Billiards - The Transformation Years 1674 - 1800
In this article we're going to cover what is called the
transformation years of billiards starting with 1674 and working
our way up to the year 1800.
By the year 1674 the game of billiards was still very similar to
the version played on the ground. The only significant change
was moving the game itself to a table. However, in the next 100
years, changes to the game would come quickly which would make
the game look more like the modern version that we play today.
The elements of ground billiards would slowly disappear
altogether. What would replace these elements are those which
made for some very different variations of the game itself. The
games became more complex and required a great deal more skill.
In the 1700s began what is referred to as the transformation to
the modern game. The innovation which probably changed the game
the most during this time was the creation of the billiard cue.
Makeshift cues had been used until this time. It was actually
the mace that led to the creation of the cue stick and
ultimately to the disappearance of the mace altogether. Players
began to use the narrow end of the mace to make their shots and
because of this discovered a new way of playing.
Prior to this, the mace had always been used to "push" the ball
forward, kind of like a miniature shuffle board stick. The
narrow end had always been the handle. The new way of holding
the mace to make shots came from the difficulty of making shots
where the cue ball was pressed up against the cushion of the
table. Thus the narrow end was better suited for making these
shots. By turning the mace around and shooting with the handle,
players discovered an immediate improvement to their accuracy
and control.
With the invention of the cue came other improvements such as
leather tips, chalk, slate beds, fine cloth, rubber rails and
standard sizes for tables. Better cushions made for better shot
making. This began the birth of "carom" games that started in
and swept across France. Gradually as time went by, billiards
was looked at as a scientific game as well as a game of skill.
The rules of the game, which included the equipment used, began
to become standardized. By the mid 1700s billiards had spread
from Europe throughout the whole world.
With the market and demand for billiards increasing at an
alarming rate, a demand for standardized rules, tables and
equipment had to be met. This of course led to big business.
Manufacturing plants of tables and equipment began to pop up
like daisies. Everyone was trying to get a piece of this ever
growing market, which included merchants, investors and even
kings.
Once again, monarchs competed with each other, not only to make
the best tables and game rooms but to grab the largest piece of
the marketing pie that they could get. Many craftsmen and
merchants actually worked for kings trying to capture as much of
the market as they could. Some would specialize in making
quality cushions while others would concentrate on cue sticks.
Others would work exclusively on designing tables. Importers
would spend fortunes trying to get the finest materials in which
to make the table cloths. It was this industrialization that
forced many of the changes that the game had undergone. After
all, with every new innovation and improvement that meant more
sales as everyone had to have the finest billiard set up that
they could get. This was now big money. Innovations that caught
on big meant profit for a lifetime.