Duck-baiting

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Henry Alken
circa 1820

Duck-baiting is a

baiting of ducks against dogs
.

Overview

Duck-baiting involved releasing a

gamble and joined in the noise to encourage their animal of choice. Those who backed the dog might throw stones at the duck in an attempt to disable it, which caused fights among the spectators. The dogs would take turns catching the duck. Prizes would be awarded to the dogs that caught the duck in the least amount of time.[1]

Strutt's Sports and Pastimes says of duck-baiting:

"another barbarous pastime and for the performance it is necessary to have recourse to a pond of water sufficiently extensive to give the duck plenty of room for making her escape from the dogs, when she is closely pursued; which she does by diving as often as any of them come near to her."[2]

It was a favourite spectator sport for Charles II of England.[3][4]

Locations

Duck-baiting events were held in and around London. Rural inns, with names like "Dog and Duck, St George's Fields",[5][3] located in St George's Fields,[6] Brixton, Hampstead, Dulwich, Stamford Hill, Tottenham, Stoke-on-Trent, Newington and Tooting had ponds where the baiting took place. On the weekends, families, friends and their fighting dogs would frequent these locations.

Decline

The rowdy assemblies associated with the activity caused public alarm.[7] Duck-baiting declined in the late nineteenth century.[3]

See also

References

  1. OCLC 2552476.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  2. ^
  3. ^ Walford, Edward, Old and New London, A Narrative of its History, its People and its Places.Illustrated with Numerous Engravings from the Most Authentic Sources. vol 6, 1872–78. Electronic Resource. Permanent URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10427/15579.
  4. ^ "Have you seen in the neighbourhood of the church or churchyard duck-hunting or dogfighting?"-"There is scarcely a Sunday there is not. I have gone out with the greatest anxiety when my wife and family were going to church to protect them." James May, vestry clerk of St Matthew's, Bethnal Green, 1817: quoted in The Times, 25 August 1834, p. 4

Further reading

  • Fleig, Dieter. (1996). History of Fighting Dogs. T.F.H. Publications. Neptune City, New Jersey.