1888 • 1 November
Frederick Henry Ayres of London files an application for a copyright for “Rules for Playing the new game of ‘Spoof’ for two players”, which is an ordinary tiddlywinks game
1888 • 6 November
Copyright status was granted for “Rules for Playing the new game of ‘Spoof” for two players” by Frederick Henry Ayres
1888 • 8 November
Joseph Assheton Fincher of London files a provisional specification for an English patent for a “New and Improved Game”
Keyword • history
UK Patent • 16,215
Game associated with patent • Tiddledy-Winks, published by John Jaques & Son
1888 • 12 December
Harold Charles Wilson of Norfolk, England and Alice Constance Inverarity Margary of Tunbridge Wells, England are granted a patent for a tennis version of tiddlywinks, “A Modification of Lawn Tennis Forming an Indoor Game”
UK Patent • 18,789
Game associated with patent • The New Game of “Flitterkins”, published by John Jaques & Son
1889 • 29 January
Joseph Assheton Fincher applies for an English trademark for “TIDDLEDY-WINKS”
UK Trademark • 85,800
1889 • 15 May
Joseph Assheton Fincher’s “TIDDLEDY-WINKS” trademark is published in Trade Marks Journal
UK Trademark • 85,800
1889 • 6 June
First publication date of the rules for “Golfette” by George Scott of Birkenhead, England, per copyright submission.
1889 • 6 June
George Scott of Birkenhead, England files application to patent a golf-style tiddlywinks game
Second known UK tiddlywinks patent
1889 • 31 July
“FLITTERKINS” trademark registered by John Jaques in England
UK Trademark • 91,920
1889 • 19 October
Joseph Assheton Fincher’s patent application approved
UK Patent • 16,215
1889 • 20 December
George Scott of England files the first U.S. tiddlywinks patent, for a golf-style tiddlywinks game.
US Patent • 432,170
1890 • 18 January
A printed query about tiddledy-winks, a new game in British Guiana
Source • Notes & Queries, page 48
1890 • 22 September
E. I. Horsman Jr. (at age 17) applied for a patent for Parlor Tennis
Source • US Patent # 442,438
1890 • 7 November
Extensive rules for tiddledy-winks, including tiddledy-winks tennis, appears in a book
Source • The Young Folks’ Cyclopaedia of Games and Sports, by John D. Champlin Jr. and Arthur E. Bostwick (date from introduction) • pages 725-726
1890 • 13 December
Frederick Henry Ayres submits application to copyright Spoof Cricket
1891 • 23 October
John Kendrick Bangs’ book Tiddledywink Tales is copyrighted
US Copyright # 38,009
1891 • 6 December
Macy’s newspaper ad includes tiddledy winks
Source • New York Times, page 17
1891 • 6 December
John Kendrick Bang’s book Tiddledywink tales is reviewed
Source • New York Times, page 19
1892 • 6 April
John Kendrick Bangs’ book The tiddledywink’s poetry book is copyrighted in the USA
Copyright # 15,185
1892 • April 24
Emily Lytton (the daughter of Bulwer-Lytton) wrote a letter to Rev. Whitwell Elwin about a fabulous tiddledy-winks party
Source • In A Blessed Girl, 1954, pages 97-98
1936 • February 20
The Duke of Kent sees TIDDLYTENNIS (An Ernest Sewell game manufactured by The London Magical Co.) played at the British Industries Fair
Source • Daily Sketch (or Telegraph), 21 Feb 1936
1947
Early reports of tiddlywinks play at Cambridge University in England
1954 • November
The beginnings of enduring tiddlywinks activity at Cambridge University, led by Bill Steen and R. C. Martin
Keywords • history
Source • On the Mat by Guy Consterdine
1955 • January 15
The Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club (CUTwC) is formed
Keywords • club
Source • On the Mat by Guy Consterdine
1955 • June 14
First match (CUTwC vs. Whitcomb’s Winkers) played under modern squopping rules
Keywords • tournament
1956
Marchant Trophy (teams championship) established
Keywords • trophy
1958 • 13 June
The English Tiddlywinks Association (ETwA) is founded
Keywords • Club
1958 • March 1
CUTwC plays The Goons, representing Prince Philip, garnering substantial publicity
Keywords • tournament– publicity
Source • Winks Rampant, by Guy Consterdine
1958 • May 9
First CUTwC vs. OUTS match
Keywords • tournament
1958 • June 11-12
Official rules of tiddlywinks agreed upon at First World Congress
Keywords • rules
Source • Winking World 7, March 1965
1958
4-2-1 scoring system defined for first, second, and third place finishers in a game (but there’s still no point transfer for a putout)
Keywords • rules
1958
Free turns are now limited to the number of free winks after the squop-up (UK term; US term is squop-out)
Keywords • rules
1958
The time limit in a game is optional; games were usually played until a potout
Keywords • rules
1958
Marchant Games-supplied equipment becomes official tournament standard
Keywords • equipment
1960
First Varsity Match held, Cambridge vs. Oxford
Keywords • tournament
1960
Oxford introduces double squop strategy at Cambridge-Oxford match
Keywords • play
1960
Time limit (to be agreed upon by team captains) introduced as a result of the double squop strategy (previously games ended via potouts)
Keywords • rules
1961 • January
Prince Phillip created the Silver Wink Trophy (made by Robert Welch) for the winner of the British university team championships
1961
Xylophone freeing shot outlawed; current rule for desquopping introduced (can hit additional winks only if they are directly below the top wink hit first)
Keywords • rules
1961 • February 1
Winking World, an official ETwA publication, first appears
Keywords • publication
1962 • August to September
Four winkers from the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society (OUTS) tour the United States, sponsored by Guinness Stout and others
Keywords • tournament – publicity
Source • Oxford Tour of U.S.• 1962
1962
British winkers attend university in Canada and start “pre-NATwA” winks teams
1962
Steve Carnovsky pots 4 out of 5 from the line during a Harvard team practice; the source of the name for the Carnovsky shot.
Keywords • history – lexicon
Reference • Life magazine, 14 December 1962
1962 • December 14
Article on Harvard tiddlywinks match appears in Life, a prominent US magazine.
Keywords • publicity
1963
Time limit points increased from 2 to 3 for a potted wink (to encourage more potting)
Keywords • rules
1963
Addition of five extra rounds after the time limit for a game expires
Keywords • rules
1963
Rule change to only lose one turn no matter how many of your own winks sent off the mat
Keywords • rules
1963 • June 16
The International Federation of Tiddlywinks Associations is established
1965
Baselines are added to mats
Keywords • equipment
1965
Point transfer for potting out introduced to the rules
Keywords • rules
1965
Squidge-off winner ends rounds added to rules
Keywords • rules
1966 • February 27
The North American Tiddlywinks Association (NATwA) is founded
Keyword • club
1969 • April
Newswink, an official NATwA publication, first appears
Keywords • publication
1969 • (approximately)
Sharp squidgers become prevalent in England when Keith Seaman develops a method for machining them
Keywords • equipment
1969
First published discussion about the possible advantage of dominant corners, in Winking World
Keywords • play – lexicon
1970 • May 2-3
First NATwA National Pairs tournament held
Keywords • tournament
1970 • (approximately; may have been 1969)
Bristol shot developed at Bristol University in England
Keywords • play
1971 • April 4
The first ETwA National Singles tournament was completed, then called the Open Singles, and held on multiple dates starting in 1970
Keywords • tournament
Source • Winking World 19, July 1971
1972 • March toApril
MIT tour of England; sharp squidgers brought back to USA; boondock strategy “exported” to England
Keywords • play
1972
Tournament games no longer played on the floor
Keywords • play
1972
First ETwA National Pairs tournament held
Keywords • tournament
1972 • May
First NATwA National Singles tournament held
Keywords • tournament
1972
Good shot (desquop using wink adjacent to the pile) invented by John Good at MIT
Keywords • play
1973 • June 23-24
First World Singles match played
Keywords • tournament
1974 • (approximately)
Two-ply grey felt mats are no longer made; a new source is found for single-ply, all-white felt mats
Keywords • equipment
1975 • (approximately)
Increasing popularity of using a more wide-open, long squopping strategy as an option to pure “positional” play
Keywords • play
1976 • February
Sunshine publishes rules of tiddlywinks perversions in Alleghany Airlines Book Club Presents
1976
NATwA establishes 30 second rule (clock stops automatically after 30 seconds pass without a shot); the opponents of the winker shooting have no choice in whether to stop it or not)
Keywords • rules
1977
Original red tapered pot supply almost gone; NATwA pot mold commissioned by Charles Frankston from a manufacturer in Brooklyn, New York (late 1976) and “new” pot production begins
Keywords • equipment
1978 • July 17
First World Pairs match played
Keywords • tournaments
1978
Squidger diameter limited to between 1 and 2 inches
Keywords • rules
1979
Joe Sachs popularizes squop-style bring-ins
Keywords • play
1979
“Foreign visitor” rule for World Pairs and Singles challenges agreed upon; however national title still goes to the highest national finisher even if the foreigner finishes first
Keywords • rules
1980
ETwA winker Pam Knowles’ NATwA Singles win prompts consensus change that national titles go to winner (foreign or not); highest national finisher also gets world challenge (as was decided previously)
Keywords • rules
1981
30 second rule (to stop clock) revised to be the choice of the opponents of the winker currently playing; adopted by NATwA and ETwA
Keywords • rules
1981
Free turns rule clarified so that free turns occurring before the end of the time limit do not go into rounds
Keywords • rules
1981
Length of games before rounds standardized at 20 minutes for singles and 25 minutes for pairs (previously ETwA used 20 minutes for both and NATwA 25 minutes for both)
Keywords • rules
1981
NATwA and ETwA rules “converge” (with a few minor exceptions)
Keywords • rules
1982
“Personalized” winks banned for tournament games (a result of Charles Relle using a flattened set of winks created using Larry Kahn’s boiling method)
Keywords • equipment
1982
“New” Italian winks introduced
Keywords • equipment
1984
Megacrud blowup shot outlawed; 2 inch jab rule introduced (ETwA)
Keywords • rules
1985 • November
American tour of England
Keywords • tournament
1986 • (may have been 1987)
Bristol (also known as Cambridge) Good shot developed at CUTwC
Keywords • play
1987 • (approximately)
First use of flexible squidgers for potting nurdled winks. (After Jon Mapley introduces his Sainsbury mint jelly top squidger, Nick Inglis inadvertently buys a different brand with a very flexible lid).
Keywords • equipment
1987
“Push” pile shot (no downward motion) ruled not in the spirit of the game, leading to better rules wording for the definition of a legal shot.
Keywords • rules
1988 • September
British tour of the United States
Keywords • tournament
1990
British tour of the United States
Keywords • tournament
1990
Winker Ratings (from Nick Inglis) first published in Winking World (best rant material ever)
1990
“Nominated wink” rule for failure to free incorporated in official rules (proposed by Rules Committee in 1989)
Keywords • rules
1991 • June
25th anniversary celebration of NATwA in Gill, Massachusetts
Keyword • celebration
1992
The term tiddlies replaces time limit points, providing the answer to the common question, “If those are the winks, what’s a tiddly?”
Keywords • rules
1993
First Scottish National Pairs tournament
Keywords • tournament
1993
“Playing out of turn” rule refined so that offended party decides which color to shoot next
Keywords • rules
2004
Major rewrite of official rules to make them easier to read/understand and to clarify some of the more complicated situations (the problem of piles crossing the boundary has yet to be solved)
Keywords • rules
2005 • January
50th anniversary celebration of modern winks and the first modern tiddlywinks club, the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club
Keywords • celebration
2006 • July
NATwA celebrates its 40th anniversary with events at Cornell and elsewhere in Ithaca, New York
Keywords • celebration
2008 • 1 March
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the famed Goons vs. CUTwC Royal Tiddlywinks Match of 1958, Prince Philip designates the Savage Club to be his royal champions to play CUTwC in Cambridge, England
Keywords • celebration
2009 • 10 January
The first triples tournament is held in the UK: the London Triples
Keywords • tournament
2016 • August
NATwA celebrates its 50th anniversary with events in Montague, Massachusetts and Vienna, Virginia
Keywords • celebration
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