchepkov started teaching
judo to the Soviet secret police. Besides wrestling, the policemen learned to control prisoners by
twisting their fingers and lips, and to kill attackers using sticks and entrenching tools. In 1938,
this paramilitary training was given rules and turned into a sport called sambo (samooborona bez
oruzhiya, "self-defense without weapons"). The guiding force behind this development was
Anatoly Kharlampiev. In sport sambo, players were expected to avoid intentionally injuring their
partners. Illegal moves included grabbing the hair, thumbing the eyes, and all kinds of blows and
strangles. Sport matches were won by a standing wrestler causing his opponent to fall full on his
back, or by applying a "painful lock" that forced the opponent to submit. Points were also
awarded to a wrestler who held his opponent down for 20 seconds. Of course, these rules
assumed competent officiating. Unfortunately, Soviet officials of the 1930s were often selected
for their political savvy rather than their athletic knowledge. Therefore brawls between officials,
wrestlers, and spectators were not uncommon.
The first five groups of instruction, or gokyo no waza, are introduced to Kodokan judo. These are
followed in 1920 by a second group of seventeen additional techniques known as shimmeisho no
waza. The additions were due to the Kodokan wrestlers having absorbed most traditional jujutsu
styles and their best techniques in the meantime.
Despite his comparatively small size (he stood about 5'10", and weighed about 170 pounds),
Martin "Farmer" Burns wins the United States catch-as-catch-can heavyweight wrestling
championship. Following this success, Burns started training other athletes, including Frank
Gotch, who was arguably the best North American wrestler of the twentieth century. (And if not
the best, then certainly one of the roughest. Gotch was notorious for gouging eyes and snapping
leg tendons during his matches. Other techniques he used include the crotch hold, the body slam,
and the step-over toe-hold.)
According to his recollections (which were not always free from embellishment), Captain Bill McDonald, commanding Company B of the Texas Rangers out of Amarillo, goes to Dallas to prevent a prize-fight. (Prize-fighting was illegal in Texas.) Seeing that he was alone as he stepped from the train, the city officials sent to meet him asked where the rest of his men were. To which McDonald replied, "Hell, ain't I enough? There's only one prize-fight!" The bout McDonald went to Dallas to stop was the one between Peter Maher and Bob Fitzsimmons that took place on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande on February 21, 1896.
1895-1896:
Gangs of Afro-Indian youths known as the Rufus Buck and Cherokee Bill gangs terrorize the
Oklahoma Territory by robbing, raping, and killing more people than the Dalton, James, and Starr
gangs combined. The mass executions that ended these gangs' rampages were later immortalized
in a Clint Eastwood movie called Hang 'Em High, where, in typical Hollywood fashion, both the
gang members and the deputies who arrested them were converted from Afro-Indians into white
men.
Analysis of Chinese police reports reveals that North Chinese bandit gangs averaged 8-13
members. Although a few carried firearms or swords, most carried sticks and farm tools.
Individual members were aged 12-17, and were usually third or fourth sons with little formal
education and no hope of inheriting land. As these youths frequently lived with their families, their
victims were usually opium merchants or shopkeepers living in different towns or counties. Crime
peaked in January and July, when the planting and harvesting were over. Accordingly, the main
difference between the Shantung bandits of 1895 and the Chinatown gangsters of 1985 was that
the former did not want to spend their lives planting sorghum and collecting dung, while the latter
did not want to spend their lives waiting tables and washing dishes.
As the Chinese government withdraws its soldiers from their provincial garrisons to fight the
Japanese in Manchuria and Korea, they are replaced with militia companies called Big Sword
Societies. Big Sword leaders were village landlords and rich peasants, and their soldiers were their
tenant farmers. (The very poor were excluded, as they were the group against which these
organizations were designed to defend.) Fencing masters and cudgel fighters were hired as
trainers, rifles and ammunition were stockpiled, and priests and shamans were beseeched to
deliver Buddhist mantras, Taoist charms, and prayers to local spirits. As the bandits these
militiamen pursued were notorious for converting to Christianity to escape justice, the Big
Swords became violently opposed to Christianity. This prejudice was their greatest contribution
to the Boxer unrest of 1899-1901.
1896:
The First International Games are held in Athens, Greece. The driving force behind these games
was the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin. Coubertin revered the ancient Greeks, and believed
that participation in amateur sports was an essential part of a liberal arts education. Coubertin also
believed that the games should honor the individual athlete, not the country, and that participating
was more important than winning. Therefore, unlike the ancient games, athletes received prizes
for second and third place as well as first. Modern sport historians often call these games the first
modern Olympics. To some extent, this is true, as they were the first modern athletic events to use
international amateur sporting competition as flag-waving national theater. Nevertheless, truly
modern Olympics, meaning quadrennial games pitting world-class athletes against one another in
theatrical settings for the purpose of exciting mass nationalism and consumer spending, only date
to the 1920s.
Following the outbreak of a major rebellion on Luzon, the Spanish close a Manila fencing
academy known as the Tanghalan ng Sandata ("Gallery of Weapons"). The reason was that its
active students included the rebel leader José Rizal y Mercado. The master of the Gallery of
Weapons was Don José de Azes, and his academy was located at a Jesuit high school known as
Ateneo de Manila. Since he taught both fencing and Filipino nationalism, this school is in all
probability, the place where Spanish fencing and Filipino arnis first merged.
Feng Yü-hsiang, a 14-year old from Chihli Province who later becomes one of China's most
powerful warlords, enlists in the Imperial Chinese army. There, his training mostly consisted of
thrusting a spear at a target, drinking, and gambling. After narrowly surviving the Boxer
Rebellion, Feng decided to join the Right Wing Guards Army of Yüan Shih-k'ai instead, which
trained with rifles instead of spears, and close-order drill instead of gambling.
San Francisco's Mechanics' Pavilion becomes the first US boxing venue known to have sold
reserved seats to women. (The occasion was a title bout between Bob Fitzsimmons and Jack
Sharkey, and Fitzsimmon's wife Rose was notorious for sitting ringside and shouting advice to her
husband.) In this particular fight, Fitzsimmons hit Sharkey a low blow in the eighth that, in the
words of the Associated Press, left Sharkey lying on the canvas, "unable to move his legs, though
he clutched spasmodically at his groin with his gloved hand... Hardly any one of the spectators
saw the foul. It was apparently unintentional." William Randolph Hearst saw the result otherwise,
and his newspapers publicly accused referee Wyatt Earp of being "exactly the sort of man to
referee a prizefight if a steal is meditated and a job put up to make the wrong man win." Hearst's
ire was due less to the fight being fixed than the $20,000 he had lost betting on Fitzsimmons to
win.
1897:
Above decks, Britain's Royal Navy experiments with ship-to-shore radio. Below decks, it bows to
Victorian sensibilities, and allows enlisted men to eat with forks instead of knives and fingers.
Reporter Bob Davis of the New York Journal coins the phrase "Solar Plexus Knockout." The
term described the left hook to the liver that Bob Fitzsimmons used to drop Gentleman Jim
Corbett during the fourteenth round of a title fight held at Carson City, Nevada. As described by
novelist Leonard Gardner 83 years later, the technique involved a left feint to the head, a right
feint to the head, then a quick step up with the right foot and a nearly simultaneous left hook to
the liver or solar plexus.
After a British bantamweight named Walter Croot dies from his head crashing into the solid
wooden flooring of the National Sporting Club at 66-68 Regent Street, laws are passed requiring
British boxing rings to have padded floors.
1898:
The Spanish-American War becomes the last major war to be fought using black powder, and the first major war to be started by the power of the popular press.
Outside Khartoum in the Sudan, the 21st Lancers make the British Empire's last important cavalry
charge. According to an eyewitness, the Lancers' command of execution was not "Charge!" but
"Right wheel into line," followed by the jerky note of a bugle.
British journalists make "hooliganism" a synonym for working class violence. (The usage probably
came from a music hall song that described hooligans as boys who were always on the riot.) The
hooligans' fighting methods emphasized kicking and kneeing, and South London hooligans wore
brass or steel-toed boots expressly for the purpose of increasing their killing power. Nevertheless,
to judge by contemporary media coverage, the hooligans' greatest crime was their unorthodox
attire, which included bell-bottom trousers, neck-scarves, peaked caps, and donkey fringe, or
Mohican, haircuts.
Brennecke introduces rifled shotgun slugs in Germany. While very powerful, they do not become
popular in the United States until 1936, or the British Commonwealth until after World War II.
Paul Pons becomes the French national wrestling champion, a title he loses in 1909 to the
Estonian wrestler George Hackenschmidt. The usual venue for such matches was a music hall like
the Folies-Bergère in Paris or the Oxford Theatre in London.
A Swiss-born boxer named Frank Erne wins the world lightweight title. In 1902, Erne retired to
Paris, where he opened a boxing gym. That said, boxing did not become popular in France for
another couple years. The reason was that nobody understood it. The chief touts of
turn-of-the-century Continental boxing were the Americans Richard Klegin and Dan McKetrick;
Klegin managed Sam McVey, Herbert Dynot, and Kid Davis, while McKettrick managed Georges
Carpentier, Joe Jeannette, and Jack Johnson. Most of their fighters were African American, and,
like wrestlers, they worked a circuit and often arranged results. For gym owners such as Erne,
however, the real money was made training wealthy amateurs. While Ernest Hemingway is
undoubtedly the most famous of the French-trained amateurs, the classic example is the British
poet Arthur Cravan, a man who became the Amateur Light-Heavyweight Champion of France in
1910 without ever fighting a round. Jack Johnson and Cravan often drank together in Paris, and in
April 1916 they even fought a bout in a Barcelona bull ring. There is some question about how
long their fight took. Johnson thought that it was over in the first, but contemporary newspaper
accounts say that it lasted until the sixth.
Toward limiting the bloodshed during lineage feuds, the Chinese government bans sword-making
in Shantung Province. This outrages clan elders, and increases the popularity of stage plays
showing mortals suddenly acquiring almost magical fighting skills. Training for the human roles in
these morality plays took place in boxing grounds called ch'uan chang. The training was open to
all. Rank was based on fighting skill. Instructors in such schools were "Senior Brothers," while
students were "Junior Brothers."
After "Colored men" are allowed into YMCA facilities in New York and Chicago, segregated
facilities appear in Boston and the American South. Meanwhile, in Tientsin, China, the YMCA
embarks on an active program designed to "increase the capacity of the [Chinese] race." This
included introducing basketball in 1896 and baseball in 1907.
About 1899:
A Shantung-based martial art society known as the I Ho Ch'uan, or "Boxers United in
Righteousness," becomes notorious for teaching members that spirit-possession and faith made
them invulnerable to bullets and swords. "In practice," wrote a skeptical Chinese magistrate
named Chiang, "some got broken arms, others wounds in their chests. But it was claimed that
these people's techniques were imperfect." Chiang's analysis seems on the money, too, as the
recruiting sergeants' trick involved a combination sleight of hand and specially modified weapons.
It also could be fatal when done wrong, as the American magician Billy Robinson learned when
his modified musket malfunctioned on stage in March 1918, and blew a hole in his chest.
1899:
John Dewey gives a Copernican twist to United States public education by making the child "the
sun about which the appliances of education revolve; he is the center about which they are
organized."
In Vienna, George Hackenschmidt wins the European heavyweight wrestling championship. The
event was billed as the world championships, but the omissions were so glaring that calling them
the European championships seems much more precise.
An English engineer named Edward W. Barton-Wright publishes an article called "The New Art
of Self Defence" in Pearson's Magazine. Barton-Wright had studied jujutsu while living in Japan,
and his "New Art," which he immodestly called "Bartitsu," combined jujutsu with boxing and
savate. Yet, while Barton-Wright was a good enough rough-and-tumble wrestler, he was no
master of Japanese wrestling. This is hardly unusual in itself, but what was unusual was that
Barton-Wright was honest enough to admit it, and to hire better-qualified teachers including
Yukio Tani and S.K. Uyenishi as his instructors. That said, Sherlock Holmes was Bartitsu's (or
"baritsu," as he called it), most famous student. In "The Adventure of the Empty House,"
published in Strand Magazine in October 1903, the Great Detective told Dr. Watson that, on the
brink of a Swiss waterfall in 1894, the evil Moriarty "rushed at me and threw his arms around me.
He knew that his own game was up, and was only anxious to revenge himself upon me. We
tottered together on the brink of the fall. I have some knowledge, however, of baritsu, or the
Japanese system of wrestling, which has more than once been very useful to me. I slipped through
his grip, and he with a horrible scream kicked madly for a few seconds and clawed the air with
both his hands. But for all his efforts he could not get his balance, and over he went."
Bernarr Macfadden takes over a struggling magazine called Physical Culture. Macfadden believed
that there "can be no beauty without fine muscles," and emphasized homerotic illustrations.
Within two years this change increases circulation from 3,000 an issue to 100,000 an issue.
Judging from the advertisements in the back, the fear of bullies sold more chest expander kits and
barbells than the desire for beautiful muscles.
The First Hague Peace Conference outlaws unrestricted submarine warfare, aerial bombardments,
chemical weapons, and expanding bullets. The only one of these restrictions to survive the Great
War of 1914-1918 was the ban on expanding bullets. That restriction survived for several reasons.
First, soft-tipped bullets frequently jammed the mechanisms of self-loading firearms. Equally
importantly, researchers had discovered fully jacketed bullets that were equally destructive in
living tissue. Examples of such improved military cartridges include the British .303 cartridge
introduced in 1910 and the Soviet 5.45x39 cartridge introduced in 1974.
During a Boxer attack on a Catholic village in Shantung Province, an eyewitness observes the Boxers carrying flags and dressing like the people in operas. This is not surprising, as the Boxers did most of their recruiting using plays, and promised their followers that they would be possessed by the spirits of the gods and demigods who inhabited those plays. That the prospective recruits believed such things is not surprising, either, as their average age was 16, and at least 60% were illiterate. Their training was minimal, too: at best, they got three months of training, and at worst, they got a single lesson in spirit-possession. Put another way, except for his nationality, the Boxer recruit of 1900 was little different from the American teenager who told Gwynne Dyer in 1982 that he enlisted in the Marine Corps because a recruiter gave him a good line, and then graduated from basic three months later thinking that he could whip the world.
1.
Comparable modern shooters put 20 shots into a 2-inch bull at 50 yards. As for speed, the world record was set in 1934, when Ed McGivern fired from a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver into a playing card set up 7 yards distant in 45/100ths of a second. Of course, when firing a single-action .45 Colt, McGivern's times doubled, which in turn supports Bat Masterson's theory that a fast gun was anyone who could fire his first shot in under half a second, and all five shots in under two seconds. As for the practice required, certainly no famous gunman ever practiced as much as McGivern, who attributed his feats to common-sense figuring and the expenditure of about 30,000 practice rounds.2.
Several turn-of-the-century Okinawan karate men, including Kyan Chotoku (who once claimed that the best place to practice karate was a red-light district, and who went broke due to gambling debts), were rickshaw men. While Kyan's occupation and gambling debts do not prove any direct links between Okinawan karate men and the yakuza, they certainly suggest them. Circumstantial evidence includes Honda Toshiaki's complaint in 1798 that the Satsuma clan made more money smuggling copper into China via the Ryukyus than it paid to the Tokugawas in taxes; Richard Kim's stories about karate being used by the bouncers in the Naha "tea-houses" of the early twentieth century; Douglas Haring's stories about the fights between Japanese and Okinawan laborers on the docks of Amami-Shoto circa 1953; Miyazato Eiichi's resignation from his post chief karate instructor to the Naha police in 1971 following a scandal involving some underworld figures; and Sasakawa Ryoichi, a former World Union of Karate-Do Organizations president, becoming known as the Godfather of Japan due to his underworld connections.3.
"Sporting ladies" is not euphemistic, as in 1878, calling a white, English-speaking dance-hall girl a whore was a good way to get your face slapped. From a legal standpoint, a prostitute was not someone who trafficked in sex acts, but any unmarried working-class female without a "respectable" job such as factory hand or maid. So, in everyday terms, a sporting lady was any working-class woman having independent income and whose idea of a good time included drinking, smoking, and gambling. Therefore sporting ladies included the wives and daughters of community leaders. (North American frontier saloons usually had separate rooms for ladies, and in parts of Canada, still do.) Beneath sporting ladies on the social scale were "pretty waiters" and "hurdy-gurdy girls." These were working-class females who preferred dancing with strangers for a dollar a dance plus tips to picking cow chips or working in factories. Non-whites could be included in this group. One of the first students in Robinson, Colorado, for instance, was a 10-year old black girl named Pearl, who went to school during the day and sang in saloons at night. If hurdy-gurdy girls had sex with a man, it was for the usual reasons, including love, payment for a good time, and rape. Beneath hurdy-gurdy girls came "women of easy virtue." These were usually Mexican, Indian, or African American prostitutes employed by saloon owners. Finally, lowest of all, were crib-style prostitutes. Most of these were alcoholics, drug addicts, or Chinese children.4.
The latter explanation is false, by the way. Otherwise peace conventions would insist on armies using casualty-producing chemical weapons like mustard, land mines, and lasers rather than killing weapons like tanks and machine guns. (While artillery causes the most casualties, rifles and machine-guns cause the most fatalities.) The reason they do not is of course that rows of crosses do not upset taxpayers nearly as much as cripples on the bread lines.5.
Like many rich men, Indian rajahs often enjoyed strange recreations. Maharajah Sir Pertab Singh of Kashmir, for instance, once held a contest to see which of his wrestlers could hold the rods of a hand-cranked electrical generator the longest time. The winner, Kikkar Singh of Amritsar, had his hands badly blistered by the charge, and received in return a prize worth less than £20. Still, this was nothing compared to the actions of Sir Jai Singh of Alwar, who set out human babies as tiger bait, and justified his actions by saying that he never missed a shot.6.
At home, the British Army reported a 20% admission rate for venereal infections. United States forces stationed in the Philippines before World War I, with their 17% admission rate, duplicated the British domestic experience, while the United States forces chasing Pancho Villa through Mexico, with their 30% admission rate, duplicated the Indian Army's experience.7.
Actor Gary Cooper told a similar story about Mary Fields, an African American laundress living in Cascade, Montana, around the turn of the century. While downing a shot in the saloon, Fields saw a defaulting customer walking past. She went out, grabbed the man by the collar, spun him around, and knocked him down with her fist. She then returned to the saloon, saying, "His bill is paid."