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The Most Popular Man in New Cross’ - Rediscovering boxer-wrestler Jack Wannop and his pugilistic pals - Talk in the chapel in Ladywell Cemetery on Sunday 19th February at 2pm

Talk in the chapel in Ladywell Cemetery on Sunday 19th February at 2pm

 As a wrestler Jack Wannop had a remarkable impact on pioneering and popularising wrestling as a sport in London before its early-1900s golden age.

New Cross might not be well-known as the ‘home’ of British wrestling or boxing, but back in the 1880s and ‘90s, hundreds – sometimes thousands – of people flocked to the area’s pubs and public halls to watch men (and the occasional woman!) punch and grapple for a cash prize, trophy, or moment of glory.

In 1881 Cumbrian carpenter Jack Wannop (1854 – 1923) and wife Miriam (1858 – 1948) settled with their growing family in New Cross, where they stayed until their deaths. Wannop founded the first New Cross Boxing Club in the early 1880s, claimed the unofficial ‘English championship’ wrestling title after an 1884 match in Deptford, and in 1888 made headlines on both sides of the Atlantic after journeying to Chicago to take on Evan ‘The Strangler’ Lewis for an international wrestling title. 

As a wrestler Wannop had a remarkable impact on pioneering and popularising wrestling as a sport in London over the years before its early-1900s ‘golden age.  As a heavyweight boxer with a preference for the ‘old style’ – bare fist – he took on some of the era’s best known names (with mixed results!) and trained a generation of south east Londoners from his New Cross gymnasiums, all of which are long-demolished.

Despite being a pillar of the community in his day and, it could be claimed, a national sporting celebrity, Jack has spent the past 100 years in an unmarked grave at Brockley & Ladywell Cemeteries.

Join local historian Sarah Elizabeth Cox (www.grapplingwithhistory.com) to find out more about Jack and his children, as well as the three friends who share the cemetery with them – ‘the Herculean’ heavyweight wrestler and Greenwich publican George Brown, aka Wannop’s Big ‘un; top boxer Dick Leary; and bookie Warren ‘Dais’ Patte, who put up the money that made the action happen. 

Expect tales of violence, tragedy, and donkey wrestling. 

Please dress warmly for this event!

Talk in the chapel in Ladywell Cemetery on Sunday 19th February at 2pm

Free but donations are very welcome!  Please book via Eventbrite

About our speaker

Sarah Elizabeth Cox is a wrestling and boxing historian who specialises in the late-Victorian period in East and South East London. She is a recent graduate of the MA History at Goldsmiths, after completing a dissertation on Jack Wannop and his gymnasiums. By day Sarah is the PR Manager for pregnancy charity Tommy’s and by night she has contributed articles or research on Jack and his friends for the Lewisham Ledger, Who Do You Think You Are magazine, FOBLC, and the National Archives. She is currently working as an historical advisor on forthcoming Disney+ 1880s boxing drama A Thousand Blows.