In a 1950 interview Barton-Wright professed to having had a "lifelong interest in the arts of self defence" and earlier interviews indicated that he had studied various fighting systems during his travels as a young man. While working as an
antimony smelting specialist for the E.H. Hunter Company in
Kobe, Japan (c. 1895–1898), Barton-Wright studied
jujutsu in at least two styles, including the
Shinden Fudo-ryū in
Kobe and
Kodokan judo in Tokyo. Upon returning to England in early 1898, Barton-Wright combined these martial arts to form his own method of self-defence training, which he called
Bartitsu. Over the next two years, he also added elements of British
boxing, French
savate and the
la canne (
stick fighting) style of Swiss master
Pierre Vigny. In 1899, Barton-Wright wrote an article titled "How to Pose as a Strong Man", detailing the mechanical and leverage principles employed in performing various feats of strength. He also produced a two-part essay entitled "the New Art of Self Defence" which was published in both the English and American editions of ''
Pearson's Magazine''. Excerpts of Barton-Wright's articles were re-printed in numerous British, American, New Zealand and Australian newspapers. In 1900, Barton-Wright established the Bartitsu School of Arms and Physical Culture at 67b
Shaftesbury Avenue in London's
Soho district. The school offered classes in a range of self-defence disciplines and
combat sports as well as various
physical therapies involving the electrical application of heat, light,
vibration, and
radiation. Club members included soldiers, athletes, actors, politicians and some aristocrats. During the next few years, Barton-Wright organised numerous exhibitions of self-defence techniques and also promoted
tournament competitions at
music halls throughout London, in which his Bartitsu Club champions were challenged by wrestlers in various European styles. In 1901, Barton-Wright published additional articles that detailed the Bartitsu method of fighting with a walking stick or umbrella. In
The Adventure of the Empty House,
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the author of the
Sherlock Holmes stories, referred to Bartitsu (misspelled as "
baritsu") in explaining how Holmes had defeated
Professor Moriarty in hand-to-hand combat at the brink of the
Reichenbach Falls. During early 1902, Barton-Wright organised and promoted the "Great Anglo-Japanese Tournament" tour, which featured Bartitsu demonstrations and contests in provincial centers including Nottingham, the Sandringham Military Base, Oxford, Cambridge University and Lancashire. ==Later life==