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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1842 A prizefight between Charles Freeman and William Perry on<br />

December 6 becomes the first to use the railway as a means of<br />

transporting spectators. (<strong>The</strong> prefight agreements stipulated<br />

that the fight had to take place halfway between Tipton and<br />

London, thus necessitating a special for the Eastern Counties<br />

Railway.) But as the police could also ride the rails, the illegal<br />

mill was rescheduled several times, and in the end the fans<br />

ended up going to the fight by riverboat.<br />

1844 In London, an English shop assistant named George Williams<br />

establishes the first Young Men’s Christian Association<br />

(YMCA). Williams’s dream was to provide middle-class Protestant<br />

men such as himself with social clubs that encouraged<br />

Bible study rather than tobacco and gin. And the early YMCAs<br />

did this. But when the YMCA moved into the United States<br />

and Canada during the 1850s, its leaders found that Bible<br />

study did not attract as many young men as the gymnasiums of<br />

the Swiss and German Turners. To overcome this problem,<br />

most YMCA buildings built after 1880 included weight rooms,<br />

gymnasiums, and swimming pools.<br />

1846 In Singapore, members of triad-affiliated gangs are reported<br />

fighting each other using wooden sticks and iron pipes. But by<br />

1867, the gangsters were using muskets and small cannon, and<br />

by 1921 they were carrying pistols. Unarmed martial arts,<br />

meanwhile, were taught and used mostly as a form of militant<br />

nationalism.<br />

1852 Harvard and Yale hold their first informal sporting competition,<br />

a rowing regatta in Boston; the ties between American<br />

sport and business are already clear, as a local railroad pays all<br />

expenses in exchange for free advertising.<br />

1853 <strong>The</strong> YMCA opens a “Colored” branch in Washington, DC. By<br />

1869 Colored YMCAs existed throughout the United States. By<br />

training hundreds of African American coaches, administrators,<br />

and officials, these YMCAs made sport part of African American<br />

cultural pride.<br />

1854 Chinese miners wave American-made spears and swords at one<br />

another during a mining dispute in Trinity County, California.<br />

This is the first known display of Asian martial arts in the<br />

Americas.<br />

1855 <strong>The</strong> United States Navy replaces its flintlock single-shot<br />

pistols with .36 caliber Model 1851 Colt revolvers; the navy<br />

also orders some full-flap sheaths to accompany these revolvers,<br />

which in turn makes it the first military to issue belt<br />

holsters with its pistols. (Military holster design reached<br />

fruition four years later with the development of the British<br />

Sam Browne rigs.)<br />

1857 An anonymous notice in the Saturday Review coins the phrase<br />

Muscular Christianity. <strong>The</strong> phrase described the philosophy<br />

that a perfect Christian gentleman should be able to fear God,<br />

play sports, and doctor a horse with equal skill. (“<strong>The</strong> object of<br />

education,” said an editorial in Spirit of the Times, “is to make<br />

men out of boys. Real live men, not bookworms, not smart fellows,<br />

but manly fellows.”) (Gorn and Goldstein 1993, 94).<br />

Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 819

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