The Fitzsimmons/Maher Fight of 1896
Bob Fitzsimmons and Peter Maher |
The heavyweight boxing championship fight of 1896 was
arguably the most controversial sporting event of all time, escalating at one
point into an international incident that involved three great athletes, the
Texas state legislature, an ambitious boxing promoter, U.S. marshals, Texas
Rangers, the Mexican army, and last, but not least, an eccentric and entrepreneurial
saloon keeper and part-time Justice of the Peace by the name of Roy Bean.
John L. Sullivan held his heavyweight championship title
from 1882-1892. He is recognized as the last champion of the bare-knuckle
fighters under the London Prize Ring Rules, and the first champion of the
gloved boxers under the Marquess of Queensberry Rules. Sullivan is said to have
won more than 450 fights during his career, finally losing the heavyweight
title on September 7, 1892, in a fight with “Gentleman” Jim Corbett that lasted
21 rounds.
Press Pass for the Sullivan/Corbett fight September 7, 1892 |
Corbett wasn’t interested in defending his title; instead,
he used his champion status to put on theatrical “boxing” exhibitions from
which he derived a substantial living.
An English boxer from Cornwall by the name of Bob
Fitzsimmons held the U.S. middleweight title and began to fight as a
heavyweight. He repeatedly challenged Corbett to a fight, but Corbett
repeatedly refused, stating that Fitzsimmons wasn’t in his league as a fighter.
Finally, in 1894, a boxing organization called the Olympic Club named
Fitzsimmons the heavyweight champ because Corbett refused to fight, essentially
forcing Corbett to fight Fitzsimmons to defend his title.
A gambler and boxing promoter in Dallas, Texas, by the name
of Dan Stuart, saw an opportunity and started promoting the fight in an effort
to bring it to Dallas. He arranged for special railroad fairs for people around
the country who wanted to come to Dallas to see the fight. He even started
plans for a fifty-two thousand seat arena to be called the Dallas Coliseum. Through
his contacts with Dallas businessmen, Stuart was able to raise forty-one
thousand dollars for the purse.
But there was opposition to the fight. The Dallas area
clergy condemned the fight because they believed that it would draw the worse elements
of society to the city. Other issues arose as well. Corbett was distracted by a
very public and ugly divorce, and Fitzsimmons was about to go on trial for
manslaughter, having killed his sparring partner in a boxing exhibition the
previous year. Furthermore, the laws in Texas at the time were vague as to the
legality of boxing.
The Governor, Charles Culberson, under pressure from the Dallas
clergy, called the state legislature into a special session in October of 1895
in order to pass a law prohibiting boxing in Texas. The issue was settled once
for all. The fight would not take place in Texas.
Texas Rangers sent to El Paso to make sure the fight didn't take place on Texas soil |
Stuart considered other states in which to hold the fight,
but one by one they all turned him down. Governor Clarke of Arkansas went so
far as to threaten to enlarge the state penitentiary to accommodate the crowds
if Stuart brought the fight to his state.
To make matters worse for Stuart, Corbett decided to retire
from boxing, believing that the fight was never going to happen. He
relinquished his title to a little-known Irishman by the name of Peter Maher
who had just fought Corbett’s sparring partner and knocked him out in
sixty-three seconds. Stuart was now left with only one fighter and no venue for
the fight. Things were looking pretty hopeless.
Fitzsimmons, who had been eager to fight Corbett, was
furious about the champ bowing out of the fight, so he immediately challenged
the new champion, Peter Maher, who accepted the challenge. Fitzsimmons and
Maher had fought once before, in 1892, with Fitzsimmons emerging the victor. The
fight was on once again. All they needed was a place to battle. The people of
El Paso came to the rescue with a plan of their own.
Souvenir coins from the fight before the last-minute change of venue |
When Texans want a fight, they will find a way. They knew
that they couldn’t have the fight in Texas because of the new law, so, raising
fifteen thousand dollars for the purse, their plan was to have the fight across
the border in Juarez, Mexico.
Everything seemed to be falling into place. Fitzsimmons
arrived in El Paso to begin training and Maher set up his training camp not far
away in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The spectators started pouring into El Paso,
and with them came a contingent of law enforcement, including U.S. marshals and
thirty-two Texas Rangers, to make sure that the fight didn’t take place in
Texas.
No one had considered asking Mexico what they thought about
having the fight in Juarez, but they found out when the Mexican government sent
150 soldiers to Juarez to keep the championship bout out of their country. Once
again, the fight had no venue.
Enter Roy Bean.
The eccentric saloon keeper/Justice of the Peace from Langtry,
Texas on the Rio Grande said that he would guarantee a venue for the fight that
would satisfy everyone.
Stuart kept the location of the fight a secret and arranged
for a special train to carry the spectators, sportswriters, gamblers, and
lawmen from El Paso to the location of the fight. On February 20th
of 1896, passengers loaded onto a special ten-car Southern Pacific train,
paying twelve dollars each ($300 in today’s money), to head east toward a secret
destination. It wasn’t until the train stopped in Langtry that anyone knew
where they were going.
Bean, always the entrepreneur, had arranged for a train from
San Antonio to deliver a fresh supply of beer, which he sold for a dollar a
bottle ($25 today) to the thirsty spectators. Then he directed them to the Rio
Grande where he had set up a boxing ring on a sand bar in the middle of the
river. He had constructed a canvas wall around the ring to discourage any non-paying
on-lookers who couldn’t afford the twenty-dollar price of admission. However,
the canyon walls of the Rio Grande rose up high enough so that many people who
couldn’t get a seat inside the canvas wall were able to climb up on the heights
to get a free show. The Texas Rangers, who had accompanied the train, stood along
the banks of the Rio Grande at the extent of their jurisdiction.
Historical Marker at the site of the Fitzsimmons/Maher fight |
The fight had been gestating for four years. After months of
preparation, after spending thousands of dollars on promotion, after bouncing from one city to the next not knowing where the fight would take place, after overcoming
special legislation and special interest and armies of soldiers and law enforcement,
the fight was finally happening…and it ended in ninety-five seconds with a
knockout by Fitzsimmons.
(Author’s note: The very next fight
by Fitzsimmons in December of 1896 was almost as controversial, but for
different reasons, and involved another Wild West icon. You can read about it
in one of my previous articles here.)
Mike describes himself as Conservative, Christian, Pro-life,
and Pro-gun. He is a drinker of copious amounts of coffee. Happily married to his
redheaded sweetheart, Tami, they live in the mountains of western
Montana. He is a writer of Western short stories and humorous fiction and
has been published in a number of anthologies and magazines. His first novel,
The Sons of Philo Gaines, is scheduled for release in May of 2020. You can
visit his blog at:
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his Facebook page at:
From the size of the "crowd," I'd say the promoters lost money. Note the building on stilts to the right of the ring. Did it hold cameras to make early "motion pictures"?
ReplyDeleteGood catch, Frank. Yes, it did. Unfortunately, the fight was over before they had a chance to get the cameras rolling.
DeleteIt seems those who want a fight will find a way, no matter what. I've always found the ingenuity necessary to accomplish this fascinating. A very interesting post. Doris
ReplyDeleteThanks, Doris. I guess that's the take-away from this: If you want something bad enough, you will find a way to make it happen.
Delete