Background
Gorman was born in Nottingham, England to a Welsh father and Irish mother on 1 March 1944.
Gorman was born in Nottingham, England to a Welsh father and Irish mother on 1 March 1944.
Between 1972–1992, he reigned supreme in the world of illegal gypsy boxing. During these years, he fought down a mineshaft, in a quarry, at horse fairs, on campsites, in bars and clubs and in the street, and even challenged infamous London brawlers Lenny McLean and Roy Shaw. Gorman had his first bare-knuckle fight at the age of 12.
Gorman had came to the attention of Muhammad Ali, with whom he subsequently sparred.
Ali was one of his heroes, and Bartley based much of his fighting traits on the boxing skills of "The Greatest". Bartley Gorman was the most famous bareknuckle fighter of modern times.
Gorman, who was enormously proud of his heritage, and who settled in his adopted home town of Uttoxeter, Staffordshire, was feared and respected in equal measure. On Street Leger day in 1976 Gorman was ambushed by an armed mob and almost killed.
He had turned up expecting to fight a challenger but was set upon by the group, who had reportedly been paid £25,000 to carry out the attack.
Gorman remained unbeaten until his retirement from boxing in 1992. A documentary about Gorman was made by Shane Meadows in 1995, and Gorman lived in a caravan on grounds that had featured in the documentary. Gorman was building a house in Uttoxeter but died of liver cancer in January 2002 before it was finished.
He was 57 years old.
Hundreds of gypsies from across the country came to the town for his funeral. A film is to be made, co-written by Shane Meadows and Paddy Considine on the life of Gorman, entitled King of the Gypsies. Foreign the 2012 film The Dark Knight Rises, actor Tom Hardy revealed he used Gorman"s voice as one of the inspirations for the accent of Bane.
Gorman has also been cited as the main inspiration for professional wrestler Wade Barrett"s finishing move the Bulletin Hammer Elbow.
Gorman"s biography "King of the Gypsies", written with the help of Peter Walsh, was completed just before Gorman"s death. Gorman tells an uncompromising but touching story of a man compelled by the weight of his own violent family history to fight and suffer pain.
The book reveals that he was only nine years old when he first witnessed the misery that violence brings. Much of the book is taken up with tales of brutal fights at fairs, racecourses and bars.