Boxing History
Nat Dresner – Mr. Boxing Edinburgh
Published
2 days agoon

Today, Glasgow is widely perceived as a spiritual home of Scottish boxing, but in the 1920s, when sport flourished north of the border, Edinburgh was a boxing epideror in the country. This was largely thanks to the ambitions and entrepreneurship of one pioneering promoter – Nat Dresner.
Born in a Jewish family in the middle class in Leith around 1880, Nathaniel Dresner was the son of an importer of the Baltic shoes and pawnshop. NAT started his career in theater management and branched in boxing in 1922 accordingly. His growth in sport was meteoric.
In his first year, as a promoter, Dresner put up a sale at the Waverley Market, the roof fruit and vegetable market at the Edinburgh City Center, each time drawing thousands of viewers. In November, Nat reserved the prevailing world champion of weighty weight, the legendary fighting pee for an exhibition on the market. The fight collapsed, but the program appeared on the headlines. Prince George, Prince Kent, whose ship Royal Navy was abandoned in Port Edgar, was the ring to see local favorites, Alex Ireland and George McKenza, winning clear wins over Billy Mack from Liverpool and Londoner Fred Bullions. Ireland and McKenzie, both managed by Dresner, were to win British titles, and the European Crown Ireland.
January 2, 1923 – less than a year after entering the combat industry – NAT achieved a solemn, almost unthinkable coup in the state of the coup when he issued the first British and European struggle in Scotland; That he was questioned two Scots, there was cherry on the cake. At that time, England – especially London – had a virtual monopoly on master competitions. In the event, in the industrial hall at Annandale Street in Edinburgh, he saw the delicate champion Seaman Hall of Peebs, he saw the pretender Johnny Brown of Hamilton in over 20 rounds, before 12,000 fans. Nat cleverly staged a match just after the Sprint Race race, an athletics event, which attracted tens of thousands of enthusiasts to Edinburgh.
In November 1924, Dresner tempted a great kid Ted Lewis in defense of his British and European welterweight titles in the industrial hall. In the crowd of 20,000 (2000 disappointed slow lately closed) that Scotland Tommy Milligan conducted Teda titles with the 20-Rund win. The program has set a foreign attendance record for Scotland, which I think is still standing.
NAT used every opportunity to pack boxing into a wider audience. Unlike the London National Sport Club, which excluded women from the promotion, Dresner reserved some of the places in the field of rings for exclusive apply by women on all their programs. He also offered the unemployed reduced admission indicator if they produced their “bottom” cards. On the other hand, he willingly accommodated members of the Scottish nobility: Marquis Clydesdale was employed as a constant time in Ringside, and Sir Iain Colquhoun from Luss was MC at the main shows of NAT.
Dresner was also an experienced marketer who understood the value of branding. Judge George Smith, who worked as a program seller in Dresner’s promotions, told the boxing author Brian Donald: “We were all flawlessly dressed by a promoter in white woolen jumpers with the inscription” Nat Dresner “with the inscription and front of bold green letters. Everything was meticulously planned. “
In six low years, Dresner made great progress in this sport and it seemed that it was just beginning, but health intervened badly. Nat died on March 31, 1928, at the age of 48, after a two -year illness. Two -week before his death he left the ill bed to take part in his last promotion, when the versatile British and European title Milligan and Alex Ireland attracted 10,000 fans at Waverley Market. His coat now goes to other promoters, but Dresner’s place was provided in the history of the Scottish ring.
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Since on November 11 was the day of Bystice this week, he is the right time to reflect on the career of a very good professional who gave his life for his country. Many boxers who died during the two world wars were often dismissed in the BN in the last 50 years, including several excellent fighters, including masters. The death of Ernie Vickers of Middlesbrough during the Falklands war is much less known. November 11 is a time to remember the members of the armed forces who served and died, but Ernie was different because he was a merchant sailor. The Navy commemorates their dead on September 3, the anniversary of the outbreak of World War II, but as Ernie is, if I can determine, the last person died in action that had a professional career. When he died at the Atlantic conveyor, next to men from the Royal Auxiliary Fleet and the Royal Navy, I will remember him today.
Ernie comes from a sports family. His father was a champion of the army sprint in 1910, and his brother became the Yorkshire champion in a quarter mile. Another brother, Jack, professionally in 1951–1956. Born in 1924, Ernie served in Royal Navy as a newborn man, serving in HMS Ganges in the last years of World War II, and won 11 out of 12 amateur competitions. In 1949 he changed his professional, working with manager Eric Munro, who was a very good boxer before the war, replacing gloves with such as Bobby Magee, Len Beynon and George Marsden. “Pan Boxing” Middlesbrough led his newborn accusation to 26 wins from the first 27 competitions, when Vickers fought through a series of four and six runes at shows in his native northeast and around him. He regularly played at the West Hartlepool engineers club, at Groundon Hendon Cricket, Sunderland, and of course he was a great favorite in his hometown at the Farre Street stadium.
Collecting such a long winning series was quite unusual in the tardy 1940s and 1950s, and Ernie looked like a pretty perspective and was a known blow, and many opponents were broken. Kelly’s manchester cyclone escaped, ahead of Ernie in Nowy ST James Hall in Newcastle in November 1950. Kelly was at the moment for Donkey’s years, he began his professional career at the end of the 1920s and knew every trick in the book.
Another veteran for almost 20 years, Ginger Roberts from Whitley Bay, was an opponent of Ernie in Ernie’s largest career competition. Two men met at Northern Area North Half’s weight, in over 12 rounds, in December 1951 at the local Vickers stadium at Farrer Street. For Roberts it was the last competition in his career 154 and gave everything. He was the prevailing owner of the title, after winning the title last year, developing Billy Exley, and was his favorite in battle. He could not compete with the youth of his opponent, or with uneven, vivid and energetic attacks, which Vickers produced during 12 rounds, and Ernie became a clear margin at the end of the competition. Within a week of the fight, his manager advertised Vickers as available to fight with any welterweight in Europe. When Ernie left the game in 1956, he won 39 of his 58 competitions in his long career.
It is not surprising that at the age of 57 he was ready to go in the middle of the world in the last war effort of Great Britain, almost 40 years after he did it, and it was a tragedy that he died so far from home.

Everyone at the eastern end knew him, but he was far from the advertisement of his previous profession. To fight students, too juvenile, to know him as a boxer, it was challenging to reconcile the figure that they now saw with the figure of the one -time King of Great Britain and Europe, a man who fought Freddie Welsh, Georges Carpentier and Harry Lewis.
Partly paralyzed and consisting of pairs of sticks to support, his body was leaning, his gait was painful shuffling, the contrast between this and now was Stark. Although boxing may not cause the state of juvenile Joseph, his name became recognition for the inseparable risk of this sport.
Joseph Aschel-Je’s real name-he was born for Jewish parents’ immigrants in 1885. He lived at Cutler Street in Aldgate, near Wonderland on Whitechapel Road, East End boxing house. Joseph won his first chance during a trial in 1900, and from 1903 he was a regular land of spells, winning most of his fights and impresses these competent crowds with his skills. Over the next few years, his fame increased exponentially. He appeared several times at the British Boxing headquarters, the National Sporting Club (NSC), but remained true in the land of spells despite low bags.
In 1908, Joseph defeated the Baker’s Corporal in NSC for the British Crown of Code, and in March 1910 he met with the former lithe champion of Jacek Goldswain from Bermondsey in the match for the first half -two lane. Józef dominated the destitute fight, broke from the unspecified Goldswain, which was disqualified in 12th place to hold. According to the terms of his agreement, NSC suspended the purse and the costs of training Goldswain, and Goldswain sued them. In a strange accent Joseph, who belonged to the Novel Boxers Union, testified against NSC. The Westminster Court told that in his opinion Goldswain did everything he could to win and should not be fined. Goldswain lost the case and then an appeal.
Three months after winning the belt, Joseph faced Harry Lewis from Philadelphia in the Wonderland in the title of World Champion, but the great American stopped him in seven. In November, Joseph developed the French Lacroix fight in Paris for the European Crown. But in January 1911 he lost the fight for his British belt, Arthur Evernden to disqualification. Since the fight was not kept in NSC, Joseph insisted that he would still be a champion, while Evernden made an unofficial claim to the title.
In October, Joseph defended his European crown against Georges’ juvenile carpentry. The French teenager proved his revelation, winning when BN said that “almost as he liked it.” But Joseph deserved the crowd’s respect for his display, which he is never able to. Although it was obstructed by a training injury to the right fist, it was obvious that Aldgate man could not win on his best night. In retrospect, lasting 10 rounds with a legendary Frenchman, just like before pulling him out of the corner, was an achievement in itself.
There was one more match for Joseph, when in April 1912 he lost his British title from Johnny Summers. He fought for several years, but was forced to leave the ring by bad health. The exact nature of his condition and whether it results from boxing is unclear. Press reports from 1915, when Joseph was only 30 years venerable, describe him as “disabled” and “affected by a stern illness.”
After leaving the box, he had a clothing store at the eastern end, but when his health deteriorated, he was forced to give up. BN noticed in 1937, when Joseph was 52 years venerable that “he almost completely lost the apply of limbs” and considered challenging speech. It was a tragic and unthinkable PostScript for a widely respected sports hero – a man who inspired great Ted Kid Lewis. Joseph died on October 23, 1952 at the age of 67.

It has always been discussed who was the best of the two pre -war world champions in the fly weight: Jimmy Wilde or Benny Lynch? After two early losses as a teenager, Wilde lost only four times in his long career, and each of these failures was against a world -class fighter. He could hit the venomous strength and dominated the flyweight division for seven years. Lynch [pictured] The loser quite regularly in the very early years of his career in 1931–1933, but these defeats taught him a lot and until 1934 he was practically impossible to defeat. His career was harassed by the inability to conveniently attract weight and infamously by drinking. When in 1935 he defeated Jackie Brown for the title of world champion, he looked great, but his demons soon caught up with him, and his career became badly used, and one man, Jimmy Warnock from Belfast, clearly emphasized the shortcomings of the Scots.
Warnock comes from a fight family, because in the 1920s and 1930s there was a fighter cluster with Belfast, including Billy, Freddie and Dave, but Jimmy was by far the best. He began his career, fighting in countless places of Diminutive Hall, and then acting around the city, including in Rialto, Beresford club, Ring Street Thomas, and in the summer, in the open air in Grosvenor Park. In 1935 he became a Bill-Toper in Ulster Hall and Kings Hall, and a year ago the Ring magazine assessed him in the top ten of the world.
After destroying Brown, Lynch fought with three fights outside the titles in his hometown, winning them quite comfortably, and then went to Belfast to meet Warnock in what was another basic competition. The newborn Scot was “on the way”, allegedly earning money, defeating newborn ejaculation. In Kings Hall, in front of a crowd of 12,000 people, including the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland and most of his office, he received a great shock when Warnock withdrew him in a sensational fight. BN informed that “in the fighting Melees Warnock never had something to learn from Lynch, who said that the Irish star could have a high speed and body at a high speed, while ignoring the hit of the master. Lynch was equipped and thrown by a boy whose versatile equipment was better.” Whether Lynch’s problems with weight turned out to be a factor in this competition is unknown, but because the match was made with four pounds above the flying weight limit, it should not be the main factor. The fact is that Lynch was simply worse at night.
Two men met again the following year at Parkhead, the Glasgow Celtic Football Club house, in a match made for 4 ounces above the flying weight limit. Inevitably Lynch took two pounds of overweight and paid 150 pounds at that time, a huge amount of money. Even with this advantage, he could not master the newborn Irishman. About 20,000 people saw Warnock dominated the world champion at the full distance of the 15 round championships. After an early surprise, when Lynch dressed him during the first minute with pruning right -handing to such an extent, Warnock never looked back, and BN lamented: “Benny’s form was enraged that it was true. Where was the whole active attack in this competition!
Lynch’s story is very sorrowful and despite his splendor, when he was at its best, he ranks second in my book by Jimmy Wilde. As for Jimmy Warnock, his two victories over Lynch were the most vital event of his career. He beat some great fighters and earned a lot of money, but Peter Kane turned out to be his Nemesis. He won 74 of 101 competitions and retired in 1948. He was a great petite scenario.

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