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Devonshire Wrestling
  • Home
  • About
    • The Martial Arts
      • History
      • Styles
      • Archives
      • Hall of fame
    • The Society
      • About us
      • Curriculum
      • Ruleset
      • Blog
  • Get involved
    • Learn techniques
    • Get certified
    • Find a club
    • Start a Study Group
  • Shop
    • Products
    • Basket
    • Account details
    • Orders
  • Contact
Devonshire Wrestling
  • Home
  • About
    • The Martial Arts
      • History
      • Styles
      • Archives
      • Hall of fame
    • The Society
      • About us
      • Curriculum
      • Ruleset
      • Blog
  • Get involved
    • Learn techniques
    • Get certified
    • Find a club
    • Start a Study Group
  • Shop
    • Products
    • Basket
    • Account details
    • Orders
  • Contact

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Exeter, Plymouth, Tiverton.

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Our Principles

Records must match every tag you tick.

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7 records

  • Obituary ×Remove tag
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1841 · Newspaper · Exeter and Plymouth Gazette

Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, Abraham Cann’s last match: retirement from the ring (1841)

WRESTLING. The Grand Match for One Hundred Sovereigns, and retirement of Mr. Cann, the Champion, from the Ring. This match, which was for 100 sovereigns, between Mr. Abraham Cann, formerly of this city, but late of Colebrook, and Mr. John Ellicombe of Kingsteignton, came off in a spacious ring, in which an area of an […]

  • Abraham Cann
  • Champion
  • Cornwall vs Devon
  • Devon Wrestling
  • Obituary
  • Severe play

1850 · Newspaper · Sherborne Mercury

Sherborne Mercury, James Cann: death notice (1850)

James Cane, champion of the Devon wrestling ring, died, 1849.

  • Champion
  • Devon Wrestling
  • Obituary

1860 · Newspaper · Field

Field, William Wreyford: an extraordinary wrestler (1860)

AN EXTRAORDINARY WRESTLER.—Mr. Wreyford, aged 82, lately died at Orchard Lake, in the parish of Cheriton Bishop—about forty years since one of the first men in the wrestling ring in the Western counties, if not in all England. Mr. Wreyford was totally blind from eight years of age, and was familiarly known in the ring […]

  • Blind Wrestler
  • Champion
  • Devon Wrestling
  • Obituary
  • William Wreford

1860 · Newspaper · Sherborne Mercury

Sherborne Mercury, Abraham Cann annuity: £200 purchased (1860)

EXETER. The Devonshire Wrestling Champion.—Mr Langdon, of the Bull Inn, Exeter, assisted by other gentlemen, has succeeded in obtaining £180 for the veteran wrestling champion, Abraham Cann. After much deliberation it has been decided to purchase an annuity in the Norwich Insurance Office, and yesterday the proposal was effected and £200 paid. The champion wrestler […]

  • Abraham Cann
  • Exeter
  • Obituary

1866 · Newspaper · Exeter and Plymouth Gazette

Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, ‘Wreford Obituary’ (7 Dec 1866)

DEATH OF A RENOWNED DEVONSHIRE WRESTLER. On Sunday last the veteran William Wreford died after a very short illness at the house of one of his children, in the metropolis [London]. Mr. Wreford bore a name familiar to all the lovers of wrestling, both in the provinces and the metropolis. Indeed, there is probably none […]

  • Crediton
  • Obituary
  • Ship Hotel
  • William Wreford

1866 · Newspaper · Exeter and Plymouth Gazette

Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, William Wreford obituary (1866)

DEATH OF A RENOWNED DEVONSHIRE WRESTLER.—On Sunday last the veteran William Wreford died after a very short illness at the house of one of his children, in the metropolis. Mr. Wreford bore a name familiar to all the lovers of wrestling, both in the provinces and the metropolis. Born at Morchard Bishop, near Crediton, at […]

  • Abraham Cann
  • Champion
  • Devon Wrestling
  • Obituary
  • Stone
  • William Wreford

1888 · Newspaper · Mining Journal

Captain Tom Gundry is dead (1888)

Captain Tom Gundry is dead. This brief announcement will be made with regret by Cornishmen in every quarter of the world. “Captain Tom” was the best known of the old school of Cornish wrestlers, and will be remembered for his prowess in the ring, and not as a mine agent. Born 70 years ago Captain […]

  • Obituary
  • Tom Gundry
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Collection Principles

Background and scope

The Devonshire Wrestling Society archive has been assembled over more than twelve years of systematic research into the history of Westcountry martial arts. When this work began, the documentary record was sparse and dispersed: sources were few, descriptions were thin, and access required navigating institutional barriers that most researchers would not have the time or resources to overcome. The archive now comprises 421 records — 322 newspaper articles (1778–1947), 35 manuscripts, 11 posters, 48 books, one letters patent, two cemetery inscriptions, and two memorials — spanning approximately one thousand years of history across five defined periods and three core disciplines: wrestling, cudgelling, and pugilism.

The material has been drawn from archives, museums, and libraries at both local and national level, as well as from diaspora communities. Access varied considerably: some holdings were straightforwardly available through public or gated online repositories; others required direct institutional inquiry, formal licensing, or payment. Licence fees for individual items have, in some cases, reached several hundred pounds. Items acquired under licence are retained for private research purposes only and are not published. A small number of items from private collections likewise remain unpublished, pending permission. All records for which publication rights have been secured are made freely and openly available.

The cost of the archive — in time and in money — has been substantial. It is offered without charge because the traditions it documents belong to the communities that produced them, and because those who come after should not be required to repeat the effort already expended.

Acquisition method

Every record in the archive was acquired through a consistent five-stage process:

Identification. Awareness of potential sources was established through systematic searches of public and private institutional indexes worldwide, and through direct correspondence with subject specialists already engaged with relevant holdings.

Access. Depending on the institution, access was obtained through online repositories, direct application, or formal licensing. Correspondence was initiated with several hundred institutions over the course of the project. Where institutions confirmed the absence of relevant holdings, this was recorded. Where access was granted, the means of access was documented.

Storage. All acquired material is held in a single centralised repository, ensuring that research access is permanent and that no duplication of acquisition effort is necessary.

Preparation. Every record has been transcribed to render it fully searchable and taggable. Images have been assigned metadata recording provenance, licensing terms, and resolution specifications for publication purposes.

Publication. The publicly available inventory represents all records for which the requisite permissions have been obtained.

Acquisition tenets

In order to ensure consistency and intellectual coherence across the archive, all prospective additions are evaluated against the following criteria, which are applied collectively and in sequence. A record should satisfy the majority of these criteria before inclusion is considered.

Relevance. The record must have a demonstrable and direct connection to the Six Shires (Devon, Cornwall, Somerset, Dorset, Gloucestershire, and Wiltshire) as the location of practice, the origin of practitioners, or the primary institutional context. Records concerning Westcountry practitioners competing elsewhere (in London, the United States, or South Africa, for example) are eligible where the practitioner’s regional identity is explicitly identified in the source. Records documenting the export of Westcountry martial arts beyond Britain are admissible and desirable, consistent with existing holdings relating to California, Japan, New Zealand, and South Africa. The record must concern one or more of the three disciplines in scope: Westcountry wrestling (Devonshire or Cornish style), cudgelling or single-stick as practised in the region, or pugilism and boxing with a demonstrable Westcountry connection. Records documenting the co-occurrence of two or more disciplines are particularly valuable and should be prioritised.

Integrity. The source must be primary or a reliable early secondary record. For newspaper sources, this means a contemporaneous report; for books, a first or early edition, or a verified transcription thereof. Secondary scholarship is admissible where it contains primary-source quotations not otherwise independently accessible, provided these are clearly identified as such.

Balanced representation. The curatorial target is approximate parity — not of record count, which will inevitably reflect the uneven survival of evidence — but of intellectual representation across the three core disciplines. Where any discipline is underrepresented relative to this target, acquisitions in that discipline should be prioritised accordingly.

Material culture. Physical objects — trophies, belts, equipment, and architectural features — are admissible where they carry inscriptions or documentary provenance that independently attest to the practice of a discipline in the region.

Verifiability. The source must be identifiable with sufficient bibliographic precision to be cited in APA format and, where possible, to be independently verified by a reader consulting the original. Oral tradition, undocumented folklore, and secondary paraphrases without citation do not meet this standard. Where a source is available online, a direct URL must be provided.

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