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Casino Games
http://www.bingo--game.com
Bingo
one thing that one has to
note about Bingo is that it is a game that is played in a group. You may
find a lot of people around him/her in a Bingo hall when a game is going
on. Keeping this in mind, its very important to realize that the game is
also a social gathering and you are expected to be at your behavioral
best. One should gauge the social boundaries of the game and
simultaneously enjoy it.In the U.S., bingo was
originally called "beano". It was a country fair game where a dealer
would select numbered discs from a cigar box and players would mark
their cards with beans. They yelled "beano" if they won.
The game's history
can be traced back to 1530, to an Italian lottery called "Lo Giuoco
del Lotto D'Italia," which is still played every Saturday in Italy.
From Italy the game was introduced to France in the late 1770s, where it
was called "Le Lotto", a game played among wealthy Frenchmen. The
Germans also played a version of the game in the 1800s, but they used it
as a child's game to help students learn math, spelling and history.
When the game reached
North America in 1929, it became known as "beano". It was first played
at a carnival near Atlanta, Georgia. New York toy salesman Edwin S. Lowe
renamed it "bingo" after he overheard someone accidentally yell "bingo"
instead of "beano". He hired a Columbia University math professor, Carl
Leffler, to help him increase the number of combinations in bingo cards.
By 1930, Leffler had invented 6,000 different bingo cards. [It is said
that Leffler then went insane.]
A Catholic priest
from Pennsylvania approached Lowe about using bingo as a means of
raising church funds. When bingo started being played in churches it
became increasingly popular. By 1934, an estimated 10,000 bingo games
were played weekly, and today more than $90 million dollars are spent on
bingo each week in North America alone.
When Italy was
unified in 1530, a lottery was launched. This weekly lottery has been
held virtually every Saturday since its inception. By 1778 word of the
game had spread to France and captured the fancy of the intelligentsia.
It was during this period that the popular version of the lottery was
born. Cards were divided into three horizontal rows and nine vertical
columns. In the 1800s the popularity of lottery games spread throughout
Europe. Education variations were created to aid children in learning
their multiplication tables, spelling and even history.
What started as the Italian lottery made its way to America via a
carnival pitchman touring Germany. There he came across the lottery game
and recognized its appeal as a carnival tent game. He made a few changes
to the game, including allowing players to complete a row vertically,
horizontally or diagonally. And he changed the name to Beano. He was
working at the carnival one night in 1929 near Atlanta when a traveling
toy salesman, Edwin S. Lowe, came by. Early for a sales call, Lowe
decided to stop at the carnival. The only tent open was the Beano tent,
which was so crowded with people that Lowe wasn't able to play the game
for himself. Lowe watched how excited the crowd was.
Lowe immediately realized the money-making potential for Beano. Upon his
return to his home in New York, he created his own Beano game by
procuring some beans, cardboard and a rubber number stamp. He invited
friends to his apartment to play the game. There he saw the same
excitement that he saw at the carnival. During the game, one player had
accidently yelled out "Bingo" and the name stuck.
It was a priest from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania who began to promote
playing bingo in churches. One the parishiners in his financially ailing
church came up with the idea of using Bingo as a way to raise money for
the church. But with only 24 unique cards to play with, the priest was
finding that there too many winners for each game. The priest contacted
Lowe about producing a large number of unique number combinations for
the cards. Lowe recognized the fund-raising potential of the game and
enlisted the help of a professor of mathematics at Columbia University
named Carl Leffler. But the increased number of bingo cards was exactly
what was needed to make the game a staple at churches across the country
and a sound source of fund-raising.
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