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Fact. More than 67 million people in the United States bowl during a year.
Fact. More than 1.3 million people compete regularly in league play
certified by the United States Bowling Congress. Staff at USBC
Headquarters in Arlington works closely with its more than 1,600 local
and state associations to serve league bowlers.
Bowling has
soared into the upper echelon of sports, setting a steady pace by
blending strong organization with modern centers in which to
participate. Although the sport now appeals to people from all walks of
life, entering a bowling center today would give few clues to its
origin.
Bowling has been traced to articles found in the tomb of
an Egyptian child buried in 5200 B.C. The primitive implements included
nine pieces of stone at which a stone "ball" was rolled, the ball having
first to roll through an archway made of three pieces of marble.
Another
ancient discovery was the Polynesian game of ula maika, also utilizing
pins and balls of stone. The stones were to be rolled at targets 60 feet
away, a distance which today still is one of the basic regulations of
tenpins.
Bowling at pins probably originated in ancient Germany,
not as a sport but as a religious ceremony. Martin Luther is credited
with settling on nine as the ideal number of pins.
The game moved
throughout Europe, the Scandinavian countries, and finally to the
United States, with the earliest known reference to bowling at pins in
America made by author Washington Irving about 1818 in "Rip Van Winkle."
The
game was being played throughout the world and rules were different
almost everywhere. Even basic equipment was not the same. In fact, why
and when the extra pin was added from the European game of ninepins to
the American game of tenpins still is a mystery.
Regardless of
how the game came into being, it became so popular by mid-19th century
indoor lanes were being built throughout Manhattan and the Bronx and on
westward, in Syracuse, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Chicago, Milwaukee and other
cities with large German populations.
In 1875, delegates from
nine bowling clubs in New York and Brooklyn met in Germania Hall in the
Bowery and organized the National Bowling Association. This was the
first attempt to bring order out of chaos.
Disagreement raged
between East and West, principally the alignment of New York State
bowlers against everyone else to the west. On Sept. 9, 1895, the
American Bowling Congress was organized in Beethoven Hall in New York
City.
A group of 40 women, encouraged by proprietor Dennis J.
Sweeney of St. Louis, met at Sweeney's establishment in 1916 and formed
what was known as the Women's International Bowling Congress.
AMERICAN BOWLING CONGRESS
ABC's roots can be traced to many people. One was Thomas Curtis, who
became ABC's first president and chaired several historic meetings that
produced an organization that succeeded where others had failed.
The
adoption of rules at the Sept. 9, 1895 meeting in New York's Beethoven
Hall, and most important, the distribution of nearly 1,000 copies by
mail to bowling groups in many parts of the United States, was the move
which created interest and trust in the fledgling group. Within a few
months, there were members in Buffalo, N.Y., Cincinnati, Lowell, Mass.,
Boston, Chicago, St. Louis, Wheeling, W. Va., Kansas City and Quebec.
After
that, representatives of local, state and provincial associations like
these have annually met in convention to review rules and consider
proposed changes. Also elected were officers and directors, all of whom
serve voluntarily and without pay. The only exceptions were the
executive director and assistant director, who oversaw the home office
staff.
Service was ABC's aim since its early days. Service began
when a league formed and applied for sanction. The sanction, with
membership cards distributed to each bowler, gives ABC a record of its
membership and entitled the league and its members to the following
services:
• Automatic bonding to protect bowler funds from theft, burglary and misuse.
• Awards for every level of achievement from 300 games to 700 and 800 series to league champions, most improved league bowlers and those who bowl a game of 100 and a series of 150 or more pins above or more pins above average
• Essential tools for league officers including rulebooks, schedules, handicap charts, average calculators and other aids
• Rules advice and counseling
• Free tournament sanctioning
• Equally important in maintaining standard bowling conditions are the programs of lane certification and equipment testing and research. Every lane is checked and measured each season to assure it meets ABC/Women's International Bowling Congress specifications. Pins, automatic pinsetting machines, scoring devices and other allied equipment undergo thorough and lengthy testing before receiving approval for use in ABC sanctioned league or tournament competition
• Publicizing the inner workings of the Congress, as well as the feats of bowlers coast to coast, is the role of the Public Relations department. Bowlers were as well informed as any sports group in the world through ABC's membership publication, American Bowler, and through news releases, pamphlets, brochures and other publications.
Although the service programs have been thorough, new groups created
special attention. In 1963, ABC added a Seniors program and designed a
complete set of services for the nation's senior citizens. The ABC
National Seniors Tournament for men 55 and older was initiated in 1964
and expanded to reach every state in 1982.
In 1966, a Collegiate
Division was initiated by the Congress to provide a program for the
nation's college men while at the same time bridging the service gap
between junior and adult competition.
With the formation of the
Young American Bowling Alliance in 1982, the Collegiate Division became a
part of that organization. It was returned to the ABC/WIBC in 1998 and
renamed College Bowling USA.
The most spectacular of ABC's many
services was the national championship tournament, the oldest bowling
event in the nation. A fixture on the sports scene since 1901, it is
unrivaled as a participant spectacle. Held in America's major cities,
the ABC Tournament runs 12 to 16 hours daily for more than 100
consecutive days.
On lanes specially-installed in public arenas,
as many as 17,000 teams and 92,000 individuals participate each year.
The prize fund exceeds $4 million.
ABCs glamour event was the
Masters, which matched the world's greatest bowlers in head-to-head
double elimination competition following qualifying round play. Each
match consists of three games throughout the competition untip the
televised stepladder finals.
Whether through leagues or tournaments, ABC provided its members options, all with the aim of having fun.
WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL BOWLING CONGRESS
There
are many colorful stories about when women began bowling in the United
States. Seniors reminisce about the turn of the century, when their
mothers or grandmothers sneaked in with (or without) their husbands to
try out the bowling game. Often they did so at the risk of their
reputations.
Tales are told about women bowlers being screened
off from view behind partitions or drapes or being allowed to bowl only
when men were not using the alleys. Those were the days of high button
shoes, skirts to the ankles, cumbersome apparel and tenpin
accommodations that were hardly appealing.
Old photos document
scenes of women bowling as early as the 1880s. The first recorded
formalized bowling for women began in 1907 in St. Louis, when Dennis J.
Sweeney, a bowling proprietor and sportswriter, organized a women's
league.
Inklings of national interest also were being shown. That
same year, many women accompanied their husbands to the American
Bowling Congress Tournament in St. Louis, as they had been doing for
several years. In St. Louis, the women laid plans to hold their own
tournament, the following year, on ABC Tournament lanes in Cincinnati
after the annual men's event had concluded. A second women's tournament
in 1909 followed the ABC event in Pittsburgh.
Records show little
activity until 1915, when Ellen Kelly, an avid bowler, formed the St.
Louis Women's Bowling Association. Buoyed by her success, she wrote to
proprietors across the country asking for names of women who might be
interested in a national organization of their own. She followed with
letters to those women, urging the organization of local associations
and offering advice on rules and establishing an organization.
By
the fall of 1916 in St. Louis, Sweeney was there to help Mrs. Kelly
stage the first "national tournament." There were eight teams entered
and champions were decided in team, doubles, singles and all events. The
prize fund was $225.
Following the tournament, those 40 women
from 11 cities met at Sweeney's Washington Recreation Parlor and created
the national organization that became, after several name changes, the
Women's International Bowling Congress. Fifty years later, a charter
member described the initial tournament as "frankly plain, there were
eight alleys and four rows of benches for visitors a small counter
square in back of the benches was used to sell soda pop, popcorn,
peanuts, etc." She also recalled that the "meeting was more of a social
gathering, and we gave little thought that it would develop into such a
big organization."
The 40 pioneers elected their first national
officers and adopted a constitution and bylaws that included the
following purposes: To provide, adopt and enforce uniform rules and
regulations governing the play of American tenpins; to provide and
enforce uniform qualifications for tournaments and their participants;
to hold a national tournament, and to encourage good feeling and create
interest in the bowling game.
Those original precepts became the
foundation of WIBC, which developed into the largest sports organization
in the world for women. The 40 pioneers set the pattern for 1.2 million
WIBC members, who bowled in more than 60,000 sanctioned leagues in
approximately 2,700 local associations in every state and several
foreign countries.
That humble national tournament – with its
eight-team entry – was the forerunner of what is now the largest women's
sports event in the world. In fact, the 1997 WIBC Championship
tournament held in Reno, Nev. attracted 14,872 five-woman teams, the
largest entry for any team tournament in history. There were 88,279
individuals, a women’s world record. The tournament celebrated its 100th
tournament in 2019.
That first tentative gathering on the
benches in Washington Recreation Parlor evolved into a model of bowling
democracy, the WIBC annual meeting. More than 3,000 delegates
representing local and state associations attended the WIBC annual
meeting to adopt rules and select national leaders. Similar annual
meetings at local, state and provincial levels assured the
self-government concept. Nationally, WIBC was governed by a board of
directors elected by the delegates. Administrative policies and
procedures were implemented by a staff at WIBC headquarters in suburban
Milwaukee.
Along with growth and development came a multiplicity
of services. Leagues received a wealth of rulebooks, record-keeping
materials and prepackaged kits to keep them functioning smoothly. Local,
state and provincial associations benefited from a variety of materials
to help them conduct their affairs more efficiently, ranging from
handbooks, information sheets and forms to educational seminars,
workshops and counseling from staff members and field representatives. A
bonding and insurance program provided by WIBC covered association and
league funds. A tournament sanctioning program was another important
service.
A description of WIBC's awards for members would fill a
chapter in itself. They recognized achievements within the realm of
every bowler, from the beginner to the world champion.
From its
humble beginnings, WIBC stood for tradition, friendship, fun,
competition, leadership and success. It has meant this and more to the
millions of women who proudly called WIBC my organization.
https://www.bowl.com/About/About_Home/History_of_bowling/
History of Bowling
5200BC
Bowling may authentically and truthfully trace its history back over 7000 years. Sir Flinders of Petrie, emeritus professor of Egyptology at the University of London, while examining the contents of the grave of an Egyptian child, discovered implements for playing a game decidedly similar to our modern tenpins. The date of this Egyptian child’s burial has been authentically placed at 5200BC.
This is the oldest accurately know form of bowling.
Research by Dr. Malcolm Rogers, hear curator of the San Diego museum, divulges that the Polynesians (inhabitants of the South Sea Islands), participated in an ancient game of bowling, in which small elliptical balls and round, flat discs, about 3.5” to 4” diameter, of stone were used. One rule of this game, called ‘ULA MAIKA’, set the distance, the stones were to be bowled, at 60 feet; the identical specification used in Tenpin Bowling.
50BC
It is absolutely impossible to secure, even though careful research, accurate data of the ancient game of bowling or ‘bowls’. Some hazard the gesture that the men and boys of the Stone Age started one form of bowling by rolling large pebbles and rocks at a row of painted stones or cones which had a flat base.
According to some authorities, its place of origin in Europe can quite definitely be placed in what is today Northern Italy. The Helvetii, living in the Alpine regions during Caesar’s time (50BC) were said to have played a game similar to the present day Italian game called ‘BOCCIE’.
4AD
The ancient chronicles of Paderborn reveal that the first bowling was done in cloisters of cathedrals. It was the custom of the canons to have parishioners, in turn, place their pins at one end of the cloister. This represented the ‘Heide’ meaning heathen. The parishioner then was given a ball, and asked to throw it at the ‘Heide’. If a hit was scored, it indicated that the thrower was leading a clean and pure life and was capable of slaying the heathen; if he missed, it meant that a more faithful attendance at services would help his aim. At the conclusion of all such tests a dinner was given and the successful ‘Kegelers’ were praised and toasted. The failures were encouraged to try a little later on. All of this, according to the findings of Pehle, had its origins as early as the third or fourth centuries AD.
400 to 1500AD
Whilst some authorities have only been able to trace the game back to the 12th century, Strutt, in his ‘Sports and Pastimes of the People of England’, hold that the game probably originated during the Middle Ages (400 to 1500AD). In 1300 only 3 pins were used in some parts of Germany: in others the number scaled as high as 17, which was the rule on Silesia for many generations.
William Fitzstephen in his ‘Survey of London’, a work written in Latin at about the end of the 12th Century, is the first authority that we have on the subject of the national games, as played in England at this period, and although it is possible that similar games have been played by other nations, both east and west, and throughout all ages, even the hieroglyphics of the ancient Babylonians and Egyptians depict games with balls, yet so far as the English game of bowls is concerned, this constitutes the first possible reference to the game.
Martin Luther was an enthusiastic bowler. Experiments convinced him that nine pins made an ideal game and this finally settled upon as the standard for the game in Germany. When played indoors, the ball was rolled at the pins; when played outdoors, if the surface was rough, a player was permitted to choose between rolling and throwing at the pins.
Although all these games had their part in the development of the modern game, it is probable that the one to which the sport of today is most closely allied is the ancient game of ninepins. This game, originally played by the Dutch as well as the Germans and the Swiss, was bowled upon beds of clay cinders. It is certain that originally all these games were outdoor pastimes, played in the open air. Later about 1200 AD as the game became more popular, a single board about 12 to 18 inches wide and about twenty or thirty yards in length was used as the lane bed. Pins were set up, three pins in each of three rows, on a board platform from 36 to 48 inches square. It was naturally impossible to hit any of the corner pins, so the pins were respotted after each ball was delivered. From time to time various improvements were made, such as providing a shelter over each end of the lane for the participants and spectators on one end, and for the individual or boy who stood by the frame to set up the pins which were bowled down. Later a small trough was placed on one side of the lane with a gradual descent from the pins to the bowlers. The pin-boy called out the number of pins beaten down which was credited to the score of the bowler. Here we find the origin of the ball return.
Finally many decided to enclose the entire lane, so here we have the origin of the indoor bowling lane, the first of which is understood to have opened in London in 1455 AD.
C1800
Whilst the game, through its different forms, continued to be developed in many in many countries the first evidence of bowling in the Americas is c1650 by the findings of a reproduction of a painting in the Bettimann Archives in New York City which depicts the Dutch bowling at pins on Bowling Green, New York. In British North America bowls first saw the light in Novia Scotia. In 1734 an enclosure was reserved as a green for the officers if the garrison of Annapolis (Port Royal).
The first appearance of ninepins in America is unknown but by about 1820 it had become generally acceptable to those who were interested in bowling. According to sports writers and sports historians, gamblers had control of the game by about 1850. Before this, in 1841, ninepin was banned by the state of Connecticut and this action also followed in many states until ninepin was illegal everywhere in the United States.
The actual origins of Tenpin are unknown, although it is thought to have come into being between 1820 and 1830. The legislators of Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York, for some reason permitted, Tenpin to grow.
From the Western Bowlers Journal Bowling Encyclopaedia the game was at its zenith in America in the 1840’s, and in New York, bowling lanes existed on nearly every block on Broadway. During the 1860’s, and through the persistence of the German population, the game continued to flourish. At the same time finger holes were cut in the 9” balls and popularity grew with bowling clubs and tournaments being organised.
First uniform specifications and rules were attempted in 1875 when 27 delegates. Chosen from nine bowling clubs, met in Germania Hall in the Bowery and organised the National Bowling Association. This body realised the necessity for a revision of the rules of the game of bowling and immediately appointed three of their number, gentlemen who were considered expert bowlers of that time, and who were known as great jurists of the laws of the game. These gentlemen were duly authorised by the main body to revise the rules of the game, draft new laws, and to submit their action to the larger body at a future meeting of the then new ‘National Bowling Association’. The results of this expert committee’s action were to place restrictions on the length of the lanes, or rather the distance from the centre of the head pin spot to the bowler’s end of the lane, so the bowlers when delivering the ball be restrained under penalty from going beyond a definite point or deadline; restrictions in the size of the balls; require dead wood to be removed from the lanes, and to declare all balls bowled in the gutter to be dead. The deadline was made to measure 60’ from the centre of the head pin spot to the bowlers’ end of the lane or foul line as it is now called. The pins which were in common use at this time measured 17” in length, 161/2” in circumference at the thickest part, and 2” at the bottom. Great vredit is due to this first Association: the revision of rules and specifications are responsible for the advancement and popularity of American Tenpins. The National Bowling Association was limited in scope, lacked appeal and failed to make good. It was followed in 1890 by the ‘American Amateur Bowling Union’. This organisation likewise soon disintegrated because of limitations, lack of initiative and foresight.
C1900
Despite the dissolution of the National Bowling Association and the American Amateur Bowling Union, there remained a definite need for a governing organisation for the bowling game known then as American Tenpins. In September 1895, a group of men met at the Beethoven Hall in New York City to form such an organisation. This group voted to call itself the ‘American Bowling Congress’ and the foresight and leadership of these pioneers is reflected today as the ABC has grown into one of the sports world’s most respected organisations.
Having established rules for Tenpins, these men remained firm in seeing that these rules were enforced. By dealing in a strict but fair manner with problems the ABC quickly earned the respect of all those who enjoyed the tenpin sport. In those early days bowlers banded together into clubs. The met for weekly intra-club competition and then there were many exciting matches between rival clubs. While the heaviest concentration of such clubs was again among the German settlement in New York, the game also had its devotees in other leading cities across the nation. Leaders of the game in these other cities adopted the rules of the American Bowling Congress and came to the ABC conventions to lend support and pass along their ideas to improve the game and the organisation.
The popularity of the game continued to grow and the founding fathers of the congress realised their role as governing body of the game, but also recognised the value of freedom of operation at the club or league level and their basic philosophy remains today. ABC leagues have a great deal of freedom of operation as long as they do not violate any playing rules of the ABC. Also the value of local organisations was recognised by the national body and today there are 3,000 such local ABC associations throughout the United States.
https://www.gotenpin.co.uk/about/history-of-bowling
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