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  • interesting historic facts

    Good afternoon to everyone viewing thesnookerforum today.
    I joined a few weeks ago and I am creating this thread
    for anyone t post any interesting historic snooker facts
    that they know of- I will be very interested to see who can
    post the most fascinating one.

  • #2
    Bo****ks

    A Rule sheet for a game similar to snooker, dated 1836, is the only known serious challenge to the theory that snooker was invented by Field Marshal Sir Neville Chamberlain, C.C.B, C.C.S.I, with his fellow British army officers, in India in 1875.

    Among its Rules is the obligation of the audience to shout out the word "Bo****ks" whenever someone becomes snookered behind the yellow!

    Lest there should be any confusion, the letters "lloc" should be substituted for the *s.

    Comment


    • #3
      Nice one statman.

      BTW: Neville Chamberlain had only managed to achieved the rank of Colonel by the end of his career, and was a Lieutenant at the time he was supposed to have invented snooker. Does that qualify as an interesting fact?

      Comment


      • #4
        I didn't know that. I was quoting from his gravestone in the churchyard of the parish church of St. John, Rownhams, Hampshire. It says:

        THE GRAVE OF
        CHARLOTTE CUYLER
        WIFE OF
        GENERAL SIR NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN
        G.C.B., G.C.S.I.
        DIED AT LORDSWOOD
        26
        TH DECEMBER 1896

        "For ever with the Lord"
        "His mercy is everlasting"


        ALSO OF FIELD MARSHAL
        SIR NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN
        G.C.B., G.C.S.I.

        ..10TH JANUARY | 18TH FEBRUARY
        |
        1820.......|.......1902


        "God be merciful to me a sinner"
        (BY REQUEST).................

        Comment


        • #5
          You have the wrong Neville Chamberlian.

          The one you want is Col Sir Neville Francis Fitzgerald Chamberlain, KCB, KCVO, CB; Knight of Grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem; Lt-Col ISC. Born 13th January 1856, died 28th May 1944.

          The one you have found is his grandfather.

          Comment


          • #6
            Game History - Part One

            I found this article quite interesting:

            http://www.ibsf.org/Activities/Snooker/gamehistory.aspx

            Courtesy of 100-uper

            "THE GAME of snooker was invented by Sir Neville Francis Fitzgerald Chamberlain in 1875. Everyone knows that. Or to be more precise, this is today's commonly accepted theory. But prior to 1938 there was an equally accepted theory that the game been introduced by a "Colonel Snooker" of the Royal Artillery. Then came the momentous day when Neville Chamberlain at last responded to the umpteenth letter speculating on the game's origins, and staked his own claim which was published in The Field on 19th March 1938.
            Neville Chamberlain waited for an amazingly long time before revealing himself as the Father of the game. Despite unremitting speculation on the subject since the game became popular in England in the 1880s Chamberlain waited until he was in his 84th year to reveal that he created the game of snooker in 1875 – some 63 years previously!

            However, there are some serious inconsistencies in the account provided by Chamberlain which could benefit from closer examination.

            The Earliest References

            The earliest contemporary reference which can be accurately dated and gives a detailed account of the game of "Snookers" appears in a letter written on 2nd February 1886 by Captain Sheldrick from Calcutta. This ancient mariner describes a game already popular at his club in Rangoon, Burma (now Myanamar), which was directly under the control of the British Army in India at that time. He describes the game as follows:

            "The way it is played is the same as Shell-out but you put in the yellow, brown, green and black balls, if you take the yellow it is double the ordinary life, if the brown treble, if the green four times, and if the black five times as much as the ordinary life, of course you must pot a red ball in before you can play on one of the other beggars but some times you run in of one of them and got to pay up the price of the ball it is second, third, fourth or fifth ball. You ought to start that game old man it will take first rate I should think with lots of young fellows, it is just the same as shell-out only these other balls are put on the spots up the centre of the table."

            The gambling element involved in Sheldrick's game gives a clue to the reason for its rapid rise in popularity. Imagine playing a game of four-handed snooker where for every point you scored, you were paid one pound by each of the other players. The variation in the value of the balls appealed to both the skilful and the lucky in a way which could not be matched by any other Pool game being played on a billiard table at that time. Even this strange version has characteristics which clearly link it to the modern game having a pyramid of reds to which was added yellow, brown, green and black balls which were "put on the spots up the centre of the table". There are additional references which appear to take Captain Sheldrick's game back to 1884 where it was being played elsewhere amongst the British Army in India.

            The first reliable reference to the game of snooker being played in England comes from a book published in 1889 by Maj-Gen A. W. Drayson. In addition to billiards, the most popular game at that time, the book describes two variations of the game of "Snooker's Pool", both easily recognisable as predecessors of the modern game.

            From other sources, there is also a reference to a set of rules being developed by John Dowland, a minor professional, in the mid-1880s. He was also credited by some early writers with the game's invention, although hard facts regarding this claim are difficult to discover.

            Chamberlain's Game

            The similarity of the all above games to the version played today is important, because the game described in Chamberlain's letter to The Field is not even remotely similar to modern snooker. Describing events in the Officer's Mess of the Devonshire Regiment, at Jubbulpore in 1875, he says:

            "One day it occurred to me that the game of black pool, which we usually played, would be improved if we put down another coloured ball in addition to the black one. This proved a success, and, by degrees, the other coloured balls of higher value followed suit."

            There is a fundamental problem here which requires an understanding of the types of game played on a billiard table at that time. Next to billiards, the most popular game on a billiard-table would have been "Pool". This game actually derives from the earliest form of billiards which had only two balls (no red) and the players would each take a ball and try to pot each other. Pool was (in 1875) a game which could be played by up to 14 players, each had their own cue-ball and they would take turns to try and pot each other in a fixed rotation. Those potted would lose a "life" and pay a monetary forfeit. After losing a number of "lives" a player was eliminated from the game. To differentiate between each player's ball, they were first numbered (in pencil) then coloured by staining with a dye. The range of coloured balls, and the sequence they were played, were initially white, red, yellow, green and brown. The blue, pink and black balls were subsequently added to this series, and would have been available around this time. Additional players could be added to the game by starting this colour rotation again with balls marked by a "cross" or "spot". A number of variations of essentially this same game were played. Amongst these was the "Black Pool" mentioned by Chamberlain. This varied from the basic game only in that the black ball was neutral. It was placed on the centre spot and a player would be entitled to shoot at it only after he had potted his allocated ball.

            It becomes apparent from this that there are two major problems with Chamberlain's description of the birth and development of the game of "Snooker". Firstly, there is no single cue-ball used, with each player using one of the balls on the table as his own, and secondly there is no reference to a pack of red balls. It may be assumed that the reds were added later had not Chamberlain said that the balls added were of a "higher value" and significantly, the red ball was already established in the sequence of the Pool, being the very first colour to be used in the standard sequence.

            The Pyramids Variation

            There were many other variations of Pool games being played in 1875, which were distinguished by the basic principle of each player using his own cue-ball. However, there was also a completely different game called "Pyramids". This involved 15 red balls being placed in a pyramid formation in the same position as modern snooker, and the players shared a single cue-ball in trying to pot the reds. This game was also sometimes called "Shell-out" when more than two players were involved. Pyramids has the two basic features missing from Chamberlain's game-the single cue-ball and the pack of reds. There can really be no doubt that the game evolved from this source and not Black Pool.

            The Compton Mackenzie Connection

            So why was Chamberlain's claim not questioned more closely at the time it was first published? The answer is that it received some very influential support from the famous author and playwright, Compton Mackenzie.
            Shortly after Chamberlain's letter appeared in The Field Mackenzie wrote to The Billiard Player reproducing the claim and leaving it in no doubt that it carried his full support, describing it as "incontrovertible evidence". The letter which appeared in the April 1939 issue of the magazine, received a similar endorsement by the Editor, Harold Lewis, so effectively closing the discussion. It will be noticed that Mackenzie had seen it prudent to change the words in Chamberlain's original letter to The Field so that instead of Chamberlain adding "other coloured balls of higher value" we are now given to understand that "others of different values were gradually added". It is not inconceivable that Mackenzie knew exactly what he was doing in making the change, the only passage in Chamberlain's original account which was altered.

            Mackenzie, who had a good knowledge of pool games, having his own table on which he regularly entertained friends with a game of "Indian Pool" more commonly known as "Slosh". He must surely have researched the story and been satisfied with it's authenticity? Well, perhaps, but if so, he certainly didn't devote much time to the exercise. His autobiography tells us that Mackenzie only learned of the claim in the early part of 1939 when details were given to him by Mr John Bisset, the Chairman of the Billiards Association & Control Council (BA&CC). Chamberlain had apparently written to the BA&CC to register his claim and the papers had lain on Bisset's desk for some time while he was wondering what to do with them. In January 1939, Bisset invited Compton Mackenzie to present the trophy to the winner of the World Professional Snooker Championship at Thurston's Hall on 4th March 1939 and shortly afterwards passed on Chamberlain's letter which he felt would provide Mackenzie with some interest for his speech.
            There is a suggestion that Mackenzie may at least have spoken with Chamberlain. He says in his autobiography, "I was able to promise the old veteran that I would give the true facts". However, this momentous meeting with one of the most famous people in England has not passed into the family history. Enquiries with modern-day descendents of the Chamberlain line revealed that although they are aware of his claim to have invented snooker, the story of a meeting with Compton Mackenzie, if it took place at all, has now been lost.

            This apparent lack of investigation into the claim does not totally discredit the Mackenzie account, but it certainly raises some questions as to just how "incontrovertible" his evidence can be considered.

            Chamberlain's New Game

            Part of Mackenzie's evidence, presumably amongst the documents passed to him from John Bisset, were a number of letters supporting Chamberlain's claim from military personnel, obviously with similarly long memories.

            The strange thing about these letters, which refer to the period between 1884-86, is that they state that Chamberlain was promoting a game of snooker which appears to be essentially the same as the one described by Captain Sheldrick during his visit to Rangoon in 1886. Here is a transformation from the "Black Pool" variation to the "Pyramids" based game, and Chamberlain is connected with both!

            It is crucial to accept at this stage that the original game could not have evolved into the new one, and the more one studies the differences in these games, and the associated billiard table games at that time, the greater will be the conviction that this statement must be true. There is also supporting evidence for this from the references supplied by Chamberlain himself.

            He had joined the Devonshire Regiment, which was under the command of his father, in 1873, and was just 19-years-old when he Christened his game in Jubbulpore two years later. Within months of this momentous event, in 1876, he had moved to the 1st Central India Horse and stayed with this regiment until the outbreak of the Afghan War in 1878. If we are to believe Chamberlain's account, his variation of Black Pool became immediately popular. He wrote "Officers in other regiments at Jubbulpore followed suit with the game in their messes". Surely this is where the changes to the game took place?

            Apparently not. One of the references produced by Chamberlain in 1938 came from Major General W. A. Watson, Colonel of the Central India Horse, who says, "I have a clear recollection of you rejoining the Regiment in 1884. You brought with you a brand new game, which you called snooker or snookers." Not, you will notice, "when you first joined the regiment in 1876". The game of "snooker", despite Chamberlain's claim to have invented it in 1875 – and for it to have been readily adopted throughout the region – was apparently unknown to his old regiment before 1884!

            It is clear that at some point Chamberlain discarded his Black Pool game, which appears to have been so unsuccessful that it was quickly eradicated from the memory of the Central India Horse, and embraced another, giving it the same name. The question now becomes, did he invent this game as well, or did he adopt and rename a game which already existed?

            Chamberlain In India

            We can make a reasonable guess at when this change is most likely to have happened by looking at Chamberlain's military career in India. Chamberlain was certainly well connected in military circles following an established family tradition in his choice of career.

            Although billiard tables were quite common in India, they were not supplied by the British Army. Rather, it was left to the officers of a Regiment to obtain and pay for such items themselves. Something that most were prepared to do in order to alleviate the boredom of their assignments. However, this did not extend to taking them along on military campaigns, and the first of these presented itself to Chamberlain in 1878 when he was involved with the outbreak of hostilities in Afghanistan, which bordered India to the North.

            In this year Chamberlain was assigned to the personal staff of Field Marshal Sir Frederick Roberts, who was Commander-in-Chief of the combined British forces in Afghanistan. Chamberlain's position on the staff was as an Orderly Officer who came under the Aides-de-Camp Captain Pretyman of the Royal Artillery. This is an important connection to which we shall refer later. We can say with some certainty that during the 2½ years of this campaign that Chamberlain would not have seen a billiard table, much less played upon one. The entire Army, including the commanding officers, lived in tents during this period and would not have transported such items with them even if it was feasible to do so. Additionally, the Afghan Nation was of the Muslim religion and as Field-Marshal Roberts tells us "possessed of a fanatical hatred of all things European". So even when the Army captured and based themselves in the Afghan capital, Kabul, they would have been unlikely to discover any billiard tables waiting to provide them with entertainment.

            Chamberlain received a "slight wound" on 1st September 1880 at the decisive battle of Kandahar which concluded the Afghan campaign. The forces under Roberts disbanded almost immediately after this and returned to their regiments. Chamberlain should have returned to the Central Light Horse, but it is known that he did not in fact rejoin this regiment until 1884. The only alternative was for him to have been in hospital with his "slight wound" and/or have taken some extended leave back in England. The probability for the latter being the case is increased because we know that his Commander-in-Chief, Field-Marshall Roberts, did exactly this.

            We next find a reference to Chamberlain in 1881 when he resumes his duties on the personal staff of Roberts who by this time had been promoted to Commander-in-Chief of the Madras Army. We know that Roberts arrived back in India in November 1881, and the following month went to his new headquarters in the hill station of Ootacamund (generally abbreviated to "Ooty") where he would remain based until July 1885. During this time Roberts and his personal staff were involved in extended tours of inspection, which as Roberts says were to "acquaint myself with the needs and capabilities of the men of the Madras Army". This included all the regiments under his command throughout Southern India, which at that time also included Burma, which adjoined India to the East.

            Chamberlain would probably have arrived at Ooty some time prior to December 1881 to find the hill station specifically equipped for recreation. The climate at Ooty was it's greatest attraction for both the British Army personnel and civilians, being almost identical to that found in England. So when Ooty was discovered, it was a dream come true for the British and when a rail link was established, there was no stopping the flow of immigrants. There arose red-tiled white bungalows and rustic cottage of burnt brick and mud, or of local stone, all very English looking, and all set amidst gardens or roses, hollyhocks and geraniums. Indian Maharajahs followed the English nobility and their palaces vied for a place alongside British cottages. Lavish parties become the order of the day; soon social life was a whirl of fun and frolic. Ooty became known as "the Queen of hill stations" and with the Commander-in-Chief of the Madras Army now based there, it saw many visitors during the pleasant summer months.

            Was the game already being played at Ooty at this time, just waiting for Chamberlain to discover it and give it a new name?

            Comment


            • #7
              Game History - Part Two

              Courtesy of 100-uper

              The Burma Connection

              If we assume that the game found in Rangoon by Captain Sheldrick and conveyed in his letter of February 1886 was personally introduced by Chamberlain we can obtain a clue as to when it was developed by the dates that Chamberlain was known to be in Rangoon. There are two known visits. The first of these took place in January 1882, the second in late 1886 during the "Burma campaign". If we are to believe that Snooker was introduced as a result of Chamberlain's visit, the game must have existed before January 1882, within a month or so of his arrival at Ooty. Of course, the game of "snookers" may have been propagated by others, but Chamberlain's extensive travels during this period where not normal and he would certainly be best placed, and have the greatest incentive, to spread a knowledge of the game. We know from the references produced by Compton Mackenzie that he was credited with introducing the game to at least four different regiments in the Madras Army, between 1884 and 1886. He is therefore the most likely candidate to have also introduced it to Rangoon.

              Of course, it could be that a visitor to the Ooty hill station took the game back to Rangoon. This is what Chamberlain had to say of this period: "Each summer that delightful hill station had many visitors, either to hunt with the "Ooty" pack of hounds or for a change of climate. Among them were officers from such big garrisons as Bangalore, or Secunderabad, as well as cheery planters of Mysore or Coorg, who rode up for a few days of gallops over "The Koondas," or a time of good cheer. Snooker soon became a speciality at the club, and, in due course, the news of it was carried far afield, and to billiard players throughout India."

              The only problem with a visitor appearing from Burma is that because of the distances involved, it is one of the least likely outposts to have been entertained. It would have taken at least 10 days (three days by ship to Madras and seven days and nights by train) to reach the hill station. Apart from perhaps an urgent delegation to meet with Field-Marshall Roberts, it seems unlikely that "Ooty" would have seen casual visitors from the Burma garrison.

              With the weight of probability remaining with Chamberlain visiting Rangoon to introduce his game, we have a date of January 1882 for the final version of the game to have existed. This is confirmed to some extent by Chamberlain who wrote "we soon introduced the game at the club at Ooty" indicating that the game was being played there shortly after his arrival at the end of 1881.

              We also know that Chamberlain had not started to promote the Pyramids version of the game before his return from the Afghan War, around November 1880. This gives us a period of approximately one year – most of this time we can assume with some confidence, he spent in England. Could Chamberlain have invented, or seen the new version of his game while in England?

              England: The Birthplace Of Snooker?

              Prior to Chamberlain staking his claim in 1938, there had been plenty of press speculation on the subject of Snooker's origins, most of them pointing to the inventor being a "Colonel Snooker" of the Royal Artillery – although the rank of this officer is also sometimes described as "Captain" – and the birthplace being the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich. If these reports are to be believed, the game was being played in London well before Chamberlain's return in 1881, in fact at least one claim says it must have existed there as early as 1865. However, based on the popular growth of the game after it's first definite reference in Drayson's book of 1889, it seems highly unlikely that the game could have remained hidden in the heart of London for any length of time.

              It is possible that Chamberlain developed the game at some serviceman's club whilst in England in 1881. In later life he was known to have been a member of "Naval and Military Clubs" and this would be just the type of establishment which is likely to have seen the first game of "snookers" in London. But the odds are against Chamberlain having been the person to introduce it during a period of leave after the Afghan War. In Chamberlain's letter to The Field he mentions that "In the eighties rumours of the new game had reached England". A strange statement if he had personally introduced it to his London club in 1881.

              In fact we know from the letter of Captain Sheldrick that the game was still not well-known in England in 1886, while it had become well established in India. This seems to confirm that the game did not start in England.

              India's Claim To Fame

              As the alternatives are eliminated, we are left with the Hill Station of Ooty as the most credible birthplace for the game of "Snookers". From the other evidence available to us, we can also date this event almost precisely as being in the last few months of 1881, while Chamberlain and his fellow officers were awaiting the arrival of their Commander-in-Chief.

              For the same reasons as we eliminated the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich as secretly harbouring the game, so we must dismiss the thought that the game was already established at Ooty when Chamberlain arrived. This was not a hidden outpost, but a facility which was regularly visited during the summer months by officers from nearby garrisons. If snooker had existed for any length of time before Chamberlain's arrival, it would certainly have already spread from this source, under whatever name it may have been called. Chamberlain also confirms that the game was introduced at the time of his arrival. He writes, "I had the great privilege of being on his [Roberts] personal staff, and, with other members of it, we soon introduced the game at the club at "Ooty."

              The "other members" who are significantly credited by Chamberlain as being involved with this introduction were, Lieutenant-Colonel George Tindal Pretyman, R.A., who was Assistant Military Secretary, and Captain Ian Hamilton, of the Gordon Highlanders, who like Lieutenant Neville Chamberlain was an Aides-de-camp.

              It will be remembered that Chamberlain and Pretyman had become acquainted during the Afghan War when both members of Roberts' staff. If the game of "snookers" had existed at Woolwich, albeit with a different name, then Pretyman would have almost certainly have known of it. Could Chamberlain have married the name of snooker to a game known to Pretyman? This cannot be totally discounted, but for this to have happened we must assume that the game had existed in London from the time that Pretyman graduated from the Academy back in 1865. This seems unlikely, although strong claims for this being the case do exist.

              Similarly, if the pair had discussed and agreed the format of the new game during the Afghan War, then surely Chamberlain would have taken the opportunity to try it at the London clubs while back in England.

              Ian Hamilton did not join Roberts' staff until early February 1882, previously being in South Africa, and it is evident that the game already existed when he arrived at "Ooty" from a letter he wrote to the Field in 1938. This letter was in response to a suggestion that the rules were drafted by Lord Kitchener, a suggestion which Hamilton refuted. However, his support of Chamberlain's claim does not read as though it was based on first-hand knowledge, rather an impression that must have existed at Ooty when he arrived there. From this, we can discount any involvement in the development of the game by Ian Hamilton. The most likely scenario therefore is that Chamberlain and/or Pretyman, developed the game during their first months at Ooty, Which one of them actually first thought of adding pool balls to the pyramid set we will probably never know, but we can be certain that Chamberlain was involved to some extent, if only to give it the name he had first coined in 1875.

              The Reluctant Hero

              Why did Chamberlain wait so long to announce his claim? Many would say that this suggests that he had a limited involvement in actually inventing the modern version of the game. By all accounts he was certainly an enthusiastic advocate for the game between 1882 and 1886. In 1885 he was happy to claim to be the inventor of Snooker, having been introduced in that capacity to an English professional player who happened to be visiting Calcutta in that year. This makes his later reluctance to reveal his involvement all the more mysterious.

              After leaving the personal staff of Roberts in 1884, Chamberlain's military career really took off. He became a Lieutenant-Colonel in 1889 and the following year was appointed Military Secretary to Kashmir Government, responsible for reorganising the Kashmir Army. In 1899 he left India and followed Field-Marshal Lord Roberts to South Africa where he was again part of his personal staff. The following year Chamberlain moved a little closer to home when he was appointed Inspector General to the Royal Irish Constabulary, a position he retained until his retirement in 1916. During this time he maintained a residence in Ireland at Castleknock, Co. Dublin.

              It could be that during this period he hardly noticed or cared about the growth in snooker and the questions being asked about it's origins, but after retirement he moved to Ascot in Berkshire where he remained until his death on 28th May 1944. Here he must surely have been aware of the game's growth. Even as a member of "Naval and Military" clubs which he admitted to frequenting, he must have seen the game being played with increasing frequency.

              However, it should be remembered that the other likely candidate, George Pretyman, also remained silent on the subject. Major-General Sir George Pretyman died in 1917 at the age of 72. His career had kept him away from England until he retired from active service in 1907, but this still gave him plenty of opportunity to join the debate had he wished to do so.

              The Australian Connection

              Almost as an aside to this story comes a tantalising prospect that we may have uncovered from Chamberlain's account, the source of the game's introduction to Australia.

              In his letter to The Field he references a meeting one evening "I think it was in 1885" with an English professional to whom he explained the rules of the game, saying "I regret I do not remember his name; he was probably a contemporary of John Roberts and W. Cook." A shortly afterwards Mr. F. H. Cumberlege also wrote to The Field to say that "the professional must have been John Roberts himself who came out to Calcutta in 1885." Although Chamberlain seems unsure of the exact date, it would seem to be a reasonably accurate guess as he was unlikely to have been in Calcutta after 1886 at which time he joined the Burma campaign and thereafter was based in Kashmir.

              The idea that the person to meet Chamberlain was the Champion himself seems to have been readily accepted, but unfortunately Mr. Cumberlege's memory seems to be faulty. There is no record of John Roberts being in India in 1885, nor I suspect, would Chamberlain be likely to forget being introduced to a player who was not only famous, even in India, but also bore the same name as his commander-in-chief. Additionally, anyone who has studied the career of John Roberts would know that having obtained such a marketable commodity he would have promoted it with vigour. Yet Roberts never even mentions the game of Snooker, and there is certainly no record of him playing it until many years after it had become established in England.

              In fact the earliest connection between John Roberts and snooker comes from his son, John W. Roberts, who wrote to the Billiard Player in 1938 saying that his father had been introduced to the game whilst touring America towards the end of 1893. He says of the American game "the balls were of the usual American size, round about 2½ ins. or 2 5/8 ins., the six coloured balls (ivory) were numbered on both sides of the white portion, the middle of the balls having deep coloured bands' yellow 2, green 3, brown 4, blue 5, pink 6 and black 7. The usual fifteen reds and the player's ball included the set." He continues, "My father was so taken up with this game that he not only brought over a set of these balls to England, but he also brought over three American players, Slossen being one of them; I think Ives was another. The first game of snooker which I witnessed by these American players caused some little sensation at the time, but what delighted the audience most were Slossen's trick shots." This surely removes any thoughts that John Roberts had discovered the game in India eight years previously, although where the curious American snooker game originated and what happened to it, is yet another mystery. However, we know that by November 1893, when Roberts returned from America, the English version of snooker was already established in London.

              So who was it that Chamberlain met in India in 1885? The only leading professional who could have been in India during the year in question was Fred Shorter who left England in May 1885 bound for Australia. He was suffering from tuberculosis and had been advised to take a long sea voyage, ironically it appears, by John Roberts himself. Shorter had toured India before (1880), and would probably have stopped there briefly during the voyage. He may therefore have had the opportunity to make this contact with Chamberlain. It is known that he arrived in Melbourne, Australia, around June 1885 where, despite his illness, he was sufficiently well to play a number of public matches promoted by Henry Upton Alcock, the famous billiard table manufacturer.

              Did Shorter carry a copy of the rules of Snooker with him and give these to Alcock? Or possibly to Frank Smith, who was at that time the leading billiards player of that country and under contract to Alcock? Indeed, Smith was known to have claimed that he and Henry Alcock had invented snooker "at the request of members of the Indian army" who visited the Victorian Club in Melbourne in "about 1887".

              Frederick James Shorter did not last long after his arrival in Australia, eventually succumbing to his illness on Saturday 22nd August 1885 at Deniliquin, New South Wales, where he seems to have spent his last days with relatives, but the links are temptingly close to credit him with the introduction of the Chamberlain's game to Australia.

              Conclusions

              The good news for those supporting the claim of Neville Chamberlain as the inventor of the game of snooker, is that despite some extensive research on the subject, I have yet to find any credible evidence to the game existing before the timescales offered by Chamberlain, or being played in any other part of the World other than India until well after these dates.

              The main problem however is that there appears to have been two completely separate versions of game. The idea that one evolved naturally from the other is too much to accept as a credible concept and it is my firm opinion that they must have been devised independently.

              Of course, Sir Neville Chamberlain may have been the sole author of both, and he certainly seems to have been involved with promoting first one, then the other version. The evidence appears to be quite strong that he invented a "Black Pool" version in 1875, but is much more tenuous when it comes to the Pyramids version (the modern game) which we can trace back with reliable documentary evidence only as far as 1884.

              The weight of probability suggests that the metamorphosis between the two versions – at least as far as Chamberlain was concerned – actually took place towards the end of 1881 at the Indian Hill Station of Ootacamund. It was almost certainly complete by January 1882. Chamberlain himself does not claim that he was solely responsible for introducing the game to "Ooty" also crediting by implication, Lieutenant-Colonel George Tindal Pretyman, R.A.

              It is tempting to link George Tindal Pretyman to the early stories which attribute the game to a "Captain" or "Colonel Snooker" of the Royal Artillery although not all of the pieces fit comfortably in this theory. Pretyman certainly meets the key link with the Artillery, having been a graduate of the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich. He was a Colonel at the time we think the game first appeared, although neither he nor Chamberlain would fit the rank of "Captain Snooker" within the three years that either of them were at Ooty. He would have been travelling with Chamberlain and Hamilton as their senior officer, visiting the same regiments, until 1884 when he left Field-Marshal Roberts' staff and thereafter could have promoted the game independently. But even if George Pretyman turned out to be the fabled "Colonel Snooker" this would just establish a connection with the game of which we are already aware, and not give us any new evidence that he invented the game.

              Was Chamberlain telling the whole truth about the extent of his involvement with the game? We must assume so. He was 84 years-old at the time he eventually wrote his letter to The Field and it is difficult to think that he had any incentive other than to relate all the facts as he knew them.

              All the evidence points to it being either Neville Chamberlain or George Tindal Pretyman who took the game of pyramids and suggested adding pool balls with different values. Which one, we will probably never know. We can however be reasonably confident that the name of "Snooker" was adopted from a suggestion by Chamberlain.

              So perhaps Colonel Sir Neville Francis Fitzgerald Chamberlain deserves a place in history as the inventor of the modern game of Snooker, but there are still some unanswered questions in this story which principally revolve around the involvement of George Pretyman.

              ibsf.org's thanks goes to Stephen J. Cox who has provided invaluable research information from Australia, also to Roger Lee and Jack Ben-Nathan for access to material in their personal collections."


              http://www.ibsf.org/Activities/Snooker/gamehistory.aspx

              Comment


              • #8
                Thank you for the endorsement. That is my article, although I have added to its details since it was first published. The additional research only confirms some of the areas which were doubtful, and considers how the name of "Snookers" may have come to be applied to the Woolwich cadets.

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                • #9
                  So there's the former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, the snooker man Neville Chamberlain, and a third one, which is the one I read about, being buried at Rownhams, who is totally unconnected...?

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                  • #10
                    As far as I can determine, General Sir Neville Chamberlain was Colonel Sir Neville's uncle, while Field Marshal Sir Neville Chamberlain was his grandfather. With nine months to think about it, you would have expected them to show a bit more imagination with their names! Don't ask me why General Sir Neville's wife is called Charlotte Cuyler, it is difficult enough to track down information on snooker.

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                    • #11
                      not only a lack of imagination but rather dimishing soldiering skills as each successive generation seems to have only achieved a lesser Rank than the one before!

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                      • #12
                        I once read in a book called the story of
                        billiards and snooker and in the first chapter
                        it mentioned something about in the early days,
                        I can`t quite recall when now,there being a set
                        of billiard balls made of explosives.
                        Does anyone know anything about this?

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                        • #13
                          The first really successful composition ball was invented by John Wesley Hyatt (New York) who formed the Albany Ball Co. in 1869 and marketed them under the trade name of "Bonzoline" The material was also used to produced piano keys and false teeth. It was reputed to be highly inflammable and liable to explode if struck too hard. This seems to have become something of an urban legend and probably wasn't as bad as is generally reported.

                          In 1892 a Director of the firm in England wrote the following letter to The Times in response to a person who claimed that his waistcoat buttons had exploded when stood next to a fire:

                          "Sir.--Our attention has been called by several of our friends and customers to a letter in your issue of the 27th ult., signed C. V. Boys, on the supposition that the remarks in that letter apply to celluloid. We do not make any buttons in celluloid, but we do make "billiard balls, combs, collars, &c," in this material, and should not like the notion to become general that they are or can in any degree become explosive or liable to spontaneous combustion. It is quite true that celluloid is originally composed of vegetable substances dissolved in the same acids as are employed in the manufacture of gun-cotton, and it is also true that camphor is used as a solvent. The latter substance, which is very volatile, is almost entirely got rid of in the drying process, and, indeed, the celluloid is not dry until the camphor is eliminated. Foreign substances of an entirely non-inflammable nature are so largely used that what as known as celluloid is indeed a very harmless material. Yesterday a representative of the Warehouseman and Draper, whose readers are naturally interested in such a question, called upon us and made several experiments with a number of forms of celluloid which he selected at random, and he has since carried out further experiments. Full details of the results will be open to the curious in the next issue of that journal; but we may say here that such articles as hairpins were carefully tested by a gas store and lighted wax vestas, and their representative was convinced that it is not possible to ignite celluloid except by actual contact with flame, and that when ignited it is very easily blown or put out. Silly rumours of billiard balls exploding were "exploded " many years since, and we cannot understand a scientific man like Mr. Boys even alluding to them or placing any credence in such "most extraordinary adventures" as he took the trouble to write to you about—Celluloid Novelty Company (Ernest H. Hindley, Director.) 57, Basinghall-street, London E.C., March 3, 1892."

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                          • #14
                            yes that`s the substance that I`d read about,I thought
                            it didn`t sound very realistic.
                            Anyway I think it`s time I logged off for the night-Goodnight everyone.

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