[1][2] His parents were John Anderson and his wife Ann, née Goddard, of Bethnal Green, in the East End of London, and then a working-class slum.
[2] On 24 April 1897, at the Ecelsior Hall, Bethnal Green, he beat Tom Ireland to win Harry Wright's 'All England' 9st 8lbs (134lbs) silver championship belt competition, over six rounds.
[2][3] It was his second bout of the night, having earlier beaten Jerry Donoghue in a semi-final, with a knockout in the third round.
[1] The 1911 census shows the family living in a house in Edmonton, north London – a much more up-market area.
[2] His silver championship prize belt, still in possession of descendants of his son Edward, was featured on an episode of the BBC television programme Antiques Roadshow, which led to Anderson's story being featured in the spin-off series Antiques Roadshow Detectives in 2015.