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To The Point Review by Darts Historian - Patrick Chaplin

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To The Point – The Story Of Darts In
America by Dan Williams Peek's
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as featured in
Planet Darts
The
book is a must for anyone interested in the history of darts and in particular
anyone interested in the development of sport in general in the USA.
For a number of years Dan
has been piecing together his history of darts in the States. It was a labour of
love, with few reliable studies preceding him, so putting this together must
have been like working on a 10,000-piece jigsaw puzzle without the aid of a
picture.
Although other American
authors including Paddy Whannel and Dana Hogdon (The Book of Darts,
Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1976), Robert McLeod and Jay Cohen (Darts
Unlimited, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1977) and Jack McClintock (The
Book of Darts, New York: Random House, 1977) made attempts in the 1970s to
trace the history of darts in America, none of their work even hints at the
extensive heritage that Dan reveals.
As a Darts Historian based
in the UK, up until I read Dan’s work, I firmly believed that the catalyst for
darts in America had been the Second World War. The American servicemen
stationed in the UK, drank in local pubs and quite naturally played darts and
after the war they took the game of darts home with them and made it their own.
I believed that the game
was taken up in great numbers and flourished even to the extent that a darts
game was invented based on the favourite national pastime of baseball. Darts
then enjoyed a similar boom to that of the UK between the mid-1970s and the
mid-1980s.
Truth is I was only partly
right. What Dan reveals is a dart history in the US nearly as long – in terms of
both darts manufacturing and organisation – as that of the game in the UK!
Fortunately, To the
Point is not written in the style of an academic. Good for you Dan, say I.
Good for the reader too. Dan makes the reader feel part of his research mission
as he seeks out his sources. We travel with him and share his experiences and
his disappointments.
He shares interviews with
us, word for word, and as a Brit, I’m introduced to fascinating US darting
characters including Tex Blackwood and the original ‘Ice Man’, Al Lippman.
Helpfully, Dan also
explodes a myth or two about America’s darts history.
For example, in the 35
years since Noel E. Williamson wrote in his book, ‘It has been said that the
Pilgrim Fathers amused themselves by playing darts aboard the Mayflower in the
year 1620’ (Darts :Kingswood, Surrey: Elliot Rightway Books, 1968), this
apparent dart playing on board has been reinterpreted and has become fact – The
Puritans brought darts to America. I’ve even heard a question asked about it in
pub quizzes!
Given the conflict of
Puritan ethic and sport, I was never happy with that ‘fact’. Dan, I am pleased
to say, blows the theory right out of the water and offers up a more tangible
explanation of the origins of the sport is his country.
The book fills a gaping
hole in the history of sports culture in America. Dan’s subject is so wide that
it is likely that the 294 pages of To the Point are only scratching the
surface of his subject. It is the foundation upon which Dan and hopefully other
researchers interested in our sport in the US will build.
To the Point – The Story
of Darts in America is published by
Columbia, Missouri: Pebble Publishing, 2000.
© 2007 Patrick
Chaplin
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