Billiard playing in 1776: from the original picture

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Billiard playing in 1776: from the original picture

Item Info

Item No: PIXC00062
Title: Billiard playing in 1776: from the original picture
Additional Title: Local option or not, we'll play billiards
Media Type: Cartoons (Commentary)
Source: Print and Picture Collection
Notes:

 gifted by Miss Lydia T. Morris, 2/1926.


Notes:

"Backgammon boards and billiard tables were popular among the wealthy by the 1770s, and the lower sorts, at least the men, could indulge in such recreations at the ubiquitous public taverns and coffeehouses. Writing of his New England in 1761, John Adams said, "In most country towns you will find almost every other house with a sign of entertainment before it." As early as 1722, a Charlestown, Massachusetts, tavern owner advertised tables for all who "had a Mind to Recreate themselves with a Game of Billiards.'"

Source: © 2012 The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

Link: http://www.history.org/foundation/journal/spring08/pop.cfm


City/Town/Township: City/Town/Township:Philadelphia
State/Province:Pennsylvania

Creator Name: Leopold, John - Publisher