Continued from The Stockade part 3:
Sir Richard Irving died in 1780 leaving his considerable fortune and his
Caribbean plantations to his three sons. After his death his
family continued to prosper until at the end of the 20th century his
descendants were worth many 100s of millions of dollars as well as
owning several Caribbean islands. One of these islands was owned
and run as a sports and fitness resort for the rich and wealthy by
another Richard Irving - a 10th generation descendant of Sir Richard.
The modern Richard Irving was researching the history of
his illustrious namesake when he came across a set of his ancestor's
diaries which had been locked away in a vault since Sir Richard's death.
Reading the diaries he was surprised to discover that Sir Richard had
organised and sponsored a boxing club on the island called "The
Stockade". Initially the club had arranged fights solely between
males - mainly slaves, but also some free men from who came to the
island to seek their fortune. Soon female slaves were added to the
fight roster and then in 1757 a white free woman made an appearance in
the fights which drew large crowds to the events. From that time
Sir Richard promoted interracial fights that pitted black slave women
against free white women. With Sir Richard's death the boxing club
had ceased to exist and all records of it seemed to have been expunged
from the history of the Caribbean.
Richard decided that he would try to recreate the
boxing club on his island based on the same ideas that had been
developed by Sir Richard over 200 years before. He would recruit
and train local women to be the "black slaves" and would offer the
opportunity to fight them to the more athletic and sporting women
staying his resorts. |