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Daniel Mendoza

Daniel Mendoza (5 July 1764[a] – 3 September 1836) (often known as Dan Mendoza) was an English prize fighter in the 1780s and 90s, and was also an instructor of pugilism. He was of Sephardic or Portuguese Jewish descent.[2][3][4]

Daniel Mendoza
Born(1764-07-05)5 July 1764
Died3 September 1836(1836-09-03) (aged 72)
Horseshoe Alley, Petticoat Lane, London, England
NationalityEnglish
Other namesMendoza the Jew
The Star of Israel
Statistics
Weight(s)160 lb (73 kg)
Height5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights37
Wins31
Losses5
Draws1

Mendoza played a significant role in the development of scientific technique in boxing, by publishing two books on the subject ('The Art of Boxing' and 'The Modern Art of Boxing') and by holding frequent public exhibitions. Modern sources regularly depict Mendoza as having been English Prize fighting Champion from 1792-1795, although contemporary sources from the late 18th and early 19th century never describe Mendoza in this way.

Early life and ancestry edit

Daniel Mendoza was born in Whitechapel, Aldgate, London, England, on 5 July 1764, to a family of Spanish and Portuguese Jews, also known as Sephardim. By the time he was born, Jews had been allowed to settle in England for about one hundred years, having been readmitted officially by Cromwell in 1656. They were still regarded by many Londoners with a degree of suspicion and faced significant antisemitism. Mendoza's ancestors came from Jaén, Spain; they had emigrated to the Netherlands, which had a policy of toleration, where his grandfather was born. The family moved to London, with ancestors living there for a century before Mendoza's birth. Several sources wrote that some of his London ancestors from Spain had earlier concealed their Jewish identity and converted to Christianity, becoming Maranos. According to many genealogical websites, his parents were Abraham Aaron Mendoza and Esther Lopez and were believed to be artisans. Jewish scholar Albert Hyamson wrote that Aaron Mendoza, a ritual slaughterer or shochet, who had written a book on his craft in 1773, was his grandfather.[3][5][6][7]

Mendoza attended a Jewish school, Shaare Tikvah,[8] where he was instructed in English grammar, writing and arithmetic, as well as Hebrew.[9] He grew up in London's East End in poor surroundings and worked as a glass cutter, labourer, assistant to a green grocer, and an actor before taking up boxing as a profession.[5]

Early career highlights 1780–90 edit

Mendoza's first fight occurred in 1780 when he was 16. At the time, he was working for a tea dealer in Aldgate, London. The fight was not a prize fight for a purse, but a contest to settle a dispute with a porter over payment for a consignment of tea. The porter had demanded twice the agreed price for the consignment and Mendoza said the porter behaved in a manner unfit for a gentleman. After much arguing between the porter and the proprietor of the tea dealership, the porter challenged the owner to settle the dispute by a duel with fists.[10]

Believing the porter was cheating his frail employer, Mendoza accepted the challenge on his behalf. Richard Humphries acted as Mendoza's second. Humphries would later act as a manager for Mendoza, arranging training facilities and securing payment for fights.[11] The duel with the porter took place in the street outside the tea dealership in a hastily constructed ring. The fight lasted for forty-five minutes, ending when the porter declared he was unable to continue. This victory brought a small measure of fame to Mendoza, as stories of the fight spread through the surrounding neighborhoods and portrayed Mendoza as the talented whippersnapper who had not just beaten, but thrashed his larger opponent.[4][10][12]

Bout with Harry the Coalheaver, 1784 edit

Turning professional at 18, Mendoza fought at Mile End in 1784 against Harry the Coalheaver. After 118 rounds, lasting forty minutes, Mendoza brought the larger man into submission.[13]

Bouts with Tom Tyne, 1785 and 1786 edit

Mendoza then fought Tom Tyne, a tailor from Bermondsey. The exact date of this fight is unclear. Mendoza himself claims 1783[14] but other events in the narrative of his autobiography suggest a date closer to 1786/7. Wheldon (2019)[15] notes that a report in the Public Advertiser seems to set the date accurately at 7 November 1785. The report read as follows: 'Monday, a pitched battle was fought near Wanstead, between Mendoza, the noted fighting Jew, and a tailor, of the Borough, which after a contest of 40 minutes (during which time much real drubbing was given on both sides) was decided in favour of the tailor, to the no small disappointment and regret of the knowing ones'.

On July 1786 [16] Mendoza fought a rematch against Tyne at Duppas Hill, Croydon, having dispatched a couple of minor fighters in the intervening eight months.[17] The second bout vs Tyne resulted in victory for Mendoza in a fight lasting 27 rounds and almost an hour. Mendoza noted that in the second bout Tyne fought with 'uncommon shyness' and that 'several sporting gentlemen assembled on this occasion'.[18]

Bout with Sam Martin, 1787 edit

After his fight with Sam Martin the Bath Butcher in Barnet on 17 April 1787, which Mendoza won in ten rounds and a total of 26 minutes, he was transported home followed by a cheering crowd who carried lighted torches and sang 'See the Conquering Hero Comes'.[19] After the fight, the Prince of Wales, who would become King George IV, presented Mendoza with 500 pounds, in addition to the 500 pounds he had won in the match, and shook his hand in full view of the gallery. Mendoza used the money to open a boxing school in Capel Court. The recognition by royalty annoyed his second, occasional manager Richard Humphries, who became a rival and planned for a match, but it elevated the stature of Jews in London.[19][20]

With the money he won from the Martin fight, Mendoza is believed to have married first cousin Esther Mendoza around 1789. They would have eleven children, whom Mendoza later struggled to support. Before he married, he promised Esther to quit boxing, but was unable to keep his promise.[3][21][22]

Bouts with Richard Humphries, 1787–90 edit

 
First fight between Humphreys and Mendoza, 9 September 1787
 
Humphries posed with guard up

The next phase of Mendoza's career was defined by a series of bouts with his former mentor and second Richard Humphries between 1787 and 1790. The first, and least known, of these took place on 9 September 1787; Mendoza lost in 29 minutes. This fight was not considered as important by historians, perhaps because Humphries dominated, or because there were fewer persons in attendance.[23]

A second Mendoza-Humphries bout took place, after postponement, on a rainy 9 January 1788 in Odiham, Hampshire and was attended by 10,000 spectators.

 
Second fight; Tom Johnson interferes, 9 January 1788

Included in the audience were the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York, who wagered 40,000 pounds on the match. Humphries was a 2–1 favourite to win, though Mendoza had his own followers and was heavily backed by the Jewish community.

The fight was disrupted from a foul called when Humphries' second, the reigning champion, Tom Johnson blocked a blow but, according to Mendoza's account, this did not end the fight.[24] According to his own account, Mendoza slipped on the wet boards of the ring and badly sprained his ankle, preventing him from continuing, and requiring him to forfeit the bout.

At least seven English newspapers of the era, including London's Times and Chronicle, published articles on the Mendoza–Humphries bouts, and United States papers ran stories as well. In one newspaper article to advertise their meeting, Mendoza taunted, "Mr. Humphreys is afraid, he dares not meet me as a boxer … though he has the advantages of strength and age, though a teacher of the art, he meanly shrinks from a public trial of that skill". Humphries replied Mendoza should make the same claim in the ring, and vowed to meet him.[25][26]

 
Third fight: Won on foul, round 65, Mendoza on left, 6 May 1789

In his third bout against Humphries on 6 May 1789 in Stilton, Huntingdonshire, Mendoza dominated and won on a foul in the 65th round when Humphries was believed to have dropped to the ground without being hit. Mendoza had trained for the bout at the Essex home of his principal Sir Thomas Apreece. The specially built arena had tiered seating and could accommodate up to 3,000 people, a more modest crowd than at his second bout. The battle commenced a little after one o'clock in the afternoon.[27] The smaller crowd may have been due to Huntingdonshire being a long journey for many fans, ninety miles from London. It was clear early in the fight that Mendoza's hand and foot work were vastly superior to Humphries', though both men were accomplished scientific boxers and had studied each other's style.[28]

Mendoza won his fourth and final bout with Humphries on 29 September 1790 in 72 rounds in Doncaster Recognised by many for his previous win, Mendoza was the 5–4 favourite, and he thoroughly thrashed his opponent, ten minutes into the bout. Pierce Egan, English boxing author of the period, noted that many in the crowd were behind Mendoza, and that the "humanity of Mendoza was conspicuous throughout the fight—often was it witnessed that Dan threw his arm when he might have put in a most tremendous blow upon his exhausted adversary".[29]

First fight versus Bill Warr edit

 
King George III, 1779

On 14 May 1792, Mendoza fought a bout at Smitham Bottom, Croydon, against Bill Warr (or Ward) his former sparring-partner. This fight resulted in a victory for Mendoza in 23 rounds, 116 minutes. After his win against Warr, Mendoza is believed to have met with King George III at Windsor Castle. Poems and songs were written of Mendoza, he sat for portraits, and was asked to give boxing exhibitions at London's prestigious Covent Gardens. Mendoza was paid 50 English pounds, an impressive sum in 1790, for several of his boxing demonstrations at Covent Gardens, which he conducted as often as three times a week.[30]

Mendoza's style of boxing edit

 
Mendoza posed with guard up

Pierce Egan recorded that ‘Mendoza was considered one of the most elegant and scientific pugilists in the whole race of boxers. […] He rose up like a phenomenon in the pugilistic hemisphere, and was a star of the first brilliancy for a considerable period’.[31] The anonymous work Pancratia (1812) noted that ‘In his manner there is more neatness than strength, and it has been said, more show than service; his blows are in general deficient in force, but given with astonishing quickness, and he is [agreed] to strike oftener, and stop more dexterously, than any other man.’[32]

Other attributes considered typical of Mendoza’s style were: ‘stopping and returning with the same hand’,[33] and extensive use of the ‘chopper’ (a backhanded punch, often delivered with the same hand that had just been used to make a block).[34][35][36] He was also noted for his ability in ‘tiring out a man’s strength […] by acting on the defensive till the assault in turn could be practiced with success’.[37] Mendoza was believed to have ‘derived his primitive knowledge of boxing from the tuition of his elegant rival Humphreys; but he so rapidly improved upon the system of his master, as to remain several years without a rival’.[38]

Mendoza as a teacher edit

Mendoza’s contribution to the development of scientific technique came as much from his ability as a teacher as from his own personal boxing style. In 1789 he published two books, The Art of Boxing, and The Modern Art of Boxing, and from 1790 onwards he frequently offered public exhibitions of pugilism in theatres, either in London or across the provinces. Mendoza also worked closely with a number of later pugilists, either as a trainer or as a second (i.e. cornerman in modern parlance). Egan noted that ‘as a teacher […], it might almost be said, that [Mendoza] was without a competitor, and turned out some excellent pupils.’[39]

The influence of Mendoza’s books is perhaps unclear. The Art of Boxing devotes just 28 pages to boxing technique, but a further 67 to documenting the ill-tempered correspondence that had passed between Mendoza and Humphreys. The Modern Art of Boxing (a slim 48 page tome) is described by Mendoza as ‘a selection from different works on the same subject’ (it contains material taken directly from, for example, Godfrey’s 1747 treatise on self-defence). Contained in both of these works are Mendoza’s ‘Six Lessons’[40][41] (described as being 'for the use of his scholars'). These consist of exercises whereby the master makes various attacks and the student is told how to defend against them. The 'Six Lessons' can be seen as an expression of Mendoza’s style as described above, with much concentration on defensive technique and counter-attack.

Later career 1793–95 edit

Though he remained an admired and heroic figure, Mendoza's decline in popular support may have partly been due to public knowledge of several crimes he committed, which he omitted from his memoirs. He may have been deported early in his life for robbery, was undoubtedly accused of fraud in a well publicised Old Bailey trial in October 1793, and was found guilty in a London trial of viciously assaulting a woman, Rachel Joel, for insulting his wife in 1795.[42][43]

After a stay in a debtors' prison, he resumed training and defeated Bill Warr again on 12 November 1794, outclassing him in only seventeen minutes at Bexley Common. At around this time Mendoza was employed as a recruiting Sargent.[44]

Bout against John Jackson, 1795 edit

 
John Jackson

On 15 April 1795, Mendoza fought "Gentleman" John Jackson on a stage at Hornchurch in Essex. At a muscular twenty-six, Jackson was five years younger than Mendoza's thirty-one, four inches (10 cm) taller, and 42 pounds (19 kg) heavier. Two hundred guineas, or a little over two hundred British pounds, were laid on each side, and the future King William IV was among the audience. The bout was only Jackson's third professional fight and the betting was recorded by Pierce Egan as having been in favour of Mendoza. Jackson, however, won in nine rounds, paving the way to victory by muscling Mendoza into the corner of the ring, grabbing his hair and pummeling his head with uppercuts using his free hand. Mendoza managed to come back up to scratch after this, but was soon knocked out. Jackson beat him into submission by the end of the ninth round. Mendoza asked for a foul for the hair pulling, but it was ruled to be legal at the time. Many pugilists, such as James Figg and Jack Broughton, shaved their heads to avoid the possibility of this, until hair-pulling was eventually banned in boxing. Mendoza retired after his loss, and though he attempted boxing comebacks, he never again enjoyed the same-size audiences or received large purses.[45] Although Mendoza continued sparring tours well into the nineteenth century, 1795 marked the beginning of a steep decline in his popularity and for the most part, his income. He very rarely appeared in the London newspapers after this period, and had lost respect with much of the public.[46]

In 1799, Mendoza contracted a debt and ended in Carlisle Prison. Though he was bailed out by friends in the Freemasons, he later served another six months. With great connections, though a convict, he was later appointed Sheriff's Assistant to the County of Middlesex in 1806, though he would have to evade prison again in later life due to mounting debts.[47]

Return to boxing vs Harry Lee, 1806 edit

Victory over Harry Lee edit

On 21 March 1806, at Grinstead Green, Mendoza returned to the ring and defeated the taller Harry Lee in 53 rounds. Based on his previous reputation, Mendoza was a 3–1 favourite in the betting. The stakes were 50 guineas a side. During this period Mendoza worked as the landlord of the "Admiral Nelson" public house in Whitechapel. He turned down a number of offers for re-matches and in 1807 wrote a letter to The Times of London in which he said he was devoting himself chiefly to teaching the art of boxing.

 
Cartoon of Riots, Mendoza in Center with stick

In 1809 Mendoza and some associates were hired by the theatre manager John Philip Kemble of Covent Gardens in an attempt to suppress the Old Price Riots. The riots lasted three months and became a violent uprising against the increase in prices at the new theatre after the old theatre had burnt down. The resulting poor publicity probably cost Mendoza much of his remaining popular support, as he was seen to be fighting on the side of the privileged.[48] The anger against the raising of the prices also sparked additional antisemitism in London and apparently, judging by the press accounts, against Mendoza himself.

He published his third book, the autobiographical "Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza" in 1816.

Though not well documented, Mendoza went on several exhibition tours through the British Isles, the most successful being those made in the summer of 1819.[7]

Final loss and death, 1836 edit

He made his last public appearance as a boxer on 4 July 1820, one day short of his 56th birthday, at Banstead Downs in a grudge match against former boxer Thomas Owen, at that point a London innkeeper and five years younger than Mendoza. Mendoza had not fought for 14 years. In need of money, he made a questionable choice, and was defeated after 12 rounds.[7]

According to several sources, he continued his work as an inn keeper and landlord, likely at the Admiral Nelson, in the later years of his life, and just before his death.[49]

He died on 3 September 1836 at the age of 72, reportedly at his home in Horseshoe Alley on London's Petticoat Lane, leaving his wife Ester and family of eleven in poverty. He was initially buried in the Nuevo Sephardic Cemetery, a Jewish Cemetery near Mile End, now part of the campus of Queen Mary University of London and later reburied in Brentwood Jewish Cemetery in Essex, England.

Pierce Egan, the author of Boxiana, a boxing history of the period, said of Mendoza that he was "a complete artist" and "a star of the first brilliancy."[19] On the subject of race prejudice, Egan wrote, "In spite of his prejudice, he (the Christian) was compelled to exclaim—Mendoza was a pugilist of no ordinary merit."[50] Egan further wrote "No pugilist whatever, since the time of Broughton (or even Broughton himself), has ever so completely elucidated, or promulgated, the principles of boxing as Daniel Mendoza". (Broughton was the first Englishman to write rules for the sport of boxing.)

Claim to the English Championship edit

Most modern sources [51][52][53][54][55] describe Mendoza as having been English Prizefighting Champion from 1792 (when he defeated Bill Warr at Smitham Bottom) to 1795 (when he lost to John Jackson at Hornchurch). This span includes a further fight against Warr in 1794. The origin of this claim to the championship would appear to be Henning's very unreliable 1902 book Fights for the Championship which includes much text invented by the author. Sources from the late 18th and early 19th century, however, seem to be unanimous in not describing Mendoza as champion.

Various contemporary newspaper accounts of Mendoza's fights in 1792, 1794 and 1795 survive, including those in the Evening Mail, the Oracle[56] and in the Sporting Magazine. These reports do not describe the fights as having been for the championship, and nor do they mention Mendoza as having been champion. Similarly, the Sporting Magazine, essentially the journal of record for sporting events in this era, refers to Mendoza on several other occasions between 1792 and 1795, but never describes him as champion.[57]

Early 19th century works such as Pancratia (1812) and Boxiana (1813) also cover these fights without making any reference to the championship - and the lengthy chapter on Mendoza in Boxiana never refers to him having been champion (whereas the chapters on established champions such as Tom Johnson, Ben Brain and Jem Belcher make their statuses clear on multiple occasions). Most tellingly, in his own autobiography [58] Mendoza makes no reference to these three fights having been for the championship and at no point claims to have been English Champion.

According to Pierce Egan's authoritative Boxiana (1813), Ben Brain continued to be recognised as champion until his death in 1794.[59] The championship then appears to have remained vacant until the advent of Jem Belcher in 1800, who is the next fighter to be described as Champion of England in the early prizefighting sources.

Halls of Fame edit

Legacy edit

In popular culture edit

Relatives edit

  • The English actor Peter Sellers was Mendoza's 1st cousin four times removed and hung portraits of the boxer in the backgrounds of several[which?] of his films.[70]
  • The Australian writer David Malouf is descended in the same degree from Mendoza.[71]

Plaques edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Mendoza states his year of birth as 1764 in his memoirs, but synagogue records suggest 1765 is more likely, because he was circumcised on 12 July 1765.[1]

Citations

  1. ^ Gee, Tony (2004). "Mendoza, Daniel (1765?–1836)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18556. Retrieved 7 January 2013. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ The Fighting Jew: The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza, Champion Boxer, Wynn Wheldon, Amberley Publishing 2019, p16
  3. ^ a b c Siegman, Joseph M. (1992). The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
  4. ^ a b The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pp. 6–15
  5. ^ a b "Daniel Mendoza". Retrieved 7 July 2019.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Grandfather was slaughterer in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 9
  7. ^ a b c "Mendoza, Daniel". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Wheldon, Wynn, Mendoza the Jew, Commentary Magazine, June 2016". 16 May 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  9. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 55.
  10. ^ a b Fight with porter in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 9
  11. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 71–72
  12. ^ Mendoza – Memoirs of Daniel Mendoza (1816) p.9
  13. ^ Fight with Coalheaver in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 9.
  14. ^ 'Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza' Mendoza, D (1816) pg.35 of the 2011 edition
  15. ^ 'The Fighting Jew: The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza, Champion Boxer' pg 29. Wynn Wheldon, 2019
  16. ^ 'The Fighting Jew: The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza, Champion Boxer' pg 31. Wynn Wheldon, 2019
  17. ^ 'Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza' Mendoza, D (1816) pp.35-41 of the 2011 edition
  18. ^ 'Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza' Mendoza, D (1816) pg.41 of the 2011 edition
  19. ^ a b c "Daniel Mendoza". JGRIT. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  20. ^ Prince of Wales, future King was there in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken (1988), Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 10
  21. ^ Married cousin with the money in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken (1988), Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 10
  22. ^ Prince of Wales there in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 10
  23. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 38
  24. ^ Foul did not end fight in Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 74–5
  25. ^ . The Huddle. 4 May 2017. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  26. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 7
  27. ^ At 1 o'clock in Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University, Montreal, July 2011, pg. 80
  28. ^ Bout with Humphries and other bouts in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 10–11
  29. ^ Bout with Humphries and other bouts in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 10–12
  30. ^ "Daniel Mendoza". Your Dictionary. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  31. ^ Pierce Egan, Boxiana volume 1, 1830, pp254-5
  32. ^ Anonymous, Pancratia, 1812, p72)
  33. ^ Henry Downes Miles, Pugilistica volume 1, 1906, p231
  34. ^ Daniel Mendoza, The Modern Art of Boxing, 1789, p17
  35. ^ Pierce Egan, Boxiana volume 2, 1824, p20
  36. ^ Pancratia p73
  37. ^ Boxiana 1, p256
  38. ^ Boxiana 2, p11
  39. ^ Boxiana volume 1, p257
  40. ^ Daniel Mendoza, The Art of Boxing, 1789, pp4-28
  41. ^ Daniel Mendoza, The Modern Art of Boxing pp15-23
  42. ^ Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 6.0, 6 July 2011), October 1793, trial of DANIEL MENDOZA, search online (t17931030‐90)
  43. ^ Newspaper account of assault of Rachel Joel in London Packet or New Lloyd’s Evening Post, 28 October 1795
  44. ^ Warr fight and work as recruiting Sargent in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 13
  45. ^ Defeated by John Jackson in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pps. 13–14.
  46. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man", pg. 88
  47. ^ Arrested for debt in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 15
  48. ^ Opened a pub after the Lee fight in The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, pg. 15
  49. ^ Was inn keeper before he died, in Slater, Robert, (1983), Great Jews in Sports, Johnathan David Publishers, Middle Village, New York, pg. 198–200, 200.
  50. ^ Great Jews in Sports, Slater, pg. 198
  51. ^ The Jewish Boxer's Hall of Fame, Blady, Ken, (1988) Shapolsky Publishers, Inc., New York, NY
  52. ^ Brodie, Daniel, "The Jewish Strong Man"
  53. ^ The Fighting Jew: The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza, Champion Boxer, Wynn Wheldon, Amberley Publishing 2019
  54. ^ Mendoza the Jew, Ronald Schlechter & Liz Clarke, 2014
  55. ^ Fighter from Whitechapel, The Story of Daniel Mendoza, Harold U.Ribalow & Simon Jeruchim
  56. ^ The reports in the Evening Mail and Oracle are given in Wheldon 2019
  57. ^ The various sources described have been added as links below under 'External Links'
  58. ^ Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza, Daniel Mendoza, 1816
  59. ^ Pierce Egan, Boxiana volume 1, pages 112-116 of the 1830 edition
  60. ^ List of inductees on the BoxRec website
  61. ^ "International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame". Jewishsports.net. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  63. ^ National Portrait Gallery
  64. ^ Jewish Museum, London
  65. ^ Joyce, James (1986). Ulysses. Random House. p. 563. ISBN 0-394-55373-X.
  66. ^ Mendoza The Great - a boxing strip from The Victor.
  67. ^ Eisner, Will; Bendis, Brian Michael (2013). Fagin the Jew (2. ed.). Milwaukie: DarK Horse. ISBN 978-1-61655-126-1.
  68. ^ Float Like A Butterfly, Sting Like A ... Jew, by Ted Merwin, Jewish Week, 18 March 2009 . Archived from the original on 28 April 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
  69. ^ Mendoza the Jew: Boxing, Manliness, and Nationalism; A Graphic History
  70. ^ Sikov, Ed, Mr. Strangelove, Hyperion, 2002, pg. 4
  71. ^ Jason Steger, Bookmarks, The Age, 11 May 2019, Spectrum, p. 19
  72. ^ Unveiling of the plaque on the Jewish East End of London website
  73. ^ Plaque #1911 on Open Plaques

Further reading edit

  • A Treasury of Jewish Folklore: Nathan Ausubel
  • Memoirs of the life of Daniel Mendoza OCLC 2963035
  • The Sportsman's magazine of life in London and the country, Volume 1. London. 1845. p. 106.
  • The Art of Boxing; by Daniel Mendoza; Originals will be hard to find, but reprints are available.
  • The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza (1816); A biography by Mendoza himself, very hard to find, although it has been reprinted
  • The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza; A reprint, edited by Paul Magriel (first edition 1951)
  • The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza; A reprint, edited by Alex Joanides (2011)
  • Edwards, Lewis (1939–1945). "Daniel Mendoza". Transactions (Jewish Historical Society of England). 15. Jewish Historical Society of England: 73–92. JSTOR 29777842. (subscription required)
  • Harold U. Ribalow, Daniel Mendoza, Fighter from Whitechapel (New York: Farrer, Straus, and Cudahy, Inc., 1962)
  • Wynn Wheldon The Fighting Jew: the Life & Times of Daniel Mendoza, 2019.

External links edit

  • Chapter on Mendoza in Pierce Egan's Boxiana, or Sketches of Pugilism Ancient and Modern (1830 reprint of the 1813 original)
  • Pancratia, or a History of Pugilism, containing a full account of every battle of note... (1812). Mendoza's major fights (two vs Warr and one vs Jackson) are described on pages 104, 117 & 118.
  • Description of Mendoza in The Sporting Magazine, April 1793.
  • Contemporary report of Mendoza vs Warr, 1794, in The Sporting Magazine, Nov 1794.
  • Contemporary report of Mendoza vs Jackson 1795, in The Sporting Magazine, April 1795.
  • Broken and Outcast short film.
  • Daniel Mendoza at the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
  • Extracts from Daniel Mendoza's Boxing Manual 23 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine hosted at the Linacre School of Defense website.
  • Daniel Mendoza on the International Boxing Hall of Fame website

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This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Daniel Mendoza 5 July 1764 a 3 September 1836 often known as Dan Mendoza was an English prize fighter in the 1780s and 90s and was also an instructor of pugilism He was of Sephardic or Portuguese Jewish descent 2 3 4 Daniel MendozaBorn 1764 07 05 5 July 1764Whitechapel Aldgate EnglandDied3 September 1836 1836 09 03 aged 72 Horseshoe Alley Petticoat Lane London EnglandNationalityEnglishOther namesMendoza the JewThe Star of IsraelStatisticsWeight s 160 lb 73 kg Height5 ft 7 in 1 70 m StanceOrthodoxBoxing recordTotal fights37Wins31Losses5Draws1 Mendoza played a significant role in the development of scientific technique in boxing by publishing two books on the subject The Art of Boxing and The Modern Art of Boxing and by holding frequent public exhibitions Modern sources regularly depict Mendoza as having been English Prize fighting Champion from 1792 1795 although contemporary sources from the late 18th and early 19th century never describe Mendoza in this way Contents 1 Early life and ancestry 2 Early career highlights 1780 90 2 1 Bout with Harry the Coalheaver 1784 2 2 Bouts with Tom Tyne 1785 and 1786 2 3 Bout with Sam Martin 1787 2 4 Bouts with Richard Humphries 1787 90 3 First fight versus Bill Warr 4 Mendoza s style of boxing 4 1 Mendoza as a teacher 5 Later career 1793 95 5 1 Bout against John Jackson 1795 5 2 Return to boxing vs Harry Lee 1806 5 2 1 Victory over Harry Lee 5 3 Final loss and death 1836 5 4 Claim to the English Championship 5 5 Halls of Fame 6 Legacy 6 1 In popular culture 6 2 Relatives 6 3 Plaques 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and ancestry editDaniel Mendoza was born in Whitechapel Aldgate London England on 5 July 1764 to a family of Spanish and Portuguese Jews also known as Sephardim By the time he was born Jews had been allowed to settle in England for about one hundred years having been readmitted officially by Cromwell in 1656 They were still regarded by many Londoners with a degree of suspicion and faced significant antisemitism Mendoza s ancestors came from Jaen Spain they had emigrated to the Netherlands which had a policy of toleration where his grandfather was born The family moved to London with ancestors living there for a century before Mendoza s birth Several sources wrote that some of his London ancestors from Spain had earlier concealed their Jewish identity and converted to Christianity becoming Maranos According to many genealogical websites his parents were Abraham Aaron Mendoza and Esther Lopez and were believed to be artisans Jewish scholar Albert Hyamson wrote that Aaron Mendoza a ritual slaughterer or shochet who had written a book on his craft in 1773 was his grandfather 3 5 6 7 Mendoza attended a Jewish school Shaare Tikvah 8 where he was instructed in English grammar writing and arithmetic as well as Hebrew 9 He grew up in London s East End in poor surroundings and worked as a glass cutter labourer assistant to a green grocer and an actor before taking up boxing as a profession 5 Early career highlights 1780 90 editMendoza s first fight occurred in 1780 when he was 16 At the time he was working for a tea dealer in Aldgate London The fight was not a prize fight for a purse but a contest to settle a dispute with a porter over payment for a consignment of tea The porter had demanded twice the agreed price for the consignment and Mendoza said the porter behaved in a manner unfit for a gentleman After much arguing between the porter and the proprietor of the tea dealership the porter challenged the owner to settle the dispute by a duel with fists 10 Believing the porter was cheating his frail employer Mendoza accepted the challenge on his behalf Richard Humphries acted as Mendoza s second Humphries would later act as a manager for Mendoza arranging training facilities and securing payment for fights 11 The duel with the porter took place in the street outside the tea dealership in a hastily constructed ring The fight lasted for forty five minutes ending when the porter declared he was unable to continue This victory brought a small measure of fame to Mendoza as stories of the fight spread through the surrounding neighborhoods and portrayed Mendoza as the talented whippersnapper who had not just beaten but thrashed his larger opponent 4 10 12 Bout with Harry the Coalheaver 1784 edit Turning professional at 18 Mendoza fought at Mile End in 1784 against Harry the Coalheaver After 118 rounds lasting forty minutes Mendoza brought the larger man into submission 13 Bouts with Tom Tyne 1785 and 1786 edit Mendoza then fought Tom Tyne a tailor from Bermondsey The exact date of this fight is unclear Mendoza himself claims 1783 14 but other events in the narrative of his autobiography suggest a date closer to 1786 7 Wheldon 2019 15 notes that a report in the Public Advertiser seems to set the date accurately at 7 November 1785 The report read as follows Monday a pitched battle was fought near Wanstead between Mendoza the noted fighting Jew and a tailor of the Borough which after a contest of 40 minutes during which time much real drubbing was given on both sides was decided in favour of the tailor to the no small disappointment and regret of the knowing ones On July 1786 16 Mendoza fought a rematch against Tyne at Duppas Hill Croydon having dispatched a couple of minor fighters in the intervening eight months 17 The second bout vs Tyne resulted in victory for Mendoza in a fight lasting 27 rounds and almost an hour Mendoza noted that in the second bout Tyne fought with uncommon shyness and that several sporting gentlemen assembled on this occasion 18 Bout with Sam Martin 1787 edit After his fight with Sam Martin the Bath Butcher in Barnet on 17 April 1787 which Mendoza won in ten rounds and a total of 26 minutes he was transported home followed by a cheering crowd who carried lighted torches and sang See the Conquering Hero Comes 19 After the fight the Prince of Wales who would become King George IV presented Mendoza with 500 pounds in addition to the 500 pounds he had won in the match and shook his hand in full view of the gallery Mendoza used the money to open a boxing school in Capel Court The recognition by royalty annoyed his second occasional manager Richard Humphries who became a rival and planned for a match but it elevated the stature of Jews in London 19 20 With the money he won from the Martin fight Mendoza is believed to have married first cousin Esther Mendoza around 1789 They would have eleven children whom Mendoza later struggled to support Before he married he promised Esther to quit boxing but was unable to keep his promise 3 21 22 Bouts with Richard Humphries 1787 90 edit nbsp First fight between Humphreys and Mendoza 9 September 1787 nbsp Humphries posed with guard up The next phase of Mendoza s career was defined by a series of bouts with his former mentor and second Richard Humphries between 1787 and 1790 The first and least known of these took place on 9 September 1787 Mendoza lost in 29 minutes This fight was not considered as important by historians perhaps because Humphries dominated or because there were fewer persons in attendance 23 A second Mendoza Humphries bout took place after postponement on a rainy 9 January 1788 in Odiham Hampshire and was attended by 10 000 spectators nbsp Second fight Tom Johnson interferes 9 January 1788Included in the audience were the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York who wagered 40 000 pounds on the match Humphries was a 2 1 favourite to win though Mendoza had his own followers and was heavily backed by the Jewish community The fight was disrupted from a foul called when Humphries second the reigning champion Tom Johnson blocked a blow but according to Mendoza s account this did not end the fight 24 According to his own account Mendoza slipped on the wet boards of the ring and badly sprained his ankle preventing him from continuing and requiring him to forfeit the bout At least seven English newspapers of the era including London s Times and Chronicle published articles on the Mendoza Humphries bouts and United States papers ran stories as well In one newspaper article to advertise their meeting Mendoza taunted Mr Humphreys is afraid he dares not meet me as a boxer though he has the advantages of strength and age though a teacher of the art he meanly shrinks from a public trial of that skill Humphries replied Mendoza should make the same claim in the ring and vowed to meet him 25 26 nbsp Third fight Won on foul round 65 Mendoza on left 6 May 1789 In his third bout against Humphries on 6 May 1789 in Stilton Huntingdonshire Mendoza dominated and won on a foul in the 65th round when Humphries was believed to have dropped to the ground without being hit Mendoza had trained for the bout at the Essex home of his principal Sir Thomas Apreece The specially built arena had tiered seating and could accommodate up to 3 000 people a more modest crowd than at his second bout The battle commenced a little after one o clock in the afternoon 27 The smaller crowd may have been due to Huntingdonshire being a long journey for many fans ninety miles from London It was clear early in the fight that Mendoza s hand and foot work were vastly superior to Humphries though both men were accomplished scientific boxers and had studied each other s style 28 Mendoza won his fourth and final bout with Humphries on 29 September 1790 in 72 rounds in Doncaster Recognised by many for his previous win Mendoza was the 5 4 favourite and he thoroughly thrashed his opponent ten minutes into the bout Pierce Egan English boxing author of the period noted that many in the crowd were behind Mendoza and that the humanity of Mendoza was conspicuous throughout the fight often was it witnessed that Dan threw his arm when he might have put in a most tremendous blow upon his exhausted adversary 29 First fight versus Bill Warr edit nbsp King George III 1779 On 14 May 1792 Mendoza fought a bout at Smitham Bottom Croydon against Bill Warr or Ward his former sparring partner This fight resulted in a victory for Mendoza in 23 rounds 116 minutes After his win against Warr Mendoza is believed to have met with King George III at Windsor Castle Poems and songs were written of Mendoza he sat for portraits and was asked to give boxing exhibitions at London s prestigious Covent Gardens Mendoza was paid 50 English pounds an impressive sum in 1790 for several of his boxing demonstrations at Covent Gardens which he conducted as often as three times a week 30 Mendoza s style of boxing edit nbsp Mendoza posed with guard up Pierce Egan recorded that Mendoza was considered one of the most elegant and scientific pugilists in the whole race of boxers He rose up like a phenomenon in the pugilistic hemisphere and was a star of the first brilliancy for a considerable period 31 The anonymous work Pancratia 1812 noted that In his manner there is more neatness than strength and it has been said more show than service his blows are in general deficient in force but given with astonishing quickness and he is agreed to strike oftener and stop more dexterously than any other man 32 Other attributes considered typical of Mendoza s style were stopping and returning with the same hand 33 and extensive use of the chopper a backhanded punch often delivered with the same hand that had just been used to make a block 34 35 36 He was also noted for his ability in tiring out a man s strength by acting on the defensive till the assault in turn could be practiced with success 37 Mendoza was believed to have derived his primitive knowledge of boxing from the tuition of his elegant rival Humphreys but he so rapidly improved upon the system of his master as to remain several years without a rival 38 Mendoza as a teacher edit Mendoza s contribution to the development of scientific technique came as much from his ability as a teacher as from his own personal boxing style In 1789 he published two books The Art of Boxing and The Modern Art of Boxing and from 1790 onwards he frequently offered public exhibitions of pugilism in theatres either in London or across the provinces Mendoza also worked closely with a number of later pugilists either as a trainer or as a second i e cornerman in modern parlance Egan noted that as a teacher it might almost be said that Mendoza was without a competitor and turned out some excellent pupils 39 The influence of Mendoza s books is perhaps unclear The Art of Boxing devotes just 28 pages to boxing technique but a further 67 to documenting the ill tempered correspondence that had passed between Mendoza and Humphreys The Modern Art of Boxing a slim 48 page tome is described by Mendoza as a selection from different works on the same subject it contains material taken directly from for example Godfrey s 1747 treatise on self defence Contained in both of these works are Mendoza s Six Lessons 40 41 described as being for the use of his scholars These consist of exercises whereby the master makes various attacks and the student is told how to defend against them The Six Lessons can be seen as an expression of Mendoza s style as described above with much concentration on defensive technique and counter attack Later career 1793 95 editThough he remained an admired and heroic figure Mendoza s decline in popular support may have partly been due to public knowledge of several crimes he committed which he omitted from his memoirs He may have been deported early in his life for robbery was undoubtedly accused of fraud in a well publicised Old Bailey trial in October 1793 and was found guilty in a London trial of viciously assaulting a woman Rachel Joel for insulting his wife in 1795 42 43 After a stay in a debtors prison he resumed training and defeated Bill Warr again on 12 November 1794 outclassing him in only seventeen minutes at Bexley Common At around this time Mendoza was employed as a recruiting Sargent 44 Bout against John Jackson 1795 edit nbsp John Jackson On 15 April 1795 Mendoza fought Gentleman John Jackson on a stage at Hornchurch in Essex At a muscular twenty six Jackson was five years younger than Mendoza s thirty one four inches 10 cm taller and 42 pounds 19 kg heavier Two hundred guineas or a little over two hundred British pounds were laid on each side and the future King William IV was among the audience The bout was only Jackson s third professional fight and the betting was recorded by Pierce Egan as having been in favour of Mendoza Jackson however won in nine rounds paving the way to victory by muscling Mendoza into the corner of the ring grabbing his hair and pummeling his head with uppercuts using his free hand Mendoza managed to come back up to scratch after this but was soon knocked out Jackson beat him into submission by the end of the ninth round Mendoza asked for a foul for the hair pulling but it was ruled to be legal at the time Many pugilists such as James Figg and Jack Broughton shaved their heads to avoid the possibility of this until hair pulling was eventually banned in boxing Mendoza retired after his loss and though he attempted boxing comebacks he never again enjoyed the same size audiences or received large purses 45 Although Mendoza continued sparring tours well into the nineteenth century 1795 marked the beginning of a steep decline in his popularity and for the most part his income He very rarely appeared in the London newspapers after this period and had lost respect with much of the public 46 In 1799 Mendoza contracted a debt and ended in Carlisle Prison Though he was bailed out by friends in the Freemasons he later served another six months With great connections though a convict he was later appointed Sheriff s Assistant to the County of Middlesex in 1806 though he would have to evade prison again in later life due to mounting debts 47 Return to boxing vs Harry Lee 1806 edit Victory over Harry Lee edit On 21 March 1806 at Grinstead Green Mendoza returned to the ring and defeated the taller Harry Lee in 53 rounds Based on his previous reputation Mendoza was a 3 1 favourite in the betting The stakes were 50 guineas a side During this period Mendoza worked as the landlord of the Admiral Nelson public house in Whitechapel He turned down a number of offers for re matches and in 1807 wrote a letter to The Times of London in which he said he was devoting himself chiefly to teaching the art of boxing nbsp Cartoon of Riots Mendoza in Center with stick In 1809 Mendoza and some associates were hired by the theatre manager John Philip Kemble of Covent Gardens in an attempt to suppress the Old Price Riots The riots lasted three months and became a violent uprising against the increase in prices at the new theatre after the old theatre had burnt down The resulting poor publicity probably cost Mendoza much of his remaining popular support as he was seen to be fighting on the side of the privileged 48 The anger against the raising of the prices also sparked additional antisemitism in London and apparently judging by the press accounts against Mendoza himself He published his third book the autobiographical Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza in 1816 Though not well documented Mendoza went on several exhibition tours through the British Isles the most successful being those made in the summer of 1819 7 Final loss and death 1836 edit He made his last public appearance as a boxer on 4 July 1820 one day short of his 56th birthday at Banstead Downs in a grudge match against former boxer Thomas Owen at that point a London innkeeper and five years younger than Mendoza Mendoza had not fought for 14 years In need of money he made a questionable choice and was defeated after 12 rounds 7 According to several sources he continued his work as an inn keeper and landlord likely at the Admiral Nelson in the later years of his life and just before his death 49 He died on 3 September 1836 at the age of 72 reportedly at his home in Horseshoe Alley on London s Petticoat Lane leaving his wife Ester and family of eleven in poverty He was initially buried in the Nuevo Sephardic Cemetery a Jewish Cemetery near Mile End now part of the campus of Queen Mary University of London and later reburied in Brentwood Jewish Cemetery in Essex England Pierce Egan the author of Boxiana a boxing history of the period said of Mendoza that he was a complete artist and a star of the first brilliancy 19 On the subject of race prejudice Egan wrote In spite of his prejudice he the Christian was compelled to exclaim Mendoza was a pugilist of no ordinary merit 50 Egan further wrote No pugilist whatever since the time of Broughton or even Broughton himself has ever so completely elucidated or promulgated the principles of boxing as Daniel Mendoza Broughton was the first Englishman to write rules for the sport of boxing Claim to the English Championship edit Most modern sources 51 52 53 54 55 describe Mendoza as having been English Prizefighting Champion from 1792 when he defeated Bill Warr at Smitham Bottom to 1795 when he lost to John Jackson at Hornchurch This span includes a further fight against Warr in 1794 The origin of this claim to the championship would appear to be Henning s very unreliable 1902 book Fights for the Championship which includes much text invented by the author Sources from the late 18th and early 19th century however seem to be unanimous in not describing Mendoza as champion Various contemporary newspaper accounts of Mendoza s fights in 1792 1794 and 1795 survive including those in the Evening Mail the Oracle 56 and in the Sporting Magazine These reports do not describe the fights as having been for the championship and nor do they mention Mendoza as having been champion Similarly the Sporting Magazine essentially the journal of record for sporting events in this era refers to Mendoza on several other occasions between 1792 and 1795 but never describes him as champion 57 Early 19th century works such as Pancratia 1812 and Boxiana 1813 also cover these fights without making any reference to the championship and the lengthy chapter on Mendoza in Boxiana never refers to him having been champion whereas the chapters on established champions such as Tom Johnson Ben Brain and Jem Belcher make their statuses clear on multiple occasions Most tellingly in his own autobiography 58 Mendoza makes no reference to these three fights having been for the championship and at no point claims to have been English Champion According to Pierce Egan s authoritative Boxiana 1813 Ben Brain continued to be recognised as champion until his death in 1794 59 The championship then appears to have remained vacant until the advent of Jem Belcher in 1800 who is the next fighter to be described as Champion of England in the early prizefighting sources Halls of Fame edit In 1954 Mendoza was elected to The Ring magazine Hall of Fame Boxing Hall of Fame 60 Mendoza was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1981 In 1990 he was inducted into the inaugural class of the International Boxing Hall of Fame 61 In 2017 Mendoza was inducted in the Bare Knuckle Boxing Hall of Fame 62 Legacy editIn popular culture edit In 1788 and 1789 James Gillray produced several cartoons of Mendoza 63 64 Mendoza appears as a character in the 1934 movie The Scarlet Pimpernel at approximately the 40 minute mark citation needed Mendoza appears as a character in the 1942 British drama The Young Mr Pitt citation needed In James Joyce s 1922 novel Ulysses the protagonist Leopold Bloom mentions Mendoza pugilist in a list of anapocryphal illustrious sons of the law and children of a selected or rejected race along with Felix Bartholdy Mendelssohn composer Baruch Spinoza philosopher and Ferdinand Lassalle reformer duellist 65 In 1970 cartoon artist Ted Rawlings illustrated Mendoza The Great is one of the anthology stories featured in The Victor comics 66 In American cartoonist Will Eisner s 2003 graphic novel Fagin the Jew a young Fagin and his father witness Mendoza s fight against Richard Humphries on which they place a bet in favor of Mendoza 67 In 2009 Randy Cohen debuted a play about Mendoza titled The Punishing Blow 68 In 2013 writer Ronald Schechter and illustrator Liz Clarke published Mendoza the Jew Boxing Manliness and Nationalism A Graphic History 69 Relatives edit The English actor Peter Sellers was Mendoza s 1st cousin four times removed and hung portraits of the boxer in the backgrounds of several which of his films 70 The Australian writer David Malouf is descended in the same degree from Mendoza 71 Plaques edit In September 2008 a commemorative plaque to Dan Mendoza made by Louise Soloway was unveiled in London by Sir Henry Cooper It hangs on the wall of the main library of Queen Mary University of London adjacent to the student cafeteria 72 His former home on Paradise Row in Bethnal Green is marked by a blue plaque 73 See also editList of select Jewish boxersReferences editNotes Mendoza states his year of birth as 1764 in his memoirs but synagogue records suggest 1765 is more likely because he was circumcised on 12 July 1765 1 Citations Gee Tony 2004 Mendoza Daniel 1765 1836 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18556 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Fighting Jew The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza Champion Boxer Wynn Wheldon Amberley Publishing 2019 p16 a b c Siegman Joseph M 1992 The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame a b The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pp 6 15 a b Daniel Mendoza Retrieved 7 July 2019 permanent dead link Grandfather was slaughterer in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 9 a b c Mendoza Daniel Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 7 July 2019 Wheldon Wynn Mendoza the Jew Commentary Magazine June 2016 16 May 2016 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 55 a b Fight with porter in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 9 Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 71 72 Mendoza Memoirs of Daniel Mendoza 1816 p 9 Fight with Coalheaver in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 9 Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza Mendoza D 1816 pg 35 of the 2011 edition The Fighting Jew The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza Champion Boxer pg 29 Wynn Wheldon 2019 The Fighting Jew The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza Champion Boxer pg 31 Wynn Wheldon 2019 Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza Mendoza D 1816 pp 35 41 of the 2011 edition Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza Mendoza D 1816 pg 41 of the 2011 edition a b c Daniel Mendoza JGRIT Retrieved 7 September 2016 Prince of Wales future King was there in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 10 Married cousin with the money in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 10 Prince of Wales there in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 10 Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 38 Foul did not end fight in Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 74 5 The Man Who Birthed Modern Boxing The Huddle 4 May 2017 Archived from the original on 3 August 2019 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 7 At 1 o clock in Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man Department of Jewish Studies McGill University Montreal July 2011 pg 80 Bout with Humphries and other bouts in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 10 11 Bout with Humphries and other bouts in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 10 12 Daniel Mendoza Your Dictionary Retrieved 2 August 2019 Pierce Egan Boxiana volume 1 1830 pp254 5 Anonymous Pancratia 1812 p72 Henry Downes Miles Pugilistica volume 1 1906 p231 Daniel Mendoza The Modern Art of Boxing 1789 p17 Pierce Egan Boxiana volume 2 1824 p20 Pancratia p73 Boxiana 1 p256 Boxiana 2 p11 Boxiana volume 1 p257 Daniel Mendoza The Art of Boxing 1789 pp4 28 Daniel Mendoza The Modern Art of Boxing pp15 23 Old Bailey Proceedings Online www oldbaileyonline org version 6 0 6 July 2011 October 1793 trial of DANIEL MENDOZA search online t17931030 90 Newspaper account of assault of Rachel Joel in London Packet or New Lloyd s Evening Post 28 October 1795 Warr fight and work as recruiting Sargent in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 13 Defeated by John Jackson in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pps 13 14 Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man pg 88 Arrested for debt in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 15 Opened a pub after the Lee fight in The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY pg 15 Was inn keeper before he died in Slater Robert 1983 Great Jews in Sports Johnathan David Publishers Middle Village New York pg 198 200 200 Great Jews in Sports Slater pg 198 The Jewish Boxer s Hall of Fame Blady Ken 1988 Shapolsky Publishers Inc New York NY Brodie Daniel The Jewish Strong Man The Fighting Jew The Life and Times of Daniel Mendoza Champion Boxer Wynn Wheldon Amberley Publishing 2019 Mendoza the Jew Ronald Schlechter amp Liz Clarke 2014 Fighter from Whitechapel The Story of Daniel Mendoza Harold U Ribalow amp Simon Jeruchim The reports in the Evening Mail and Oracle are given in Wheldon 2019 The various sources described have been added as links below under External Links Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza Daniel Mendoza 1816 Pierce Egan Boxiana volume 1 pages 112 116 of the 1830 edition List of inductees on the BoxRec website International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame Jewishsports net Retrieved 20 January 2011 Announcement on the website Archived from the original on 8 April 2018 Retrieved 31 October 2017 National Portrait Gallery Jewish Museum London Joyce James 1986 Ulysses Random House p 563 ISBN 0 394 55373 X Mendoza The Great a boxing strip from The Victor Eisner Will Bendis Brian Michael 2013 Fagin the Jew 2 ed Milwaukie DarK Horse ISBN 978 1 61655 126 1 Float Like A Butterfly Sting Like A Jew by Ted Merwin Jewish Week 18 March 2009 Float Like a Butterfly Sting Like A Jew Archived from the original on 28 April 2009 Retrieved 22 March 2009 Mendoza the Jew Boxing Manliness and Nationalism A Graphic History Sikov Ed Mr Strangelove Hyperion 2002 pg 4 Jason Steger Bookmarks The Age 11 May 2019 Spectrum p 19 Unveiling of the plaque on the Jewish East End of London website Plaque 1911 on Open PlaquesFurther reading editA Treasury of Jewish Folklore Nathan Ausubel Memoirs of the life of Daniel Mendoza OCLC 2963035 The Sportsman s magazine of life in London and the country Volume 1 London 1845 p 106 The Art of Boxing by Daniel Mendoza Originals will be hard to find but reprints are available The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza 1816 A biography by Mendoza himself very hard to find although it has been reprinted The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza A reprint edited by Paul Magriel first edition 1951 The Memoirs of the Life of Daniel Mendoza A reprint edited by Alex Joanides 2011 Edwards Lewis 1939 1945 Daniel Mendoza Transactions Jewish Historical Society of England 15 Jewish Historical Society of England 73 92 JSTOR 29777842 subscription required Harold U Ribalow Daniel Mendoza Fighter from Whitechapel New York Farrer Straus and Cudahy Inc 1962 Wynn Wheldon The Fighting Jew the Life amp Times of Daniel Mendoza 2019 External links editChapter on Mendoza in Pierce Egan s Boxiana or Sketches of Pugilism Ancient and Modern 1830 reprint of the 1813 original Pancratia or a History of Pugilism containing a full account of every battle of note 1812 Mendoza s major fights two vs Warr and one vs Jackson are described on pages 104 117 amp 118 Description of Mendoza in The Sporting Magazine April 1793 Contemporary report of Mendoza vs Warr 1794 in The Sporting Magazine Nov 1794 Contemporary report of Mendoza vs Jackson 1795 in The Sporting Magazine April 1795 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daniel Mendoza Broken and Outcast short film Daniel Mendoza at the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame Extracts from Daniel Mendoza s Boxing Manual Archived 23 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine hosted at the Linacre School of Defense website Daniel Mendoza on the International Boxing Hall of Fame website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daniel Mendoza amp oldid 1220180127, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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