At Farnborough in Hampshire on 17th April 1860, Tom
Sayers of England and John Heenan of the United States
met in boxing’s first world championship bout – it truly
was the Lion and the Eagle. All England held its breath,
and when news of the outcome of the fight reached New
York, the city came to a standstill. The Lion and the
Eagle tells the now-forgotten story of one of the
greatest events in England’s sporting history. The
bare-knuckle prize ring, technically illegal and in
decline for more than a generation, for one brief moment
blazed brighter than ever. Newspapers which had ignored
pugilism for decades, sent their best reporters. Charles
Dickens was riveted, William Makepeace Thackeray wrote
an epic poem, Prime Minister Palmerston ensured that
police turned a blind eye. ‘The Lion and the Eagle’
tells how the fight was arranged, recounts the bloody
and desperate battle itself, and details the
extraordinary aftermath. But that is not all. It tells
the story of England and America in an age of turmoil
and transformation. The miseries of the industrial
revolution, the wonders of the Crystal Palace and the
transatlantic telegraph cable, the chaos of New York
City, the glamour of the Pony Express, all are here.
Victoria sat on the throne of England, the Light Brigade
charged, Lucknow stood firm. In America, as the iron
horse sealed the doom of the Indians, millions of slaves
groaned under the lash and Abraham Lincoln set out on
the journey which would take him to the White House.
Through it all, Tom Sayers and Jack Heenan fought for
their lives. The Lion and the Eagle is a must for those
who are fascinated by the most visceral sport of all.
But it is also a book for anyone who has ever wondered
how our ancestors lived when America was young and
England ruled the world.
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