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Craps
History -
| 18th
Century - English Hazard
The most fashionable men of 18th and 19th century England rolled dice in a game
called Hazard in luxurious private gambling houses.
In hazard the banker (setter), sets a stake. The player (caster), calls
a main (a number from 5 to 9, inclusive) and then throws two dice. If he
"nicks" (5 is nicked by 5; 6 by 6 or 12; 7 by 7 or 11; 8 by 8 or 12; 9
by 9), he wins the stake. The caster throws
out, losing the stake, when throwing aces or deuce-ace ("crabs", or "craps")
or when throwing 11 or 12 to a main of 5 or 9, 11 to 6 or 8, and 12 to 7. Any
other throw is his chance; he keeps throwing until the chance comes up, when he
wins, or until the main comes up, when he loses. When a chance is thrown, the
setter pays more than the original stake, according to specified odds.
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19th Century - French Hazard
The French learned the game
from the English and called it Craps or French Hazard, a corruption of
"Crabs," the name for a pair of ones. In French
hazard the player throws against the house. In English or Chicken Hazard the
player throws against an opponent.
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| 1813
- American Craps
When settlers arrived in the new
world, they brought their dice with them. And, gradually, as dice were rolled on
riverboats, wharfs and in private houses, a simplified Americanized version of
"Craps" developed: Bernard de
Mandeville adapted Craps from the game Hazard in New Orleans in 1813 and simplified hazard into
the present game of private craps. So the casino dice game of craps
is of American origin.
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| 1830's
- Spread
Private
craps then moved up the
Mississippi river on steamboats and spread to casinos and gambling halls
throughout the country. This original version of craps allowed only "field"
and "come bets", which made the game very vulnerable against fixed dice, which
were often used.
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1865 - John H. Winn's New Version
It wasn't until John H. Winn, a
dice-maker by trade, created an
innovated version of craps, where players could bet for, or against the
roller. This eliminated the usefulness of fixed dice and created the very
popular versions of craps that are played today.
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| 1910
- Moving
West
The
popular game moved west with the frontier, and is played today in homes
and clubs across the country. By 1910, craps
had become the most popular casino game in the world. As many as 30 million
Americans play dice every year. And the stakes can be gigantic. Some
years ago, a Detroit businessman broke a casino bank when he won
$300,000 in less than two hours of play.
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