A Thousand Blows: The remarkable true story of bare-knuckle boxer Hezekiah Moscow and notorious girl gang The 40 Elephants

A Thousand Blows: The remarkable true story of bare-knuckle boxer Hezekiah Moscow and notorious girl gang The 40 Elephants
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A Thousand Blows: The remarkable true story of bare-knuckle boxer Hezekiah Moscow and notorious girl gang The 40 Elephants
Author: Greg Evans
Published: Feb, 21 2025 06:00

The new drama combines the real worlds of the Victorian boxing scene and an infamous all-female crime syndicate. In the grimy underworld of 19th-century London, a bare-knuckle boxer dreams of making a name for himself, while an all-female gang of thieves terrorises the West End. This is the world of A Thousand Blows, the latest historical drama from Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight, which lands on Disney+ this week.

 [Erin Doherty as Mary Carr in 'A Thousand Blows']
Image Credit: The Independent [Erin Doherty as Mary Carr in 'A Thousand Blows']

Starring Stephen Graham, Small Axe’s Malachi Kirby, and The Crown’s Erin Doherty, the series is a brutal, fast-paced tale of Victorian London’s underground fight scene, entwined with the exploits of The 40 Elephants – a notorious all-female crime syndicate. While much of the drama is fictionalised, both the gang and the enigmatic boxer at its heart, Hezekiah Moscow, are rooted in real history.

 [Hezekiah Moscow photographed in 1888]
Image Credit: The Independent [Hezekiah Moscow photographed in 1888]

Knight’s A Thousand Blows follows Moscow, played by Kirby, as he becomes entangled in the criminal world ruled by The 40 Elephants and their leader, Mary Carr (Doherty). Meanwhile, Graham plays Sugar Goodson, a ruthless bare-knuckle fighter loosely inspired by a real figure of the same name.

 [Malachi Kirby as Hezekiah Moscow in 'A Thousand Blows']
Image Credit: The Independent [Malachi Kirby as Hezekiah Moscow in 'A Thousand Blows']

The 40 Elephants were one of Britain’s longest-running organised crime syndicates. First documented in 1873, though possibly dating back to the 18th century, the gang took their name from their base in Elephant and Castle, South London. As historian Brian McDonald detailed in his books Gangs of London and Alice Diamond and the 40 Elephants, they were experts in deception and shoplifting, swindling high-end West End stores such as Harrods with tactics ranging from wearing fake arms to impersonating housemaids in wealthy households.

While many gang members’ names are historically accurate, A Thousand Blows plays with the timeline. Mary Carr, born in 1862, is depicted as the gang’s leader in the 1880s, though the group peaked decades later. Alice Diamond (played by Darci Shaw), another key character, was only born in 1896 but appears alongside Carr in the show. In reality, the gang was at its most formidable in the 1920s, even forcing smaller criminal outfits to pay them protection money.

Unlike the Peaky Blinders or the Kray twins, Hezekiah Moscow is a largely forgotten figure. But his story – discovered by A Thousand Blows star Graham and his wife, Hannah Walters – is just as remarkable. Graham recalled being shown an “amazing” photograph of Moscow, describing him as looking “regal” and full of “humility and dignity.”.

Fighting under the pseudonym “Ching Hook” or “Ching Ghook,” his alternate name suggests mixed heritage – something reflected in A Thousand Blows, where Moscow speaks Mandarin thanks to his Chinese grandmother. By 1882, he had gained recognition in the East London boxing scene and became a minor celebrity, making headlines for his powerful performances in the city’s rowdy, underground fight venues. But boxing wasn’t his only talent – Moscow was also a music hall singer and a lion tamer at the Shoreditch Aquarium.

His circus career, however, led to controversy. He was charged by the RSPCA for “cruelly ill-treating” four bears in his care – a rare documented detail in an otherwise elusive personal history. Despite his prominence, little is known about Moscow’s later years, adding an air of mystery to his story. He was accompanied in London by his friend Alec Munroe, played in A Thousand Blows by Francis Lovehall (Small Axe). Munroe, another Caribbean-born boxer, struggled to find the same success as Moscow. His life was tragically cut short in 1885 when he was stabbed to death in Spitalfields at the age of 35.

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