Page 24 - The Collector's Companion: Issue CC101
P. 24

Fire away!                                               Words and

                                                                photos by
       1930s-1950s printed                                      Terry Smith

       playfield bagatelle

       games                                            Detail from ‘A Little Game of
                                                        Bagatelle’ (1864), J.L. Magee














                                                                                           Super Gold Star    Big Shot           Dan Dare Bagatelle  Space rocket
                                                                                           Lindstrom Tool & Toy Co.  Gotham Pressed Steel Corp.  Chad Valley  Chad Valley
                                                                                           Est. 1934, USA     1937, USA          1950s, UK          1950s, UK
                                                                                           Tin, 24ins tall.   Tin, 24ins tall.   Wood & hardboard, 24ins tall.  Wood & hardboard, 24ins tall.
                                                                                           Valued from £50-£75  Valued from £50-£75  Valued from £100-£125  Valued from £50-£75
       Pinball  was  a  tabletop  board  game.  The  origins  of
       pinball can be traced to games like bocce and ground
       billiards in which balls were rolled on a course. Ground
       billiards evolved into the tabletop game with which we
       are all familiar, and often refer to as “pool.” Eventually,
       tabletop billiards evolved into an even smaller scale
       version called bagatelle.
       Bagatelle originated in France in the early eighteenth
       century. Players used a stick, or cue, to hit a small ball
       into pins then later, holes. In the mid eighteenth century
       Japanese billiards improved upon this game further to
       include metal pins to guide the ball, and incorporated a
       metal plunger to send the ball on its course.
       In the 1860s, Montague Redgrave, in Cincinnati USA,
       patented another version that improved the game fur-
       ther. He developed another mechanised spring loaded
       plunger that would launch the ball into the field of play.
       He also incorporated marbles as the balls (ball bear-
       ings were also used) and reduced the size of the game
       course to fit on a table.
       These days, colourful versions such as those featured
       here are just as likely to adorn walls as pieces of cool art!




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