English pottery commemorative jug with Molineaux and Cribb the Boxers c1815

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£3350

Dated: 1811 English Staffordshire

A very rare and previously unrecorded canary yellow pitcher with silver luster decoration depicting the famous boxers Molineaux and Cribb. The underglaze transfer print of the two fighters is exceptionally well executed. There is also another underglaze transfer print of a poem dedicated to the "science" of boxing and its place in the patriotic hearts of the British on the reverse side of this historic sporting commemorative.There is an original firing detail at the rim which is completely original to the piece. Born into slavery in Virginia, Molineaux was trained by his father, also a fighter, as was Molineaux's twin brother. He boxed with other slaves to entertain plantation owners. Molineaux earned his owner a large sum of money in winnings on bets, was granted his freedom, and moved to England where he expected to be able to earn money as a professional boxer. Molineaux's first fight in England was on 24 July 1810, beating Jack Burrows in 65 minutes. On 3 December 1810, having been trained by Bill Richmond, another ex-slave turned boxer, Molineaux fought Tom Cribb at Shenington Hollow in Oxfordshire for the English title. According to the writer Pierce Egan, who was present, Molineaux stood five foot eight and a quarter inches tall, and for this fight weighed "fourteen stone two" (198 pounds (90 kg)). Egan wrote that few people, including Cribb, expected the fight to last very long; there was betting that Cribb would win in the first ten rounds.However, Molineaux proved a powerful and intelligent fighter and the two battered each other heavily. There was a disturbance in the nineteenth round as Molineaux and Cribb were locked in a wrestler's hold (legal under the rules of the time) so that neither could hit the other nor escape. The referee stood by, uncertain as to whether he should break the two apart, and the dissatisfied crowd pushed into the ring. In the confusion Molineaux hurt his left hand; Egan could not tell if it had been broken. There was also dispute over whether Cribb had managed to return to the line before the allowed thirty seconds had passed. If he had not, Molineaux would have won, but in the confusion the referee could not tell and the fight went on. After the 34th round Molineaux said he could not continue but his second persuaded him to return to the ring, where he was defeated in the 35th round. The return fight on 28 September 1811 at Thistleton Gap in Rutland was watched by 15,000 people. Cribb won this contest after breaking Molineaux's jaw. Molineaux's boxing career ended in 1815. After a stint in a debtor's prison he became increasingly dependent on alcohol, and died penniless in the regimental bandroom in Galway in Ireland three years later from liver failure. He was 34 years old.

Dimensions: 6 inches high

Current Condition: Good unrestored condition.

£3350    $4522

Description

A very rare and previously unrecorded canary yellow pitcher with silver luster decoration depicting the famous boxers Molineaux and Cribb. The underglaze transfer print of the two fighters is exceptionally well executed. There is also another underglaze transfer print of a poem dedicated to the “science” of boxing and its place in the patriotic hearts of the British on the reverse side of this historic sporting commemorative.There is an original firing detail at the rim which is completely original to the piece.
Born into slavery in Virginia, Molineaux was trained by his father, also a fighter, as was Molineaux’s twin brother. He boxed with other slaves to entertain plantation owners. Molineaux earned his owner a large sum of money in winnings on bets, was granted his freedom, and moved to England where he expected to be able to earn money as a professional boxer.
Molineaux’s first fight in England was on 24 July 1810, beating Jack Burrows in 65 minutes. On 3 December 1810, having been trained by Bill Richmond, another ex-slave turned boxer, Molineaux fought Tom Cribb at Shenington Hollow in Oxfordshire for the English title. According to the writer Pierce Egan, who was present, Molineaux stood five foot eight and a quarter inches tall, and for this fight weighed “fourteen stone two” (198 pounds (90 kg)). Egan wrote that few people, including Cribb, expected the fight to last very long; there was betting that Cribb would win in the first ten rounds.However, Molineaux proved a powerful and intelligent fighter and the two battered each other heavily. There was a disturbance in the nineteenth round as Molineaux and Cribb were locked in a wrestler’s hold (legal under the rules of the time) so that neither could hit the other nor escape. The referee stood by, uncertain as to whether he should break the two apart, and the dissatisfied crowd pushed into the ring. In the confusion Molineaux hurt his left hand; Egan could not tell if it had been broken. There was also dispute over whether Cribb had managed to return to the line before the allowed thirty seconds had passed. If he had not, Molineaux would have won, but in the confusion the referee could not tell and the fight went on. After the 34th round Molineaux said he could not continue but his second persuaded him to return to the ring, where he was defeated in the 35th round.

The return fight on 28 September 1811 at Thistleton Gap in Rutland was watched by 15,000 people. Cribb won this contest after breaking Molineaux’s jaw.
Molineaux’s boxing career ended in 1815. After a stint in a debtor’s prison he became increasingly dependent on alcohol, and died penniless in the regimental bandroom in Galway in Ireland three years later from liver failure. He was 34 years old.

Additional information

Dimensions 6 in