How legalized gambling moved from the Strip to Main Street.
In the 1700s, newspapers regularly published the odds on local cockfighting matches. Harvard and other institutions of higher learning used lotteries to finance construction projects, as did numerous churches. Ben Franklin helped organize a lottery in 1746, and George Washington was—according to George Sullivan's 1972 history of lotteries, By Chance a Winner—a "frequent ticket buyer" who won land in one raffle, five pounds in a 1763 lottery, and 16 pounds in a 1766 drawing. Nearly three decades later, he was still playing: In 1793, when the District of Columbia sold 50,000 lottery tickets at $7 apiece to raise funds for federal buildings, Washington purchased tickets for himself and his friends.
1 comment:
Writerfella here --
Now we know WHY GW threw that dollar coin across the Potomac! But - but - but - did George Washington ever play 'Texas Hold 'Em?'
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'
Post a Comment