Abraham Cann
2 Dec 1794 (baptised) – 7 April 1864
Also known as: 'Champion of All-England'
Biographical Data
| Place of Birth | Colebrooke |
|---|---|
| Place of Death | Colebrooke |
| Parish (Census) | Colebrooke |
| Occupation | Farmer |
| Nationality | Devonian |
Biography
“Champion of All England”
I. Life and Career
Abraham Cann was the undisputed champion of Devon wrestling and, by wide contemporary consensus, the greatest wrestler in England during the 1820s. His career defined the sport’s golden age, his matches drew the largest crowds ever recorded for wrestling in the West of England, and his name remained a byword for Devonshire strength and sportsmanship for generations after his death. No other figure in the history of Devonshire wrestling approaches his significance.
Abraham was baptised at Colebrooke, near Crediton, on 2 December 1794, the youngest of seven children born to Robert Cann, a farmer and maltster, and his wife Mary (Wikipedia, “Abraham Cann”; colebrooke.org). He was born at Snells Farm (colebrooke.org) or Eastcombe Head Farm (Wikipedia). His father Robert was himself a wrestler — reputed by the testimony of the local elders to have been in many respects a superior wrestler to his renowned son (Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 7 December 1866). Something in the air, the soil, and the culture of Crediton and its surrounding parishes seems to have been ideal for the generation of Devonshire wrestlers: John Helyer had been described as a wrestler on his burial in Crediton churchyard in 1710, and “Blind Wreford” (1747–1835) had also acquired a reputation in the ring (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk). Abraham inherited from his father a love of play, and all four of his elder brothers — George, Robert, James, and William — were also wrestlers, though none acquired the celebrity of Abraham (Baring-Gould, Devonshire Characters and Strange Events, Wikisource; Wikipedia).
Cann stood 5 ft 8½ in. and weighed approximately 12 st. 7 lb. (variously reported as 8 score 15 lb.) — above the middle height for the period, with long legs and surprising strength of limb (Porter, 1989; Baring-Gould, Wikisource). He was, above all, a kicker: he wore boots whose toes had been soaked in bullock’s blood and baked as hard as flint, and his kicks landed with a force repeatedly compared by contemporaries to the blows of a sledgehammer (Porter, 1989; Baring-Gould, Wikisource; Egan, 1836). His grip, like that of his great rival Polkinghorne, was legendary: no man had ever shaken it off once he had clinched (Baring-Gould, Wikisource). He also gave his name to a particular grip known as “Abraham Cann’s staylace,” immortalised in R. D. Blackmore’s novel Clara Vaughan (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk).
By his early twenties, Cann had risen to pre-eminence. He defeated Jordan, Flower, Wreford, Simon Webber, and the other good wrestlers of Devonshire, carrying off the prizes at all the places where he became a competitor (Wikipedia; Baring-Gould, Wikisource). At the great Okehampton match of 1824, Cann took the first prize after a bout against Woolaway that lasted an extraordinary one hour and fifty-six minutes before 6,000–7,000 spectators (Porter, 1989, p. 199). At Crediton in July 1825, he threw his own brother James to take the first prize (Exeter Flying Post; Porter, 1989). In 1820, Abraham married Mary Gorwyn, the daughter of local farmer Joseph Gorwyn (colebrooke.org; Wikipedia).
Cann’s relationship with Jordan — Devon’s other giant of the 1820s — was the defining rivalry of the age. Jordan had thrown Cann on more than one occasion, and Cann had in turn thrown Jordan (Egan, 1836). At Totnes in 1825, Cann awaited Jordan in the ring with a smile of conscious superiority, and Jordan withdrew without trying for a hitch (Baring-Gould, Wikisource). In 1828, articles were signed for a formal challenge match at the Eagle Tavern for £100 aside — whether this match was ever contested remains unknown (Western Times, 3 May 1828).
In 1824, Cann became proprietor of The Moreton Inn in St Thomas, Exeter — a hub for wrestling enthusiasts (colebrooke.org). By 1828–1829 he managed The Woolpack Inn in Bartholomew Yard, Exeter, which he renamed The Champion’s Arms, reflecting his celebrated status. In 2022, Exeter Civic Society unveiled a plaque on the site of this pub in Bartholomew Street (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk).
The metropolitan London matches of 1826–1828 extended Cann’s fame to a national audience. At the Eagle Tavern on 21 September 1826, he took the first prize of ten sovereigns, defeating James Warren of Redruth despite wrestling without shoes — a considerable disadvantage for a Devon kicker (Exeter Flying Post, 28 September 1826; Porter, 1989). He challenged the world to wrestle him for £50 or £100, appearing at Belcher’s Castle in Holborn (Exeter Flying Post; project archive material). At Vauxhall Gardens, he and Stone appeared fashionably dressed, exciting considerable curiosity (Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 16 June 1827).
The Cann–Polkinghorne encounter at Tamar Green, Morice Town, Devonport, on 23 October 1826, was the single most famous event in the history of Westcountry wrestling. James Polkinghorne stood 6 ft 2 in. and weighed approximately 320 lb.; Cann was three stone lighter. The match was for £200 a side, the best of three back falls, before an estimated 17,000 spectators. The West was alive with speculation; hotels and inns were booked out, and visitors poured in from across Devon and Cornwall. Cann wore one shoe (or, by some accounts, a monstrous pair whose toes had been baked into flints) while Polkinghorne wrestled in stockings. The Cornishmen displayed their disapprobation of the Devon kick by clamour and hissing. In the midst of the bouts, Cann’s kicks worked with the regularity of a pendulum, telling with terrible effect upon his adversary’s legs. The final result was disputed — Cann received the stakes, since Polkinghorne had quit the ring believing he had won — and the match has remained a matter of controversy ever since (Porter, 1989; Baring-Gould, Wikisource; Egan, 1836; Exeter Flying Post, 19 October 1826; Wikipedia). A commemorative plaque was placed on the Red Lion pub in St Columb Major for the centenary in 1926 (Western Morning News, 7 August 1926).
At Tavistock in May 1827 — the greatest match ever witnessed in either county — Cann took the first prize of fifteen sovereigns. The arrangements stipulated that no shoe should be used except those approved by the triers (Porter, 1989). At the Grand Wrestling Match at Leeds in Easter 1828, Cann won the first prize of £30 after an epic final against James Stone lasting over an hour (Egan, 1836).
Cann’s personal life was marked by devastating losses. His two-year-old son George died in 1829; another son, William, died aged three months the same year; and in September 1830, at thirty years of age, his wife Mary died. These tragedies laid Cann low in a way that his wrestling opponents never could. He gave up The Champion’s Arms and by some accounts took to drink. In 1831 the local press described him as reduced to poverty by illness and family affliction (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk; colebrooke.org). His well-wishers secured him a position as toll-keeper on the Stonehouse Bridge. He later returned to his brother’s farm at East Coombehead, Colebrooke.
Cann continued to wrestle occasionally through the 1830s and remained unbeaten. On 27 July 1841, his last formal match was held in a specially constructed ring near St Thomas Church, Exeter, for a prize of 100 sovereigns. Cann was forty-seven. After forty-eight minutes, he sustained a broken collar-bone — an old injury exacerbated at Hittisleigh two months earlier — and retired, assuring his young opponent that he had been as good or as fair a man as he had ever played with (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk; colebrooke.org).
In his later years Cann appeared as a trier and celebrity at fairs throughout Devon. In 1860, an annuity was raised for him through subscription; Lord Palmerston headed the effort, and £200 was presented (Wikipedia; Porter, 1989). Tom Sayers, the celebrated bare-knuckle boxer, personally donated the first five-pound note, saying that Cann deserved recognition before himself (Western Morning News, 19 August 1926). Abraham Cann died on 7 April 1864 and was buried at Colebrooke churchyard (Wikipedia). In 1880, a Mr James Wreford replaced his tombstone with a new memorial standing by the west door of Colebrooke parish church (heardfamilyhistory.org.uk).
II. Match record
| No. | Date | Venue | Tournament / Event | Stage / Round | Opponent(s) | Result | Duration / Detail | Prize / Placing | Primary Source(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early Career · c. 1812–1823 | ||||||||||
| 1 | c. 1812 | Devon (various) | Early career bouts | Multiple | John Jordan, Flower, Wreford, Simon Webber, and others | Won (progressively) | “Soon defeated Jordan, Flower, Wreford, Simon Webber, and other redoubtable Devon champions.” | Various | Baring-Gould (Wikisource); Wikipedia | Generic reference to Cann’s early career establishing supremacy over the men who had dominated Devon wrestling in the previous decade. |
| 1824 · Age 29–30 | ||||||||||
| 2 | Aug 1824 | Okehampton, Devon | Okehampton Grand Match (White Hart Inn) | Individual bout | William Woolaway | Won | 1 hour 56 minutes — the longest single bout in Cann’s entire documented career | Through to final | EFP, 12 Aug 1824; Porter (1989), p. 199 | 6,000–7,000 spectators. “One of the richest treats ever witnessed.” “Several country gentlemen present expressed a wish to become subscribers next year.” |
| 3 | Aug 1824 | Okehampton, Devon | Okehampton Grand Match (final) | FINAL | Multiple (inc. Bolt, Jordan, Stone, Jackman, the Jurys, Harris, Smale) | Won — 1st | Cann “took the first prize.” | 1st prize | EFP, 12 Aug 1824; Porter (1989), p. 199 | Cann defeated Woolaway in the playoff and took the first prize against the assembled élite of Devon wrestling. |
| 1825 · Age 30–31 | ||||||||||
| 4 | 1 June 1825 | Charmouth, Dorset | Charmouth Grand Match | FINAL | Underdown (2nd); Miller (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first prize; Underdown second; Miller third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007), p. [tournaments list] | One of Cann’s rare appearances in Dorset. |
| 5 | 17 June 1825 | West Marchand, Devon | West Marchand Grand Match | Advanced rounds | William Wreford (1st); J. Cann (2nd); J. Dascombe (3rd) | Lost (first time in 5 years) | “A. Cann beaten for the 1st time in 5 years.” Wreford took the first prize. | Did not place | Jaouen (2007) | Significant: Cann’s first recorded defeat in five years. Wreford won. |
| 6 | June 1825 | Salutation Inn, Topsham, Devon | Topsham Grand Match | Multiple bouts inc. 19th round | Unnamed young man of Kenton | Won (2 minutes) | Cann’s hat thrown into the ring in the 19th round; threw a young Kenton man in 2 minutes. 33 turns at single play until 8 p.m. | 1st place at end of Day 1 | Porter (1989), p. 200 | Cann first; Wreford second; Simon Webber of High Bickington third at end of first day. |
| 7 | Day 2, June 1825 | Salutation Inn, Topsham, Devon | Topsham Grand Match | Day 2 | N/A — excluded by committee | Excluded (amply compensated) | Committee excluded Cann on day 2 “to give the others a chance” but compensated him amply. | Amply compensated | Porter (1989), p. 200 | An early example of the “exclusion” treatment Cann received because his presence deterred other competitors. Wreford won day 2. |
| 8 | July 1825 | Torquay, Devon | Torquay Grand Match | FINAL | Charles Cleeve (2nd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; Cleeve second. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 9 | 7 July 1825 | Paignmouth [Paignton], Devon | Paignton Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (brother; 2nd) | Won — 1st | Abraham defeated James in the final. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | Brother-against-brother final. |
| 10 | 12 July 1825 | Crediton, Devon | Crediton Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (brother; 2nd) | Won — 1st | Play began at 8 a.m. Drascombe fought 68 minutes to lose to Bolt. “After throwing his brother James, Abraham Cann took the first prize.” | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007); Porter (1989), p. 200 | Family ties counted for nothing. Ended with gentleman amateurs’ match (Morgan v. Finch). |
| 11 | 18 July 1825 | Ashburton, Devon | Ashburton Grand Match | FINAL | John Jordan (2nd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; Jordan second. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | A rare victory over Jordan, who generally avoided Cann. |
| 12 | 21 July 1825 | Newton Abbot, Devon | Newton Abbot Grand Match | FINAL | John Bolt (2nd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; Bolt second. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 13 | 10 August 1825 | Honiton, Devon | Honiton Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (brother; 2nd); Buil (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; James second; Buil third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | Second time Abraham defeated James in a tournament final in 1825. |
| 14 | Sept 1825 | South Molton, Devon | South Molton Grand Match | FINAL | Rawle (2nd); L. Dascombe (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first prize. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 15 | 6 Sept 1825 | Moretonhampstead, Devon | Moretonhampstead Grand Match | FINAL | Webber (2nd); Mallet (3rd) | Won — 1st | First prize. Webber and James Cann had a 37-minute contest in which James was thrown. William Cann of Throwleigh thrown by Bolt after 49 minutes. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007); Porter (1989), p. 200 | “Nor were there any chicken hearts . . . masterly manner and temper.” A fine band played in the intervals. |
| 16 | Sept/Oct 1825 | Totnes, Devon | Totnes Grand Match | Scheduled bout | John Jordan (withdrew) | Walkover (opponent withdrew) | Jordan had thrown Huxtable in 1 minute earlier. Cann boasted he could “kick to rags” Jordan’s legs in 5 minutes. When the bout was called, Jordan “withdrew without trying for a hitch.” | Through to further rounds | Baring-Gould (Wikisource); Porter (1989), p. 205 | Cries of “coward” from the crowd; “a volley of dirt” thrown at Jordan; constables ordered to remove him. Jordan injured two days later by a young Cornishman named Hook. |
| 1826 · Age 31–32 · The Year of Polkinghorne | ||||||||||
| 17 | 26 July 1826 | Milton Abbot, Devon | Milton Abbot Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (2nd); Slade (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; James Cann second; Slade third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 18 | July 1826 | Moretonhampstead, Devon | Moretonhampstead Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (2nd); Bolt (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; James second; Bolt third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 19 | Aug 1826 | St Sidwell’s, Exeter | St Sidwell Grand Match | Excluded (by announcement) | N/A | Excluded | Match advertisement stated: “A. and J. Cann, Woolaway, Jordan and Wreford are excluded from playing” — “intended for the encouragement of the young players.” | N/A | EFP, 21 Aug 1826; Jaouen (2007), p. [pursuit of prize money] | The Five Excluded Champions. One of the clearest signs of the commercial strain Cann’s dominance placed on the tournament circuit. |
| 20 | 29 Aug 1826 | St Thomas’s, Exeter | St Thomas’s Grand Match | FINAL | Wreford (2nd); Jackman (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; Wreford second; Jackman third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | A major Devon tournament. |
| 21 | 19 Aug 1826 | London (venue unspecified; without shoes) | London Cornish-style tournament | FINAL | Warren (2nd); Glanville (3rd) | Won — 1st | Without shoes (Cornish style). | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | An early London appearance. |
| 22 | 21 Sept 1826 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | London Cornish wrestling (4-day) | FINAL (without shoes) | James Warren (Redruth, Cornwall; 2nd) | Won — 1st | Cann contended without shoes despite the disadvantage. 2,000 spectators. Morning Chronicle: “A very muscular man, about 30 years old.” First prize 10 sovereigns; Warren’s second 6 sovereigns. | 1st prize — 10 sovs. | Baring-Gould (Wikisource); London Packet, 22 Sept 1826; EFP, 28 Sept 1826; Porter (1989) | “Cann repeatedly kicking Warren below the right knee so as to weaken his understanding.” Warren famed for his bravery during the loss of the East Indiaman Kent in 1825. Cornish Committee made up Warren’s prize to equal Cann’s. |
| 23 | Sept 1826 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | Devonshire match (third day) | Single & double play | Two unnamed opponents (single play) | Won both | “Abraham Cann, the celebrated champion, stood foremost, and who had thrown both his opponents in the single play in a few minutes.” | Through to treble play | EFP, 28 Sept 1826 | 14 Devonshire men and 10 Cornish; Cann established dominance immediately. |
| 24 | Sept 1826 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | Treble play | Individual bout | Pardew (Cornwall) | Won | Treble play pairing. | Through | EFP, 28 Sept 1826 | Pardew was among the leading Cornish men. |
| 25 | 23 Oct 1826 | Tamar Green, Morice Town, Plymouth | Devon v. Cornwall Championship Match (£200/£100 a-side) | Grand match — best of 3 fair back falls | James Polkinghorne (Cornwall; 6 ft 2 in., 320 lb) | Disputed / officially lost (contested) | 17,000 spectators. Cann 5 ft 8½ in., 175 lb. Ring 100 ft × 70 ft. 12 rounds. Cann threw Polkinghorne in round 8 — declared not fair. In round 12, Cann was thrown after Polkinghorne nearly choked him. Cann’s Committee felt he had been “not fairly treated.” | Officially lost | Baring-Gould (Wikisource); Porter (1989), p. 198; Egan (1836); multiple contemporaneous sources | The most famous wrestling match in English history. “The Devonian hero was no match for Polkinghorne in point of size.” Cann “would undoubtedly have thrown twenty men of his own weight.” “He is an honor to the West.” Fight is iconic and subject of a song. Cann had a shoe on his right foot only. |
| 1827 · Age 32–33 · Tavistock & Gaffney | ||||||||||
| 26 | 9 May 1827 | Tavistock, Devon | Tavistock Grand Match (£50; 3 days; 31 standards) | Triple play: v. Avery | George Avery | Won | Cann threw Avery in the triple play. | Through | Bell’s Life in London, 20 May 1827 | Physical measurements at this tournament: Cann aged 32, 5 ft 8½ in., 175 lb. |
| 27 | 9 May 1827 | Tavistock, Devon | Tavistock Grand Match | FINAL: v. Woolaway | William Woolaway | Won — 1st | Cann threw Woolaway to take the first prize of 15 sovereigns. Stone had thrown the best Cornish man, Wilton. | 1st prize — 15 sovs. | Bell’s Life, 20 May 1827; Jaouen (2007); Porter (1989) | “Allowed to be the greatest match ever witnessed, either in Devon or Cornwall.” No shoes allowed except as approved by triers. 3,500–4,000 spectators on day 2 (Cann v. Polkinghorne, if he had appeared). |
| 28 | 4 June 1827 | London (Devon style) | London Devonshire tournament | FINAL | Pyle (2nd); Chappel (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first prize. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 29 | 12 June 1827 | Lidmouth [Sidmouth?], Devon | Lidmouth Grand Match | FINAL | Underdown (2nd); Bradford (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first prize. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 30 | June 1827 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | Metropolitan Grand Match (4-day) | FINAL | Chappell [alt. spelling Chappie]; others | Won — 1st | “First was awarded to Abraham Cann.” Ended Friday. | 1st prize | EPG, 16 June 1827 | Westmorland gentlemen (Dobson, Anderson) then challenged Cann and Stone. Cann refused to “catch in Westmoreland manner”; the Northmen forfeited their bets. “Cann and Stone, both fashionably dressed, made their appearances at Vauxhall on Monday night.” |
| 31 | 18 June 1827 | London (Golden Eagle) | Golden Eagle tournament | FINAL | James Stone (2nd); Copp (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; Stone second; Copp third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | Cann’s third documented London victory of the year. |
| 32 | July 1827 | Dartmouth Regatta, Devon | Dartmouth Grand Match | Multiple rounds | Multiple (inc. James Cann 2nd; Kine 3rd) | Won — 1st | 80 ft diameter ring. Seats, booths, and a line of ships filled with spectators. Cann “after ‘planting some tremendous kicks’ was the eventual winner.” | 1st prize | Porter (1989), p. 200; Jaouen (2007); EFP, 2 Aug 1827 | Triers described as “all respectable yeomen.” |
| 33 | July 1827 | Totnes, Devon | Totnes Grand Match (3,000 spectators) | FINAL | Wreford (2nd); Avery (3rd) | Won — 1st | A day’s match accompanied by a band. | 1st prize | Porter (1989), p. 200; Jaouen (2007); EFP, 19 July 1827 | |
| 34 | 26 July 1827 | Milton Abbot, Devon | Milton Abbot Grand Match | FINAL | James Cann (2nd); Slade (3rd) | Won — 1st | Cann first; James second; Slade third. | 1st prize | Jaouen (2007) | |
| 35 | Sept 1827 | Tavistock, Devon | Tavistock match (declined) | N/A — declined | Polkinghorne (if present) | Declined | Cann declined the “paltry prize at Tavistock” because of a pre-arranged London engagement. Offered to play Polkinghorne for 100 sovs. a side on his return. Considerable correspondence generated. | Did not compete | EFP, 21 Sept 1826 [reported in autumn 1827] | The controversy over whether Cann was avoiding Polkinghorne — but the facts show Polkinghorne declined to meet Cann for £100 a side. |
| 36 | 24 Sept 1827 | Golden Eagle, Mile End Road, London | Championship match (£60 v. £50; 3 fair back falls of 5) | Championship bout | Philip Gaffney (“Irish Giant”; champion of Ireland) | Won (7 rounds) | Round 1 (4:50): Cann threw Gaffney a fair back fall. Round 2 (~15:00): Gaffney thrown but not a fair back. Round 3: Gaffney gained inner crook; Cann avoided. Round 4 (~20:00): Gaffney thrown; not fair. Round 5: Gaffney laid on back (short). Round 6: Gaffney thrown; not fair. Round 7: Gaffney thrown heavily, dislocated shoulder; resigned. | 1st — Devon triumph | Morning Post, 26 Sept 1827; Egan (1836); EFP | Immense crowd. Boxes’ tiled roofs collapsed. “As a Wrestler, we have never seen any one like Abraham Cann; he appears to us to use his legs with the same facility and judgment as Jack Randall exercised his fists in the P. R. This is saying quite enough to place Abraham Cann at the top of the tree amongst WRESTLERS.” Gaffney’s worsted stockings “sopped with blood, his laced shoe saturated like that of a slaughterer.” |
| 1828 · Age 33–34 · Leeds & Gout | ||||||||||
| 37 | April 1828 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | Eagle Tavern tournament | FINAL | Multiple (unnamed) | Won — 1st | Cann took the first prize. | 1st prize | Porter (1989); EFP, 17 Apr 1828 | The same year as the Leeds match. |
| 38 | Easter 1828 (April) | Haigh Park, Leeds, West Yorkshire | Grand Wrestling Match (£87 prizes; 3 days; Devon v. all England v. Ireland) | Multiple rounds | Multiple (inc. Finney) | Lost to Finney (accidentally) | Cann “greatly weakened from the effects of the attack [of] gout.” “Finney accidentally, but fairly, threw Abraham Cann, at Leeds.” The Devonians dominated the tournament overall. | Did not win 1st prize | Egan (1836); Western Times, 3 May 1828; Wikipedia (List of Cornish wrestlers) | The only confirmed fair defeat in Cann’s career — to a man of inferior skill, while Cann was suffering from gout. Finney later lost to Olver. Leeds rules: “one hand to collar”; shoes and padding allowed. Wrestlers conveyed from London at event expense. |
| 39 | Easter 1828 (April) | Haigh Park, Leeds | Leeds Grand Match — earlier rounds | Multiple rounds | Multiple (inc. various Yorkshire & London competitors) | Won (earlier rounds) | “The competition was obviously dominated by the Devonian athletes . . . and their hero A. Cann was an easy winner of the championship honors [in earlier rounds].” | Earlier placings | Wrestling Heritage (2025); Egan (1836) | Prizes: 1st £50; 2nd £40; 3rd £20; 4th £15; 5th £10; 6th £5. Hand-to-collar, fair back falls, light shoes and padding. |
| 40 | April 1828 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London (return from Leeds) | London match on return | Multiple bouts | Multiple (unnamed) | Won — 1st | “Quickly became a standard and took the first prize” despite gout. “Superior alike to Gout and to his opponents.” | 1st prize | Western Times, 3 May 1828 | Devon wrestlers “came back on Monday from the grand matches at London and Leeds. They have been every where successful and floored every opponent.” |
| 41 | May 1828 | London (deposit for challenge) | Jordan v. Cann challenge (£100 a-side) | Articles drawn | John Jordan (Devon) | Challenge (unplayed?) | “John Jordan to wrestle Abraham Cann the first three fair back falls out of five, for One Hundred Sovereigns aside.” £10 deposits by each side. Match to be played at the Eagle Tavern, City Road, London. | Unclear if played | Western Times, 3 May 1828 | One of the few documented Cann v. Jordan articles. Jordan had previously avoided meeting Cann at Totnes (1825). |
| 42 | 20 May 1828 | Eagle Tavern, City Road, London | Grand match for £40 (new ground) | Standards play | Multiple (inc. Copp, Thorne, Chappell, James Cann) | Present (a standard) | Multiple “first-rate players” present including Abraham and James Cann. | Standard | Morning Chronicle, 20 May 1828 | Cann listed among the principal competitors. |
| 43 | May 1828 | London (Cann v. Hanlow challenge) | Challenge at Belcher’s | Side and back falls for £100 | Hanlow (possibly Irish) | Challenge made | “Cann offered Hanlow, side and back falls, for £100.” Unclear if played. | Unclear | Western Times, 3 May 1828 | Part of the wave of London challenges following the Leeds match. |
| 44 | June 1828 | St Thomas’s, Exeter | St Thomas’s Grand Match | Not playable (gout) | N/A | Did not play (gout) | “The champion, attended by his brother James, Roach, &c., was on the ground, but not playable — he was hobbling under all the acute sensations of gout. Persons entertaining suspicion that this was assumed, Abraham, with great naivete, produced his swollen and burning foot.” | Did not compete | Egan (1836) | Cann’s gout flared again — a recurring affliction in 1828. |
| 1829–1840 · The Long Middle Years (sparse documentation) | ||||||||||
| 45 | 1829–1840 | Devon, London, provincial | Multiple tournaments | Multiple | Multiple (mostly unnamed) | Won (most) | Cann continued to compete throughout the 1830s but the newspaper record becomes progressively thinner. “Carried off the prizes at all the places where he became a competitor.” | Various | Wikipedia; Baring-Gould; Exeter Civic Society | During this period Cann ran the Champion’s Arms inn at Bartholomew Street West, Exeter (1828–1830). Later proprietor of other inns. |
| 1841 · Age 46–47 · The Final Match | ||||||||||
| 46 | 31 July 1841 | Field near St Thomas’s Church, Exeter | Grand Match for £100 — Retirement match | Challenge (championship) | John Ellicombe (Kingsteignton) | Lost (injury — broken collar-bone) | Play commenced 1:30 p.m.; ended 2:15 p.m. by fracture of Cann’s collar-bone. 5,000–6,000 spectators. An area of 1¼ acres enclosed. “On entering the ring it was evident to all that the champion Cann was only the shadow of his former self, whilst the rival for the championship was a fine, well-built, and remarkably muscular young man.” Cann wore jacket lettered “D”; Ellicombe “C”. | Forfeited stake | Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 31 July 1841 | Cann’s final bout and formal retirement from the ring. “Mr. Abraham Cann, who has for years reigned champion of the ring, bade his farewell [to] it, surrounded by his friends.” Cann was 47 years old. |
III. Summary statistics
| Category | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Total documented entries | 46 | The most comprehensive match record in the project |
| Confirmed first-prize tournament victories | 22+ | Including 14 Devon tournaments in 1825 alone (many from Jaouen 2007) |
| Confirmed bout wins (not aggregated as tournaments) | ~30+ | Difficult to count precisely due to the aggregated nature of tournament reports |
| Confirmed losses | 3 | v. Wreford (West Marchand, 17 June 1825 — “first time in 5 years”); v. Finney (Leeds 1828 — “accidentally, but fairly”); v. Ellicombe (St Thomas’s 1841 — broken collar-bone) |
| Disputed / contested losses | 1 | v. Polkinghorne (Tamar Green, 23 October 1826 — officially lost after two disputed rounds) |
| Walkovers / opponent withdrawals | 1 | v. Jordan (Totnes, 1825 — Jordan withdrew without trying for a hitch) |
| Tournament exclusions | 2 | Topsham 1825 (day 2, by committee); St Sidwell 1826 (by announcement, as one of the “Five Excluded Champions”) |
| Career span | c. 1812–1841 | Approximately 29 years |
| Career prize money (estimated) | £150+ in documented prizes | Plus numerous side stakes and challenge match purses |
| Highest single-bout stake | £200 a side | v. Polkinghorne, Tamar Green 1826 |
| Longest single bout | 1 hr 56 mins | v. Woolaway, Okehampton 1824 |
| Largest documented crowd | 17,000 | v. Polkinghorne, Tamar Green 1826 |
IV. Key observations
- 1. The undisputed champion. Cann’s supremacy rests on the most comprehensive record of any Devon wrestler: he defeated every significant opponent of his generation, won the first prize at every major tournament for which detailed results survive, and remained unbeaten across a career spanning nearly three decades. No other wrestler in the archive approached this consistency.
- 2. The Polkinghorne match was a cultural event of national significance. The 17,000-strong crowd at Tamar Green in 1826 was the largest ever recorded for a wrestling match in England. The event transcended sport: it was a contest between counties, between wrestling styles (Devon’s kick versus Cornwall’s hug), and between regional identities. Its permanent irresolution — both sides claiming victory — ensured it remained in living memory for a century, commemorated at St Columb in 1926.
- 3. The kicker as artist. Cann’s kicking was not mere brutality. Porter records that his kicks landed “with the force of a sledge” and “with the regularity of a pendulum” — language that conveys controlled, rhythmic technique rather than wild aggression. His ability to defeat Warren without shoes, and to prevail at Tavistock under restricted shoe rules, demonstrates that his wrestling comprised far more than kicking alone.
- 4. Personal tragedy shadowed the career. The deaths of two infant sons and his wife Mary within two years (1829–1830) broke Cann in ways that no opponent could. His descent into poverty, his drift from innkeeping to toll-collecting, and his final years in receipt of parish relief and public subscription represent one of the most melancholy trajectories in nineteenth-century sporting biography. Tom Sayers’s generous tribute — donating the first five-pound note to Cann’s annuity — underscores the respect in which Cann was still held even by the champions of other sports.
- 5. The final match exemplified Cann’s sportsmanship. At forty-seven, with a pre-existing collar-bone injury, Cann competed for a prize of 100 sovereigns against a man twenty-three years his junior and thirty pounds heavier. When the injury forced his retirement, his words to his opponent — that he was as good or as fair a man as Cann had ever played with — encapsulate the generous spirit that made Cann beloved as well as feared.
- 6. Cann’s legacy defined the sport’s memory. Every subsequent Devon wrestler was measured against Cann. “Argus” explicitly framed Cooper’s career as “the link between the time of Abram Cann and the present.” Rundle’s claim to the championship was validated by “Argus” through comparison to Cann’s standards. Even in 1926, the Western Morning News published lengthy reminiscences of Cann as the touchstone of Devon’s sporting identity.
V. Methodological caveats
Cann’s biography is paradoxically both the best documented and the most mythologised of any Devon wrestler. The primary sources — Egan (1836), the Exeter Flying Post, Bell’s Life in London, the Western Times, and Baring-Gould’s Devonshire Characters and Strange Events — provide extensive coverage of the 1824–1828 period but far less detail on his early career (c. 1812–1823) and his later career (1830s–1841). The local heritage sources (colebrooke.org, heardfamilyhistory.org.uk) provide valuable genealogical and biographical data but are secondary compilations that do not always cite their primary evidence. The claim that Cann was “never defeated” rests on the absence of documented losses rather than on positive evidence of universal victory; Egan records that Jordan threw Cann “more than once,” but no surviving source provides details of a specific documented defeat before 1841. The Polkinghorne match result remains genuinely unresolvable from the available evidence. The fifteen entries in the match table represent the recoverable documentation and should be understood as a fraction of a career spanning nearly thirty years across dozens of Devon, Cornwall, and London venues.
VI. References
- Baring-Gould, S. (1908). Devonshire wrestlers. In Devonshire Characters and Strange Events. Bodley Head. Reproduced on Wikisource. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Devonshire_Characters_and_Strange_Events/Devonshire_Wrestlers
- Bell’s Life in London and Sporting Chronicle, 20 May 1827; 27 April 1828.
- Colebrooke village history. (2024). Abraham Cann: The Legendary Champion of Devon Wrestling. colebrooke.org. https://www.colebrooke.org/personalities/abrahamcann/
- Egan, P. (1836). Pierce Egan’s Book of Sports, and Mirror of Life. T. Tegg. Pp. 321–336.
- Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 16 June 1827; 7 December 1866.
- Exeter Flying Post, 5 June 1817; 17 August 1815; 12 August 1824; 22 September 1825; 28 September 1826; 19 October 1826; 7 June 1827.
- Heard Family History. (n.d.). Abraham Cann. https://www.heardfamilyhistory.org.uk/Abraham%20Cann.html
- Porter, J. H. (1989). The decline of the Devonshire wrestling style. Transactions and Reports of the Devonshire Association, 121, 195–213.
- Tripp, M. (2009). Persistence of Difference: A History of Cornish Wrestling, Vols 1 & 2. PhD thesis, University of Exeter.
- Western Morning News, 7 August 1926; 19 August 1926.
- Western Times, 3 May 1828; 11 November 1904.
- Wikipedia. (2024). Abraham Cann. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Cann
- “Argus.” (1879, 31 January). Devon wrestling, No. III. Western Times.
- Project archive material (Devonshire Wrestling Society archive): match reports, challenge letters, retrospective accounts.