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History of ShuffleBoard
05/20/12
Back in 15th Century England, folks played a game of sliding a "groat"
(a large British coin of the day worth about four pence) down a table. The game
was called shove groat and/or slide groat. Later, a silver penny was used and
the name of the game became shove-penny and/or shovel-penny, and was later renamed
Shuffleboard. The game was played by the young and old, and was a favorite pastime
in the great country houses of Staffordshire, Winchester and Wiltshire.
While our Founding Fathers were busy putting together the makings of this great
country, there were big shuffleboard matches being conducted throughout the
colonies. Shuffleboard was popular among the English soldiers as well as the
colonists.
In his play, The Crucible," concerning the historic witch trials of Salem,
Mass., Arthur Miller wrote: In 1692, there was a good supply of ne’er-do-wells
who dallied at the shuffleboard in Bridget Bishop’s Tavern." That
item provides a written record of the entrance of the game into the New World.
The fame of the game spread, and soon it came upon the public scene in more
ways that one. In 1848, in New Hanover, Pennsylvania, a case of "The State
vs. John Bishop" to decide the question, "Is shuffleboard a game of
chance or a game of skill?" Came up for trail. The judge ruled thus:
"Though the defendant kept a public gaming table, as charged, and though
diverse persons played thereat and bet spirituous liquors on the game, the game
was not a game of chance, but was altogether a game of skill."
The game shed its crude beginnings when American cabinetmakers such as Hepplewhite
and Duncan Phyfe turned out some of their finest inlaid cabinet work on shuffleboard
game tables for the wealthy homes of New York City.
By 1897, table shuffleboard rated as much space in the metropolitan newspapers
in the New York City area as prizefighting and baseball. Highly publicized tournaments
played by such colorful characters as "Big Ed’ Morris, Dave Wiley,
Alex Scott, Ed Gardland, and George Lavender drew hordes of fans. The fans faithfully
followed the players to tournaments in New York City, Newark, Paterson, Hoboken,
Jersey City and Bloomfield, New Jersey, and even into Philadelphia. The fans
included important figures of the business, theatrical, and political worlds.
Shuffleboard made its was across the country. In 1904, Gentleman Jim Corbett,
an avid player, had a tavern owner named Croll install a table in his Alamedia,
California, pub. "Doc" Croll, his son, claimed it was the first shuffleboard
in that part of the country.
World War II opened the "Swinging Forties" and shuffleboard really
came into its own. The intrinsic appeal of the game – skill, diversity,
competitiveness, availability to young and old, strong and disabled, the serious
game, the fun game, offered the kind of release needed in those turbulent years.
Hollywood climbed on the shuffleboard bandwagon and took it up, at first, as
a source of good publicity. Then when the pin-up girls and bandleaders and actors
discovered they really liked the game, shuffleboards found their way into the
studios and homes of the stars. People like Betty Grable, Harry James, Merv
Griffin, Alan Ladd; all had their own shuffleboards.
Shuffleboard grew to its greatest height in the 1950s. Most major shuffleboard
manufactures sponsored nationwide shuffleboard tournaments. These were the biggest
tournaments ever held; one had 576 teams participating.
Fierce competition among major manufactures and suppliers, lack of uniform
rules and organization, the inability to gain sponsorship of the sport, and
general internal strife in all facets of shuffleboard, led to a demise of the
game in the ‘60s and ‘70s. Some feared it was damaged beyond "repair,"
but others invested their time, efforts and talents to breath life into the
sport that they had loved. That dedication paid off, by the mid-‘80s,
shuffleboard experienced a revival, a revival that has extended and strengthened
in the ‘90s.
While organization, cooperation and communication have been key elements in
the revival of shuffleboard; probably the most important factor has been an
almost universal realization in The World of Shuffleboard that new young shooters
will be the continued lifelines of the sport. Across the nation, established
shooters have made it their top priority to help novice players develop their
talents and nurture their enthusiasm for league and tournament play. As long
as that remains a priority, shuffleboard will continue to grow.
One major accomplishment in this decade was the establishment of a National
Shuffleboard Hall of Fame in 1995. Since then, several states have formed state
or area shuffleboard Halls of Fame. Often, those who have been honored by their
respective states are then nominated for induction into the National Hall of
Fame.
To date, 12 people have been inducted into the National Hall of Fame: (California)
PeeWee Ramos, Bob Miles, Billy Chiles; (Oklahoma) Bill Melton, Glen Davidson;
(New Jersey) Mickey Mickens, Sol Lipkin; (Texas) Earl Kelly; (Nebraska) Denny
Busch; (Pacific Northwest) Jim Foran. Several others are currently going through
the nomination process. It is the NSHF’s goal to recognize excellence
for all deserving participants in The World of Shuffleboard and to finance a
"home" for preserving the history of shuffleboard so that generation
to follow will have a knowledge of and appreciation for that history.
Information provided by the American Shuffleboard Company,
The Phil-American Shuffleboard Company, and
The Board Talk
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