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The History of Bingo
by Adel Awwad
In Italy during the 1530s a lottery
was invented that is still played in Italy every Saturday. This is where
the game of Bingo originated. The game travelled to France in the 1770s
and was initially played amongst wealthy Frenchmen. The game then travelled
deeper into Europe reaching Germany, where they chose to use it as a tool
to help their children learn history, spelling and math.
Finally, the game reached Atlanta,
Georgia in 1929 where it became known as 'beano'. It was played at fairs
and carnivals around the country. Each player had some dried beans and
a card containing numbered squares - this was divided into three rows and
nine columns. There was a caller who drew random discs numbered from 1
to 90 from a cigar box or a bag. The designated number drawn out was then
shouted to waiting players. The players used their beans to cover up the
matching number on the card. The winner would be the first person to cover
up an entire row of numbers. When this happened the player yelled 'beano'
to alert everyone that they had won.
A New York toy salesman, Edwin S.
Lowe, was visiting a country fair one day when he witnessed a woman shout
'Bingo!' In her eagerness to tell everyone that she had covered all her
numbers, she became tongue-tied and shouted 'Bingo' instead of 'beano'.
This error ultimately inspired Lowe and he rushed back to New York to develop
and market a new game - Bingo!
Lowe's first commercial version of
the game retailed at $1 for a 12 card set and $2 for 24 cards. A priest
from Pennsylvania realized that he could raise some much needed funds for
his church by running Bingo games, but he soon discovered a problem. There
were often too many winners! When he brought this to Lowe's attention Lowe
hired a math professor, Carl Leffer, to help him increase the amount of
Bingo combinations. By 1930 they had invented over 6,000 Bingo cards -
reputedly at the cost of Leffer's sanity.
Word soon spread that Bingo was an
easy and enjoyable way to raise money. By 1934 it was estimated that over
10,000 games a week were being played. Having been unable to patent his
invention, Lowe generously allowed his competitors to pay him a dollar
a year and for that he happily let them call their games 'Bingo' too.
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