Inventors
The
History of Bingo
By
Mary
Bellis
In the U.S., bingo was originally
called "beano". It was a country fair game where a dealer would select
numbered discs from a cigar box and players would mark their cards with
beans. They yelled "beano" if they won.
The game's history can be traced
back to 1530, to an Italian lottery called "Lo Giuoco del Lotto D'Italia,"
which is still played every Saturday in Italy. From Italy the game was
introduced to France in the late 1770s, where it was called "Le Lotto",
a game played among wealthy Frenchmen. The Germans also played a version
of the game in the 1800s, but they used it as a child's game to help students
learn math, spelling and history.
When the game reached North America
in 1929, it became known as "beano". It was first played at a carnival
near Atlanta, Georgia. New York toy salesman Edwin S. Lowe renamed it "bingo"
after he overheard someone accidentally yell "bingo" instead of "beano".
He hired a Columbia University math professor, Carl Leffler, to help him
increase the number of combinations in bingo cards. By 1930, Leffler had
invented 6,000 different bingo cards. [It is said that Leffler then went
insane.]
A Catholic priest from Pennsylvania
approached Lowe about using bingo as a means of raising church funds. When
bingo started being played in churches it became increasingly popular.
By 1934, an estimated 10,000 bingo games were played weekly, and today
more than $90 million dollars are spent on bingo each week in North America
alone.
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