Anyways, to get back on track a bit...
Following the Dark Period:
https://books.google.com/books?id=ZXg9A ... on&f=false
A pretty interesting book written in 1909 and for free viewership online chronicling from Figg to Johnson. Thought I'd share.
Anyways...
As I said before, all fights, had mixtures of everything. Boxing or not, this is how the sport generally was in America prior to the 1800s. There was no uniform rules--- just what you agreed on. "Fighting Fair" (no biting, gouging, etc) was oftentimes not done.
The Quaker Thomas Ashe, gave a detailed description of a melee between a Virginian and a Kentuckian in his travelogue, Travels in America (London, 1809), The two had agreed to "tear and rend" one another - to rough-and-tumble - rather than "fight fair". Ashe elaborated what this meant: "You startle at the words tear and rend, and again do not understand me. You have heard these terms, I allow, applied to beasts of prey and to carnivorous animals; and your humanity cannot conceive them applicable to man: It nevertheless is so, and the fact will not permit me the use of any less expressive term."
Ashe goes on to describe what can only be described as truly ultimate fighting. It was the size and power of the Kentuckian against the science and craft of the Virginian. After exchanging cautious throws and blows, suddenly the Virginian lunged at his opponent:
"The shock received by the Kentuckyan, and the want of breath, brought him instantly to the ground. The Virginian never lost his hold; like those bats of the South who never quit the subject on which they fasten until they taste blood, he kept his knees in his enemy's body; fixing his claws in his hair, and his thumbs on his eyes, gave them an instantaneous start from their sockets. The sufferer roared aloud, but uttered no complaint. The citizens again shouted with joy. Doubts were no longer entertained and bets of three to one were offered on the Virginian. "
The crowd roared its approval as the fight continued. The Kentuckian grabbed his smaller opponent and held him in a tight bear hug, forcing the Virginian to relinquish his facial grip. Over and over the two rolled, until, getting the Virginian under him, the big man "snapt off his nose so close to his face that no manner of projection remained." The Virginian quickly recovered, seized the Kentuckian's lower lip in his teeth, and ripped it down over his enemy's chin.
This was enough: "The Kentuckyan at length gave out, on which the people carried off the victor, and he preferring a triumph to a doctor, who came to cicatrize his face, suffered himself to be chaired round the ground as the champion of the times, and the first rougher-and-tumbler. The poor wretch, whose eyes were started from their spheres, and whose lip refused its office, returned to the town, to hide his impotence, and get his countenance repaired."
"Rough and tumble" was also commonly referred to as "no-holds-barred" or "tear and render". It was a brutal sport for hard people in a harsh land. One where the skill with which a fighter could pluck out the eyeball of an opponent was as celebrated by spectators as any knockout artist or submission expert was today.
The skill was so desired that exercises were devised to help practice the craft and many of the best gougers "fired their fingernails hard, honed them sharp, and oiled them slick". In fact the technique became so widespread that the "rough and tumble" also became known as "gouging".