Billiards - The Transformation Years 1800 - 1826
In this article on the history of billiards we pick up the
transformation years starting at the turn of the 19th century.
After the cue itself, the next radical change to the game of
billiards was the invention of the cue tip by Captain Mingaud,
an imprisoned French soldier, in the early 1800's. Prior to this
invention, leather had been used at the end of cue sticks. But
these tips did little to have any effect at all on shot making.
They were really just leather patches put in place to protect
the wood itself. Nobody is exactly certain of the date Mingaud
came up with his invention but it is estimated that it was
sometime between 1807 and 1823. The difference between his cue
tips and the earlier ones was the radical effect it had on shot
making with the "spin" that could be put on the ball. This
allowed for more accuracy and control.
Mingaud himself was a student of the physics of shot making. He
literally transformed the cue into a scientific instrument. By
creating a hard backing, so that the tip could adhere to the
surface of the cue, he reduced the pressure exerted on the wood.
In addition to this an even distribution of force was created
between the point of impact and the shaft of the cue. But the
biggest change was the cue tip itself. By rounding off the
surface he increased the area of the tip that could put a
rotation on the ball itself. So that when the ball was hit off
center it created what is now called "english" or "backspin."
This changed the game forever.
As improvements to the cue were made, so were improvements made
to the table. Other innovations also came about that radically
changed the game from the construction of the tables to the
improvements in cushions and balls to the invention of chalk.
Also came about the fist tournaments and standardized rules for
a variety of new forms of the game.
Like the game itself, table improvements also came about slowly
until the 1800s. Even though the early tables that the monarchs
used were beautiful to look at, functionally they were quite
crude in comparison to our modern day versions. Early tables
were constructed by cabinet workers. Because their beds were
made of wood they warped easily within just a few years and
structurally were not sturdy at all. The cushions were no more
than just attached wooden rails which were unpadded until the
1600s. Their function was simply to keep the balls in play after
being struck. The newer pads added a strategic element to the
game play.
In 1826 England's John Thurston made a change in the way table
beds were made, that would change the game forever. Because he
was unhappy with the tendency of wood beds to warp he searched
for a new material to make them from. Marble had been used on
some tables with success but the cost just made it impractical.
He looked for something cheaper that was more readily available
that would be used on every table that his company produced.
We'll cover this radical improvement that changed the game
forever as well as other improvements in our next article in
this series.