The expediency of holding a 15-ball pool tournament has been discussed for months in billiard circles.
It is now announced that O'Connor Brothers, who organized the tournament in 1878, which first brought Wahlstrom before the New York public, are making preparations for holding a similar tournament at an early date.
Five hundred dollars in money prizes will be awarded. It will be expected that Wahlstrom, "Al" Lambert, "Lew" Morris, Knot of Jersey City, Jacob Schaefer or his brother Charles Schaefer, "Gleason's" Morris, "Lon" Morris, and Eugene Carter will enter.
It is possible that the present pool champion, Samuel F. Knight, may also become a competitor. While these preparations are on foot, Billiard Champion Jacob Schaefer and ex-Champion William Sexton are practicing for their match at the new "champion's game" of billiards. The game is fixed for the evening of the 22nd. It will be played in Tammany Hall for the Collender Championship Badge and a money stake of $1,000.
Somebody sent me a link to the above-referenced article from The New York Times, published April 7, 1880. Though I am not familiar with any of the players' names, I thought some pool aficionados may have heard of the Schaefers and William Sexton.
The money payouts then aren't much different than a regional tournament today, 120 years later.
I was wondering what 15-ball Pool was, thinking it might be 15-ball rotation, but I'm not sure. Could this be straight pool?
In another article from this era, it states: George F. Slosson has challenged Jacob Schaefer to play a game of billiards for the " Collender badge" and the championship of America....
I am curious as to what the Collender badge is and would very much like to see a picture of it and add it to my personal collection of pool pics. I'm not sure one even exists anymore. Back then, I guess instead of tin cups, pool players won this Collender badge.
From reading these older pool news articles, I discoverd the "Brunswick" name in Brunswick-Balke-Collender company from the 1920s. I'm thinking Collender must have been here before Brunswick, but maybe not. I'm still reading and learning.
If anybody has a picture of that badge, please share! I wonder if one even still exists today, and if so, how much it would be worth! TIA!
JAM
It is now announced that O'Connor Brothers, who organized the tournament in 1878, which first brought Wahlstrom before the New York public, are making preparations for holding a similar tournament at an early date.
Five hundred dollars in money prizes will be awarded. It will be expected that Wahlstrom, "Al" Lambert, "Lew" Morris, Knot of Jersey City, Jacob Schaefer or his brother Charles Schaefer, "Gleason's" Morris, "Lon" Morris, and Eugene Carter will enter.
It is possible that the present pool champion, Samuel F. Knight, may also become a competitor. While these preparations are on foot, Billiard Champion Jacob Schaefer and ex-Champion William Sexton are practicing for their match at the new "champion's game" of billiards. The game is fixed for the evening of the 22nd. It will be played in Tammany Hall for the Collender Championship Badge and a money stake of $1,000.
Somebody sent me a link to the above-referenced article from The New York Times, published April 7, 1880. Though I am not familiar with any of the players' names, I thought some pool aficionados may have heard of the Schaefers and William Sexton.
The money payouts then aren't much different than a regional tournament today, 120 years later.

I was wondering what 15-ball Pool was, thinking it might be 15-ball rotation, but I'm not sure. Could this be straight pool?
In another article from this era, it states: George F. Slosson has challenged Jacob Schaefer to play a game of billiards for the " Collender badge" and the championship of America....
I am curious as to what the Collender badge is and would very much like to see a picture of it and add it to my personal collection of pool pics. I'm not sure one even exists anymore. Back then, I guess instead of tin cups, pool players won this Collender badge.

From reading these older pool news articles, I discoverd the "Brunswick" name in Brunswick-Balke-Collender company from the 1920s. I'm thinking Collender must have been here before Brunswick, but maybe not. I'm still reading and learning.
If anybody has a picture of that badge, please share! I wonder if one even still exists today, and if so, how much it would be worth! TIA!

JAM
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