Willie Hoppe in 1899

Bob Jewett

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From the November 19th, 1899 New York Times http://query.nytimes.com/search/ :

NOTABLE BOY BILLIARD PLAYER.
"Willie" Hoppe, Little Higher than the Table, Makes Great Shots.

A small, light-haired boy has attracted much attention lately by his marvelous billiard playing in the rooms of Maurice Daly.

The boy, "Willie" Hoppe. of Cornwall-on-the-Hudson, is but eleven years old, and not very large for his age, his head and shoulders barely reaching above the billiard table.

He began playing on an old pool table in his father's hotel, his opponent in those games being his brother Frank, who is slightly older.

The table was in poor condition, and the balls were but little better, but these handicaps did not feaze the youngsters, who played game after game, using a chair to elevate them in making the shots.

Maurice Daly has the youngster in hand, and believes he will be the equal of any player in this country within the next five years. He has the best points of Schaefer's game, and the accurate knowledge of angles that is a feature of Student Slosson's play.

During the past week the boy has been an attentive looker-on at all the games of the intercity and interclub amateur billiard tournament at Slosson's Academy, and has taken note of all the difficult shots that were made.

Friday was ladies' night in the tournament, and the youngster participated in and won an exhibition contest from Edward McLaughlin, the veteran player. The old style game, without the use of balk lines, was played. "Willie" evoked the applause of the crowd by magnificent open table work at the start. He finished the game with a beautiful run along the rails, nursing the balls in clever fashion.

Some of his carroms were very difficult, and the boy was compelled at times to lie along the table on his stomach in order to reach the ivories. He has done wonderful work in practice, having an unfinished run of 310 to his credit at the straight rail game. His record at fourteen-inch balk line is 98, his best average for 200 points being 12.
 
Great article. I notice, though, that the term 'pool table' gets used in describing how he started out playing. Would that simply be a mistake on the part of the author, or did he actually begin by playing pool before switching discplines? I'd have assumed that in an era when billiards were so well-known to the public that you wouldn't have seen the two terms used interchangably.
 
Willie in 1900

Here's Willie a year later.
 

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Great article. I notice, though, that the term 'pool table' gets used in describing how he started out playing. Would that simply be a mistake on the part of the author, or did he actually begin by playing pool before switching disciplines? I'd have assumed that in an era when billiards were so well-known to the public that you wouldn't have seen the two terms used interchangeably.
No, according to his autobiography, he started with pool.

One day, my father lifted me up on a chair, placed a cue in my hands and arranged two balls near a corner pocket. ...
He was about 6. In the fall of 1895 the Hoppe boys gave an exhibition at Maurice Daly's room and Daly said that Willie should switch from pool to carom, and so he did.
 
The inlay on the table young Hoppe is playing on in the picture is sure beautiful.

Bob were tables affordable to a regular Joe in young Hoppe's day or were tables generally only bought by billiard halls and private clubs?
 
The inlay on the table young Hoppe is playing on in the picture is sure beautiful.

Bob were tables affordable to a regular Joe in young Hoppe's day or were tables generally only bought by billiard halls and private clubs?
A fairly plain 8-foot table cost about $160 in 1914. See the Brunswick Rule Book which has some tables in the middle. According to one on-line calculator, that would be $3400 in today's dollars.

I have some price lists from around that time, but they do not quote prices for tables. I think they wanted you to talk to a salesman in the retailer's office.
 
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