Originally Posted by
AJ Camacho
Like I said, his intention was ideal and notable but he did not achieve more than those who worked for him. Those coaches were the heart of his gym and it was their open minded nature, and willingness to share their knowledge with their peers that pushed things forward. In terms of cause and effect, the greatest thing to come out of Barton's efforts was bringing Judo and Jujitsu to Europe, giving it a permanent home that is still strong to this day.
Unfortunately, Barton's Bartitsu lacked any real vetting process and in many ways was the antithesis of MMA. In MMA, everything must be proven in the cage. If it doesn't work in the cage, then it doesn't work. That reality is the mark by which all theoretical techniques were judged. In Barton's time, his proving ground were the Music Hall challenge matches. There's a reason why Bartitsu never took off and why his Jiujitsu coaches had such success.
I think this whole Bartitsu revival thing is just marketing hype of a dead martial art designed to sell some seminar tickets on the heels of the Sherlock Holmes movie. Meanwhile the pertinent aspects of martial arts history gets pushed to the wayside. Barton is an interesting sidenote in MMA history, nothing more.