globehall.com globehall.com
Main :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add URL
 
 

Academics & Learning

 

Sports

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Drink & Food

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Estate & Realty

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

Companies & Business

 

Issues & News

 

Indoor Games

 

Computers & Software

 

Self Management

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Technology & Science

 

Investment & Finance

 

Entertainment

 

Teens & Kids

 

Art & Creative

 

Garden & Home

 

Policies & Law

 

Shopping Online

 

People & Society

 

Main › Indoor Games › Casino Play
 

Bingo - It's Birth and Beginning

 
Author: John C. Thorenssen

The true origin of bingo dates back as far as the mid 16th century and is connected, strangely enough to the unification of Italy in 1530. This unification saw the introduction of a National lottery system, known as Lo Giuoco del Lotto dItalia held each week. Interestingly, this lottery is today a major source of income to the government, contributing over 75 million dollars each year to the budget.

It was the French who developed a passion for Le Lotto, as it became known and they adapted their own version of the game that strikes a strong resemblance with todays version of bingo. Three horizontal and nine vertical rows formed the basis of the card and players would cover their numbers as they were drawn until an entire horizontal row was covered hence the winner.

Lotto continued to flourish throughout Europe. It was used as an educational tool in Germany to teach children their multiplication tables and even formed the basis of many other games and toys still noticeable in toy stores today. But where and when did Lotto somehow morph into Bingo? Well, the answer lies in what could be described as a compromise Beano!

Picture the scene. Its 1929 and a weary and stressed toy salesman by the name of Edwin S. Lowe is driving to Jacksonville, Georgia to prepare for some appointments. Soon after starting his own toy company a year earlier, the market crashed and Mr Lowes prospects were looking very bleak indeed.

Before arriving in Jacksonville, Lowe decided to cheer himself up by stopping off at a country carnival, being a night early for his appointments. Only one carnival booth was open and very crowded. The excitement seemed to be generated by a game that was a variation of Lotto, known as Beano. A horseshoe table was covered with numbered cards and beans. Every time a pitchman pulled a wooden disk from an old cigar box and called the number on it, the players reached for a bean and covered the corresponding number on their card, if they had it. When they had totally covered a line, either diagonally, vertically or horizontally, they had to shout Beano! They then received a doll.

Lowe wanted to play, but the game was too popular and no seats were available. What he did notice though was that all the players seemed to be addicted to the game. The pitchman was not able to close and had to eventually chase the players away at 3:00am. The pitchman had apparently picked the game of Lotto in Germany and decided to adapt and bring it to the United States and to rename it Beano. The success of the game on the carnival circuit proved to be highly lucrative.

Back in New York, Lowe invited some friends to his apartment and introduced them to the game. The tension seemed palpable. One time, a player became close to winning and was getting more and more excited. When her final number was called she jumped up in a fit of ecstasy and in all her excitement got herself tongue-tied. Instead of shouting Beano she spat out Bingo! Lowe would later describe the sense of elation he experienced when he heard her cry. He knew from that moment he was going to introduce this game to the public and name it Bingo.

What a success it proved to be for Lowe and his company! As the game came out of the public domain it was hard for it to be trademarked. Entreponeurs emerged from all sides and began their own versions. Lowe graciously asked them to pay just one dollar a year and call their games Bingo as well. To avoid litigation, this seemed a small price to pay and hence the massive spread and popular interest in bingo.

Lowe became aware of the fundraising possibilities of bingo after he was approached by a parishioner who wanted to use the game to raise funds. However, there seemed to be a problem when he discovered that each game tended to produce at least a half a dozen winners. Lowe knew that in order for bingo to succeed and a larger scale he needed to develop a greater number of combinations for his cards. So he approached a mathematics professor at Columbia University by the name of Carl Leffler. Lowe wanted 6,000 new cards with different combinations. The professor agreed. What he may not have conceptualised was how much harder each card became to develop than the card before. The fee per card rose to $100 and the task was finally completed, much to Lowes delight and at a cost to the professor of his sanity! (Or so many people have speculated).

After that, bingo really began to take off. People started to approach Lowe in droves, asking him to help them develop bingo games. Newsletters and even a book were published. The stakes and prizes got higher and pretty soon bingo took its place in popular American culture along with sports and other forms of gambling and general entertainment.

Author Bio:
John C. Thorenssen is a popular columnist. John likes to pen down articles about this area.
You can search for this article using: online casino, online casinos, best online casinos, free casino games, casino royale
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
What You Should Know About Free Online Games
 
Let Me Explain the Game of Billiards
 
League Two Betting Review - 7 August 2006
 
Dart Your Way To An Exciting Evening
 
Top 3 Most Wanted Features Of Online Poker Sites
 
Pacific Poker Review
 
Play Blackjack Like a Pro
 
The Nine Squared Enigma That is Sudoku
 
Poker Tables for Sale
 
Poker Slow Playing - Master It For Huge Gains!
 
 
 
   Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
© 2008 www.globehall.com All Rights Reserved.