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Thread: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in Éire

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    Default Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in Éire

    Great little article about Molineaux from the Irish Examiner


    Molineaux was born on a plantation farm in Virginia, tobacco capital of the world, in 1784. During the American War of Independence, when the colonies rose up against British rule, his father, Zachery, fought alongside his slave owner, the master of the Molineaux plantation farm.
    Tom Molineaux took his surname from the plantation owner, as was practice for a child born into slavery. His father’s heroics in the War of Independence accorded his son a little status growing up, so young Tom became tight with the plantation owner’s son, Algernon Molineaux.
    Molineaux earned his freedom after winning a boxing match against a slave from a rival plantation. There was a $400 purse on the fight, which was a huge sum. Molineaux drifted towards New York and eventually set sail for England, the centre of the boxing universe, in 1809.
    In 1810, he fought three boxing fights, winning the first two (one against a guy called ‘Tom Tough’), before he landed his money shot — a bout against Tom Cribb, the reigning British boxing champ. It was effectively a world-title fight, in an outdoors ring 30 miles outside London.
    It was a bare-knuckle fight, as was customary. It was extraordinarily bloody. The two men battered each other so badly — a black man and a white man — that spectators were unable to tell them apart.
    According to the boxing writers who covered the fight, including a legendary scribe, Pierce Egan, Molineaux was done out of it by foul means. Egan wrote: “it was the most dreadful affront to British sportsmanship ever witnessed”.
    While Molineaux had Cribb in a headlock, fans stormed the ring and broke some of Molineaux’s fingers, so Cribb could release himself. A re-match was fixed, but Molineaux was easily beaten in it. He was a sucker for distractions out of the ring — chiefly drinking and womanising — so he was out of shape.
    His star went on the wane on the British boxing scene. In 1815, he moved to Ireland, where there was also a vibrant boxing scene, although the purses he earned were smaller. He mainly fought in fairs and exhibitions. He challenged Dan Donnelly, a renowned Dublin fighter, but Donnelly refused to take him on, maintaining he wouldn’t fight “a conquered man or a black man”.
    “Molineaux accused Donnelly of being a racist, and maybe he was, but Molineaux wasn’t at his best by then,” says Kilbane. “There would have been no great gain forDonnelly’s reputation to beat a man that was on the way out. Molineaux was 32. Donnelly took one look at him and said, ‘I’m not fighting you.’
    “In Ireland, at the time, even though there was Irish planters involved in the slave trade — particularly out of Galway, Cork, Limerick, Dublin, and Belfast — Dublin had its black man-servants, and they were treated decently enough. In the early 1800s, it was a status symbol for the middle classes to have one.”
    Molineaux slipped further and further down the social scale. His body withered from drinking and TB. His falling weight took from his boxing prowess.
    He died in 1818, his last year or two spent in Galway, where he fought in Eyre Square and other market squares, alongside competing Sunday attractions like badger-baiting and cock-fighting.
    Almost a century later, his career was summed up in that old boxing book, Pugilistica, which was published in 1905: “From Scotland, Molineaux went on a sparring tour to Ireland. At the later end of the year 1817, he was travelling over the northern parts of that country, teaching the stick-fighting natives the use of their fists… Molineaux was illiterate and ostentatious, but good-tempered, liberal, and generous to a fault.
    Fond of gay clothes, gay life, and amorous to the extreme, he deluded himself with the idea that his strength of constitution was proof against excesses.”
    Crossing the Black Atlantic is on Wednesday on TG4, 9.30pm George Washington — boxing coach?
    It seems George Washington — one of the founding fathers of the United States and its first president — was a useful boxer. He had the build — he stood at 6ft 2in with a long reach, and according to Sports Illustrated he was also an accomplished wrestler who was “a master of the British style known as collar and elbow”. In the documentary Crossing the Black Atlantic, an old legend that Washington taught Tom Molineaux to box is aired. “Who can tell?” says Des Kilbane, the film’s co-director. “The timelines suggest their paths could have crossed. Washington was an old man, and a fairly decent boxer himself who allegedly was a Virginian champion as a young man. The plantation where Molineaux was a slave wasn’t far from Mount Vernon, George Washington’s estate. When those fights were on between boxers from one plantation against another there were hundreds at them gambling so I’m sure Washington knew about them. It would be a surprise if he didn’t go to them. It’s possible he saw the talent and coached a young Molineaux. It’s a folktale but it’s possible.”


    https://amp-irishexaminer-com.cdn.am...nd-460967.html
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    "I am always doing that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it."

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    Default Re: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in É

    Hidden Content

    "I am always doing that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it."

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    Default Re: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in É

    There is no nonsense like ole timey nonsense. Washington boxed and lived in the same state. Sure he was ancient and multiple days trip away but he might have coached this random slave so sure, he did.

    Great stuff, appreciate you bringing it by

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    Default Re: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in É

    I bet Kovalev has a way nicer toilet.

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    Default Re: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in É

    Quote Originally Posted by p4pking View Post
    I bet Kovalev has a way nicer toilet.
    And that’s what’s really important, I learned that here. I’m still growing, some day the hood wearers will tell me where to shop.

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    Default Re: Tom Molineaux: The slave who boxed his way to freedom before dying destitute in É

    Tom's grandson went on to invent the electric carving knife

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