Cuimhní cinn Henry Moses Dufur

Bhí Henry Moses Dufur i seilbh an Domhain Trom-Chomórtas Comórtais Coiléar agus Elbow le linn na 1870í. De réir 1855, D'éirigh Dufur as a bheith ag troid go gairmiúil chun dul sa tóir ar a ghairm lánaimseartha mar oiriúint éadaí. Fiú le linn a ghairm bheatha wrestling, D'oibrigh Dufur mar oiriúint.

Dufur told the correspondent from An Boston Globe that he was born in Richford, Vermont ar Meitheamh 5, 1943. This date of birth conflicts with his obituary, which said Dufur was born on June 5, 1844

Dufur’s father trained Henry Moses Dufur, known as “Mose” to his friends. Dufur said that even at seventy-two, his father could prevent most men from taking him off his feet.

henry-moses-dufur-fógra báis

Announcement of Henry Moses Dufur’s Death in the Bennington Evening Banner (Fearann ​​Poiblí)

Dufur has three other brothers, Noah, John, and David. All four brothers wrestled although Mose showed the most competence as a wrestler.

When Dufur was seventeen years old, Dufur wrestled one of the best wrestlers in his state. The wrestler weighed two hundred fifty-five pounds. Dufur only weighed one hundred fifty-five pounds. Despite the one-hundred-pound weight disadvantage, Dufur won the match in twelve minutes.

When Dufur turned eighteen, he wrestled an African American barber named Billy Jenkins. No one in Vermont thought any wrestler could throw Billy Jenkins. Jenkins weighed 252 pounds to Dufur’s 164 punt.

Dufur surprised everyone when he threw Jenkins so hard that Jenkins could not work as a barber for two weeks after the contest.

When Dufur was twenty years old, he moved to Marlboro, Vermont, where Dufur opened a tailor shop. Dufur kept the tailor shop throughout and after his professional wrestling career. Professional wrestlers in the 19ú Century often worked a full-time profession and wrestled part-time.

Dufur won the Collar-and-Elbow Championship in the early 1870s. Despite being the recognized World Champion, Dufur wrestled exclusively in the northeastern United States to stay close to his Vermont home.

Dufur lost the title to John McMahon in the late 1870s. Mar sin féin, in his day, Dufur was the most famous practitioner of the style. McMahon gained a larger reputation because William Muldoon was wary of wrestling the skilled McMahon.

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Sources: An Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts), Aibreán 22, 1855, p. 4

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