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Encyclopedia > Faro (card game)

Faro is a card game, a descendant of Basset. It enjoyed great popularity during the 18th century, particularly in England and France, and in the 19th Century in the United States, particularly in the Old West, where it was practiced by faro dealers such as Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp. It has since fallen out of fashion and is only practiced by dedicated Old West enthusiasts and Civil War reenactors. For the Russian group of artists, see Jack of Diamonds (artists). ... Basset (French:Bassette, from Italian:Bassetta), also known as Barbacole and Hocca is a card game that was considered one of the most polite card games, and only fit for persons of the highest rank to play at, on account of the great losses or gains that might accrue on... For other uses, see England (disambiguation). ... The cowboy, the quintessential symbol of the American Old West, circa 1887. ... John Henry Doc Holliday (August 14, 1851 – November 8, 1887) was an American dentist, gambler, and gunfighter of the American Old West frontier who is usually remembered for his associations with Wyatt Earp and the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. ... Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp (March 19, 1848–January 13, 1929) was an American farmer, teamster, sometime buffalo hunter, officer of the law in various Western frontier towns, gambler, saloon-keeper, and miner. ... Union reenactors recreate the Battle of Saltville in Saltville, Virginia on Aug. ...


Its name is believed by some to be a corruption of pharaoh and refers to the Egyptian motif that commonly adorned French-made playing cards of the period, though no records of any Egyptian Motif on any playing cards of that era have been found. An alternative explanation traces the name to the Irish word Fairadh (Pron. fearoo), 'to turn', which could have been brought to France and the UK through mass emigration from Ireland, in particular in the aftermath of the Flight of the Wild Geese, and among those of the Irish Brigade serving in France. For other uses, see Pharaoh (disambiguation). ... This article is about the modern Goidelic language. ... // The Irish diaspora consists of Irish emigrants and their descendants in countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Argentina, Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa and states of the Caribbean and continental Europe. ... The Flight of the Wild Geese refers to the departure of an Irish army under the command of Patrick Sarsfield from Ireland to France, as agreed in the Treaty of Limerick on October 3, 1691, following the Williamite war in Ireland with the Jacobites. ... The Irish Brigade was a brigade in the French army composed of Irish exiles. ...


Faro is similar to the contemporary game of Mini-Baccarat. This article is about the card game. ...

Contents

Rules

The layout of a Faro board.

A game of faro was often called a "faro bank". It was played with an entire pack of playing cards and admitted an indeterminate number of players, termed "punters", and a "banker". Chips (called "checks") were purchased by the punter from the banker or house from which the game originated. Bet values and limits were set by the house. Usual check values were 50 cents to $10 each.


The faro table was square, with a distinguished cut-out for the banker. A board with a standardized betting layout consisting of one card of each denomination pasted to it, called the "layout", was placed on top of the table. (Traditionally, the suit of spades was used for the layout.) Each player laid his stake on one of the 13 cards on the layout. Players could place multiple bets and could bet on multiple cards simultaneously by placing their bet between cards or on specific card edges. Players also had the choice of betting on the "high card" located at the top of the layout.


A deck of cards was placed face-up inside a "dealing box", a mechanical shoe used to prevent manipulations of the draw by the banker, and was supposed to assure players of a fair game. Many sporting-house supply companies sold gaffed dealing boxes that were designed so that the banker could cheat.


The first card in the dealing box is called the "soda" and is "burned" off, leaving 51 cards in play. As the soda is pulled out of the dealing box, it exposes the first card in play, called the "banker's card", which is placed on the right side of the dealing box in the other, called the carte anglaise, or English card, and simply called the "player's card" in the United States, for the players placed on the left.


The banker draws two cards. The first is the "losing card", and all bets placed on that card are lost by the players and won by the bank. The second card is the "winning card", and all bets placed on that card are returned to the players with a 100% winning paid by the bank. The banker collects on all the money staked on the card laid on the right and pays double the sums staked on those on the card remaining on the left (in the dealing box).


A player could "copper" their bet by placing an hexagonal (6-sided) token called a "copper". Some histories claim a penny was sometimes used in place of a copper. This reversed the meaning of the win/loss piles for that particular bet. An abacus-like device, called a "case keep", is employed to assist the players and prevent dealer cheating by counting cards. The operator of the case keep is called the "case keeper". It has been suggested that Abax be merged into this article or section. ...


Certain advantages were reserved to the banker: if he drew a doublet, that is, two equal cards, he won half of the stakes upon the card which equaled the doublet. In a fair game, this provided the only house edge. If the banker drew the last card of the pack, he was exempt from doubling the stakes deposited on that card. In most cases, when three cards remained, the dealer would offer a specialized bet called "betting the turn". This bet offers a 4-to-1 (5-for-1) payout if the players can identify the exact order of the last three cards.


History

Faro was one of the most popular card games of the 18th and 19th centuries. Although both faro and Basset were forbidden in France, on severe penalties, these games continued to be played in England during the 18th century, apparently because it was easy to learn, quick, and when played honestly, the odds for a player were the best of all other gambling games. "Our life here", writes Gilly Williams to George Selwyn in 1752, "would not displease you, for we eat and drink well, and the Earl of Coventry holds a Pharaoh-bank every night to us, which we have plundered considerably." George Selwyn (1719–1791) was an English politician and wit. ...


Charles James Fox preferred faro to any other game, as did 19th century American con man Soapy Smith. It was said that every faro table in Soapy's Tivoli Club in Denver, Colorado, in 1889 was gaffed (made to cheat). Indeed, the famed scam artist Canada Bill Jones loved the game so much that when he was asked why he played at one game that was known to be rigged, he replied, "It's the only game in town." Statue of Charles James Fox in Bloomsbury Square, erected 1816. ... Jefferson Randolph (Soapy) Smith II (1860-July 8, 1898) was an American con artist and gangster who had a major hand in the organized criminal operations of Denver, Colorado, Creede, Colorado, and Skagway, Alaska from 1879 to 1898. ... Denver redirects here. ... Canada Bill Jones was the working nickname of William Jones, a noted confidence artist, riverboat gambler and card sharp. ...


Faro's detractors regarded it as a dangerous scam that destroyed families and reduced men to poverty, because of the rampant rigging of the dealing box.


While the game became scarce after World War II, it continued to be played at a few Las Vegas and Reno casinos through 1985. [1] Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki Tōjō Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000... For further information, see Las Vegas metropolitan area and Las Vegas Strip. ... Places Reno, Nevada Reno, Pennsylvania Reno, Lamar County, Texas Reno, Parker County, Texas A valley in Italy Other Uses Reno, a Turk from the popular videogame and CG movie by Square-Enix, Final Fantasy VII. Reno a 1939 film A band named Reno Reno is a drug Reno 911! - A...


Faro is central to the story of Tchaikovsky's opera The Queen of Spades. The Queen of Spades (Пиковая дама in Russian, Pikovaya dama in transliteration) is an opera in three acts by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky to a Russian libretto by the composers brother Modest Tchaikovsky, based on a short story by the poet Aleksandr Pushkin. ...


References

John Nevil Maskelyne, Sharps and Flats (First Pub. London, 1894) - reprint by GBC[2] Las Vegas. ISBN 0-8950-912-5. Gives chapter on the game, equipment, and cheating.


Tom and Judy Dawson, The Hochman Encyclopedia of American Playing Cards, 2000, Pub. US Games Systems Inc. Stamford CT. ISBN 1-57281-297-4. Gives historical account of Faro cards in the US, extensively illustrated.


United States Playing Card Company - Glossary [3] With "Buck the Tiger" to play against the bank; and no less than 8 other popular terms have been contributed by the game of Faro.


Howard, M. The Traditional Game of Faro Barbary Coast Vigilance Committee. 08 June 2004


Sanders, J. R. Faro: Favorite Gambling Game of the Frontier Wild West Magazine - October, 1996


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Faro (Game) - LoveToKnow 1911 (462 words)
FARO (from Pharaoh, a picture of the Egyptian king appearing on a card of the old French pack), a game of cards, played with a full pack.
The dealer places the pack, after shuffling and cutting, in a dealing-box face upwards, and the cards are taken from the top of the box in couples through a slit in the side.
Faro is played considerably in parts of the United States, whither it is said to have been taken from France, where it had a great vogue during the reign of Louis XIV.
Faro (card-game) at AllExperts (1121 words)
Faro is a card game, a descendant of Basset.
A game of faro was often called a 'faro bank.' It was played with an entire pack of playing cards, and admitted of an indeterminate number of players, termed 'punters,' and a 'banker.' Chips (called 'checks') were purchased by the punter from the banker or house from which the game originated.
Although both faro and Basset were forbidden in France, on severe penalties, these games continued to be in great vogue in England during the 18th century; apparently because it was easy to learn, quick, and when played honestly, the odds for a player, were the best of all other gambling games.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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