In February 1857, the central square of Vassouras, located in the heart of Rio de Janeiro’s coffee-producing Paraíba Valley, hosted a large-scale auction. Landowners from across the region gathered to acquire laborers for their expanding estates. Among those presented to the crowd was Benedita, a twenty-three-year-old woman originally from the Bahian Recôncavo.
Benedita stood nearly 1.95 meters tall, possessing a formidable physical stature that immediately drew the attention of the buyers. However, the auctioneer openly noted her history of non-compliance on four previous estates, stating that traditional disciplinary measures had failed to alter her defiance. Describing her as unsuited for standard agricultural or domestic labor, the auctioneer struggled to draw bids, steadily lowering the price until the crowd began to disperse.
From the back of the square, Joaquim Lacerda, the owner of the modest 320-hectare Santo Antônio farm, offered a mere seven cents. Lacerda was not a man of vast wealth; his estate was heavily burdened by debt, and he operated on tight financial margins. Despite the amusement of the wealthier landowners present, the gavel fell, and Benedita was transferred to Lacerda’s custody. The two made the three-kilometer journey back to the Santo Antônio estate in silence.
A Hidden Strategy in the Barn
Upon arriving at the farm at dusk, Lacerda bypassed the standard communal quarters and led Benedita directly into the main barn. Lighting an oil lamp, he sat down to address her, attempting to gauge her literacy and her familiarity with combat. Benedita remained defensive and silent, suspicious of her new surroundings.
To establish a baseline of communication, Lacerda placed a hunting knife on the floor between them, stepping back to demonstrate that he did not intend to use force. He then disclosed the true nature of his financial desperation. Ten years prior, his son Vicente had been killed during a roadside ambush. Following that loss and the subsequent passing of his wife, the farm had fallen into severe economic decline. Lacerda owed twelve thousand réis to the region’s most prominent landowner, the Baron of Araújo—a debt he could not pay with his failing harvests.
Lacerda explained that the Baron’s daughter, Eduarda, hosted an annual high-stakes prize-fighting tournament on their estate that attracted competitors from across the country. The winner of the tournament stood to receive a purse of one hundred thousand réis. Lacerda proposed a formal partnership:
-
The Goal: Train Benedita systematically for the upcoming December tournament.
-
The Split: Use half of the prize money to clear the estate’s debts and secure its future.
-
The Reward: Allocate the remaining fifty thousand réis to purchase Benedita’s formal legal release, providing her with the financial independence to relocate.
Recognizing the lack of viable alternatives and noting Lacerda’s apparent candor, Benedita accepted the arrangement.

Technical Preparation and Discipline
The training regimen commenced at dawn in a secluded clearing deep within the estate’s forested borders to avoid detection by neighboring landowners or farm hands. Lacerda constructed a rudimentary training ring using ropes secured between trees, equipping the area with sandbags and wooden targets.
While Lacerda lacked the physical capability to spar due to age, he possessed a thorough understanding of classical pugilism, utilizing old technical manuals detailing defensive stances, guards, and footwork. For the first several weeks, he focused on channeling Benedita’s raw physical power into precise, deliberate movements.
To maintain the illusion of standard farm operations, Benedita performed her assigned duties in the fields each day after completing five hours of intensive combat training. Over several months, her conditioning shifted from uncoordinated defense to disciplined, athletic execution. By September, three months prior to the scheduled event, her defensive timing and striking precision had developed to a competitive standard.
The Final Match and Legal Redress
The final match paired Benedita against the tournament’s reigning competitor, a man named Tomás who stood 2.10 meters tall and weighed 150 kilograms. Prior to the match, Eduarda de Araújo approached the ring, expressing interest in acquiring Benedita’s services permanently, an offer Benedita immediately rejected.
The opening rounds of the final match were heavily dictated by Tomás’s superior weight and reaching advantage. A severe uppercut in the third round sent Benedita to the canvas, nearly ending the match. Supported by Lacerda from the ringside, she managed to regain her footing before the referee completed the count. As Tomás advanced to conclude the bout, Benedita executed a decisive, ascending counter-strike to his jaw, causing him to lose consciousness and securing the tournament victory.
Eduarda de Araújo delivered the leather satchel containing the one hundred thousand réis directly to the team. In accordance with their prior verbal contract, Lacerda immediately counted out fifty thousand réis and presented the sum to Benedita.
The following morning, Lacerda accompanied Benedita to the local notary to execute the formal legal documents granting her permanent manumission. Armed with her legal freedom, new attire, and substantial capital, Benedita departed the Paraíba Valley three months later to settle in Salvador. Lacerda utilized his portion of the purse to clear his institutional debts and stabilize the Santo Antônio farm, which he managed independently for the remainder of his life.
Thirty years later, following Lacerda’s passing, a letter was recovered from his personal effects. It had been sent from Salvador, where Benedita had utilized her capital to establish an educational academy dedicated to instructing young women in literacy, self-defense, and vocational skills. The correspondence offered a final acknowledgment of Lacerda’s decision to offer an equitable partnership based on mutual utility and respect rather than conventional subjugation.