
Jacco has fought many battles with some of the first dogs of the day, and has beat them all, and he hereby offers to fight any dog in England of double his own weight. Jacco Macacco, the celebrated monkey, will this day fight Tom Crib's white bitch, Puss. He claimed that he had seen a bill advertising a fight between Jacco and Puss: Richard Martin, the MP for Galway who was known as "Humanity Dick" for his philanthropy and constant attempts to introduce legislation improve the treatment of animals, gave an impassioned speech to Parliament in 1822 when introducing a bill to prevent the mistreatment of horses, cattle and sheep (his earlier attempt in 1821 had been defeated in the Lords). Cribbs well known bitch Puss which shows the two combatants locked together tearing at one another's throats. Thomas Landseer produced an etching from his own sketch of Fight between Jacko Maccacco a celebrated Monkey and Mr Tho. Lennox gives the terms of the fight on which he reports as a wager of fifty pounds that Puss could either kill Jacco or last five minutes with him (almost double the length of time which any of Jacco's previous opponents had managed) and reported Jacco as the victor though he did not record the eventual fate of the dog. Aistrop puts the date of the contest as 13 June 1821. The various accounts of the fight and its outcome appear contradictory: the two animals may have been matched more than once, so reports may be from different fights. It appears that there was at least one contest between Jacco and the equally renowned white bull and terrier bitch, Puss, who belonged to the former prizefighter Tom Cribb. Although Egan's account of Tom and Jerry's visit to the Westminster Pit to see the fight between Jacco and the dog is detailed and is accompanied by a fine print by George Cruikshank, it is a humorous fiction and even though it may be based on real events it is impossible to judge how accurate the record of the fight is. Pierce Egan also wrote about a battle between the "monkey phenomenon" and a dog in his popular account of the adventures of the characters Tom and Jerry in various sporting venues, Scenes from London Life. Lewis Strange Wingfield (1842–1891) wrote in his 1883 novel Abigail Rowe: a Chronicle of the Regency of an advertisement for a hundred guinea match between Jacco and "Belcher's celebrated dog Trusty". When he also defeated this dog, his reputation began to grow and a fight was fixed for him at the Westminster Pit. Jacco defeated both this dog and a second dog, and was then matched against a dog bred for fighting at Bethnal Green.

Carter finally tired of Jacco's constant attempts to attack him and took the ape into a nearby field where he set a dog on him. Carter had taught Jacco many tricks, but because the ape was extremely aggressive Carter had to purchase a large sheet of iron to use as a shield whenever he approached him. The sailor had sold him to a silversmith called Carter from Hoxton. Jacco had always been very calm but one day suddenly became aggressive over a saucer of milk and lacerated three of the sailor's fingers.



In a statement published in 1825 he claimed that Jacco had belonged to a sailor who had kept him for three years. Īistrop gave a somewhat different account of Jacco's history. Īlthough he was already somewhat famous, at the Westminster Pit Jacco's fights began to attract spectators from the higher reaches of society and considerable wagers were placed on his fights. Lennox writes that after biting his owner he was sold to the proprietor of the Westminster Pit, Charles Aistrop. In Pictures of Sporting Life and Character (1860), William Pitt Lennox gives a detailed account of Jacco's career: he was landed at Portsmouth where he fought dogs in a number of local sporting arenas before being purchased by a London sporting impresario and transported to Hoxton from where he continued his career, fighting in the Chick Lane and Tottenham Court Road pits, and earned one of his monikers as the "Hoxton Ape". Most details on Jacco come from second-hand or fictionalized accounts. Thomas Sutherland's 1826 aquatint from an 1822 original by Henry Thomas Alken The Westminster-Pit: A Turn-up between a Dog and Jacco Macacco, the Fighting Monkey
