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When and Where Darts Was
Banned

When and Where Darts Was Banned
A few things you (probably) didn't know about the game.
The King and Queen had
played a game of darts in the Slough Community Centre in 1937 and caused a
sensation. It made front-page news on Britain's national daily papers and the
country was darts-struck.
Women especially enquired
about how they could play this 'royal' game and the darts craze led to darts
saloons appearing in the capital and even invitations to 'Darts and Dancing' in
Mayfair were not unknown.
The country, albeit
momentarily, was engulfed in this new fad. Dartboard and dart manufacturers
could hardly keep up with demand. Darts was being played simply everywhere - or
so it seemed.
The truth was that darts
wasn't being played everywhere. In fact in two major cities and one major town
the game of darts was banned.
The town of Huddersfield
had banned darts years before under some obscure Public Health Act which gave
absolute power in matters relating to games on licensed premises to the local
justices.
Some publicans managed to
avoid the ban by installing dart games which involved throwing darts with rubber
suckers on the end, but somehow, and not surprisingly perhaps, it just wasn't
the same and didn't really catch on.
The licensing justices of
Liverpool and Glasgow imposed a ban on darts and other pub games a few months
before the game's popularity was boosted by the 'royal' match. Their reasoning
was quite clear. Despite the levels of drunkenness falling all across the nation
since the end of the Great War, the level remained very high in these two
cities.
The Burgh Licensing Court
in Glasgow in 1939 decided to ban 'all kinds of games' on the grounds that they
encouraged drunkenness or more especially what they termed 'ne'er do wellism'.
The Glasgow and District
Licensed Trade Defence Association appealed and within a few months the ban was
lifted for some games, dominoes included, but not darts.
The Liverpool justices were
just as strict as those over the border and protestations reached as far as the
House of Commons. A. P. Herbert, MP defended darts' case in Parliament, but even
he, an avid supporter of pub games and a keen skittle player, was not able to
convince the Home Secretary that the ban should be lifted.
The 'craze' for darts was
ended by Adolf Hitler and the game would have to wait another thirty-five years
or more before the profile was raised as high - or even higher.
The ban on darts in both
Liverpool and Glasgow stayed in place until after the end of the Second World
War. However, by 1949, the city of Liverpool had become a 'hot bed of darts' and
in the early 1950s Glasgow hosted the first ever darts championship of
Scotland.
© 2007 Patrick Chaplin

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