Nat Langham

Nat Langham

Nat Langham (20 May 1820 – 1 September 1871) was an English middleweight bare-knuckle prize fighter. He had the distinction of being the only person ever to beat Thomas Sayers.

Early life

Stephen Nathaniel Langham was born in 1820 into abject poverty in Hinckley, Leicestershire,

He always spoke with a speech impediment, the result of a childhood incident when he stole a hot potato from a market stallcaught in the act, the vendor thrust the steaming potato into his mouth, causing severe permanent tissue scarring.

Career

Langham was just under six feet (1.8 m) tall, and 11 stone (150 lb; 70 kg) in weight. His deprived childhood caused him to suffer ill health all his life. During his career, boxing was an illegal clandestine profession, carried out in comparative secrecy. In spite of the small prizes available, his prowess in the ring earned him a considerable fortune. Following his defeat of Thomas Sayers in 1857, he retired from the ring and became the matchmaking manager of the first professional champion of the boxing world, Jem Mace.[1]

Later life

In the 1861 census of London he appears as a victualler and as widower living on Castle Street in Westminster.[2]

A blue plaque now commemorates Langham's place of birth on Church Street, Hinckley, and a road "Langham Close" now bears his name.

Langham died of consumption in 1871 at the age of 52 in London; he is buried in Brompton Cemetery.

See also

References

  1. Gordon, Graham (2008). Master of the Ring. Milo Books. ISBN 1903854695.
  2. 1861 Census RG09/58 Folio 107, Page 2, Schedule 11: London - 12, Cranbin Stores, Castle Street, St Martins, Westminster (Names and Surname: Nat Langham, Relation to Head of Family: Head, Condition of Marriage: Widower, Age last Birthday: 40, Profession or Occupation: Victualler, Where Born: Hinckley, Leicestershire)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.