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The Lightning Dart Scorer

The Lightning Dart Scorer
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Some
time during the 19th century the chalk and dartboard replaced the cribbage
board as the standard method of scoring a game of darts. Since the early
‘boom’ days of darts in the 1920s inventors have tried all manner of ways of
making the job cleaner, faster and more efficient.
From an
article first published in Dart World Magazine
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Like many a publican,
Oliver Hilson was a devotee of darts. As licensee of the City of Hereford
public house in Upper St. James’s Street, Kemp Town, Brighton, during the 1920’s
and 1930’s, Oliver was very much involved with the game, organising regular
matches and arranging darts leagues in the town.
No mean player himself, he
was presented with a silver cup by the members of his darts club to commemorate
their winning the Section ‘A’ Cup and the Championship Cup in the 1934/35 season
of the Tamplins Brighton Dart League.
Born in Brighton on 19
January 1906, Oliver Hilson was more than a popular licensee and more than a
good pub darts player. He was also an inventor.
On 3 February 1931 he
submitted a patent application for the country’s first automatic scoring machine
for darts called ‘The Lightning Scorer’. The patent was accepted on 31
March 1932 and improvements made and patented in February 1935 and September
l938.
The scorer was housed in a
bakelite case, 14 inches square, and the front panel was divided into two
compartments, one for each player. Each compartment had three telephone dials,
one for the units, one for the tens and the other for the hundreds. Each also
had a window to show the score remaining. The machine was simply set up to show
the total target score in each window and after each turn the player dialled his
score and that was automatically deducted from the total.

In the mid-1930’s Oliver
Hilson and his family moved from Brighton to Hounslow and he began producing the
‘Lightning Scorer’ under the name ”Lightning Automatic Scorer Company”, the
machines being manufactured using workshops in both Hounslow and Chiswick..
The scorer was exhibited at
the Brewers’ Exhibition in 1938 and on 14th December the Morning Advertiser
described the product as ‘popular’, ‘successful’ and ‘foolproof’.
The machine also had the
approval of the National Darts Association who declared: ‘The scoreboard as
submitted by you was pronounced the most perfect, neatest and easiest to work
and understand, that the Executive Council of the National Darts Association
have ever viewed. It has the approval and approbation of the said N.D.A. who
think it will be a great asset to the game of darts and they compliment the
inventor upon his achievement.’
The Darts and Sports Review
of 3 December 1938 was as equally enthusiastic about the product stating:
‘We confidently recommend
this scorer to licensees, club secretaries and all enthusiasts who are looking
for a really practicable, handsome and lasting automatic darts scorer.’
The ‘Lightning Darts
Scorer’ sold for fifty shillings each (£2.50) or seventy shillings (£3.50) for
the deluxe edition.
The machines were popular
and were manufactured by Oliver up to 1939. However, the company was operating
at a slight loss and more funding was required for its success so in May 1939
the company was sold and a limited company formed called “Lightning Scorers
Limited”. Oliver remained as one of its three directors being personally
responsible for ‘manufacture and invention’. He held 240 of the 600 shares
issued.
The company accounts for
the period 13 February 1939 to 31 May 1940 show that 2,150 scorers had been sold
but the company continued to run at a loss. Because of the war it was extremely
difficult to obtain the necessary parts for the manufacture of the scorers and
this was a major problem for the company.
At the beginning of the war
Oliver had volunteered for service and was a member of the Royal Air Force
Volunteer Reserve, but he wanted to do more than that. He tried to support the
Daily Mirror’s ‘Darts Boards for the Troops Fund’ and drafted this advertisement
which was headlined ‘OUR HELP THE TROOPS OFFER’.
‘By arrangement with the
Daily Mirror Dart Boards for the Troops Fund we will subscribe for one of these
dartboards, attached with the name and address of any club or licensed house,
who purchase one of our famous “Lightning Automatic Darts Scorers at 55/-…
Here is a chance to help
the troops and help yourself. It has been definitely proved that the
installation of a Lightning Automatic Darts Scorer will bring you increased
business…
Why not purchase a new
machine and let us have your old machine for the troops?….’
Helping the troops and
helping promote the business. In February 1940 further applications were made
for letters patent and this time the machine had only two dials for each player,
one for the units and the other a combined dial for the tens and hundreds
operated through concentric wheels. It is not known if this revised version was
ever manufactured but it is thought unlikely as Oliver died soon after the
application was made and the business collapsed.
Owing to the heavy bombing
of the Hounslow area Oliver had evacuated his wife and children to the Reading
area, two incendiary bombs having previously fallen on their home and caused
some damage. Oliver had taken to sleeping regularly in a cupboard under the
stairs in order to take shelter from the air raids. Gas from a fractured main
(undoubtedly caused by the bombing) leaked into the cupboard and Oliver died in
his sleep of carbon monoxide poisoning in October 1940.
The pub that Oliver ran,
The City of Hereford, in Brighton, is now long-gone. It was demolished in 1971,
after a long battle by customers, whose 380 signature petition failed to sway
the planners’ decision. The site was then developed as multi-storey flats.
I am indebted to Oliver
Hilson’s son, Professor Barry Hilson, for the information contained in this
article and for the illustrations.
© Patrick Chaplin 2007

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