Australian Boxing - The Early Days
- Sport - boxing - fighters - champions -, Australian -
Australia - ring - bare knuckles- gloves - bare knuckles - London Prize
Ring Rules of 1838 - Young Kable of Windsor - Englishman Sam Clark -

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Holding the opponent's wrist for a better head shot.
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Until 1884 all fights in Australia were contested with bare knuckles. They
were conducted first under bare knuckles, and later under the London Prize Ring Rules of 1838 (revised in 1853).
Under these rules, rounds ended when one of the contestants was knocked or thrown to the ground; and as fights were
fought to a finish - unless interrupted by police or by thugs - they lasted up to, and even beyond, 100 rounds.
The longest bare-knuckles fight in history took place in Australia - at Fiery Creek, near Daylesford, Vic. -
on 3 December 1855, when Irishman James Kelly defeated English soldier Jonathan Smith for a purse of £400 in a 17-round bout which lasted 6 hours 15 minutes.
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Boxing ??????? |
After defeated Charles Lifton at Sydney Racecourse (which later became Hyde Park) on 7 January 1 814.
The first Australian-born pugilist to make a name for himself was Young Kable of Windsor, NSW, who knocked out
Englishman Sam Clark in 1824.
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Absolutely no comment what so ever. |
In the 1830s Parramatta and Windsor were favoured New South Wales ring sites, but important fights were also
decided at Surry Hills and Como. The main fighters of the period were Kable, Ned Chalker, Young Bailey, and George Hough.
Bill and Tom Sparkes, the latter known as Sprig of Myrtle, and lzaac Gorrick (alias
"Bungaree") were among the leading fighters of the 1840s. Gorrick became the first Australian to box in England in 1842.
In 1847 Bill Sparkes also went to England, where on 4 May 1847 he met the unbeaten Nat Langham. Sparkes acquitted himself well, but broke his
right arm in the sixty-second round - his chief second surrendered on his behalf in the sixty-seventh.
Reference
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