As it is with most popular card games,
the origins of Poker and the history of 7 Card Stud Poker are shrouded
in mystery. No one is entirely sure how or where the game began. Further,
when considering the history of 7 Card Stud Poker, you should first know
how Poker is thought to have come about.
There are many theories about the
history of Poker and the history of 7 Card Stud Poker. The most commonly
held belief is the name Poker came from the French card game Poque (from
the German word pochen, which means "to knock). However, the game itself
more closely resembles a Persian game called Nas, which was played with
a five-suit deck. Likely the game of Poker as we know it resulted from
some combination of Poque and as Nas. The concept of bluffing in Poker
came from still another source: the English game brag (first spelled Bragg),
which is very similar to Poker but played using only three cards.
The first recorded instance of Poker
in the United States was an 1829 game in New Orleans, played with a 20-card
deck consisting of all cards with values of 10 and higher (four tens, four
jacks, four queens, four kings and four aces). The game was not named,
but the object was to bet on whose five-card hand contained the highest
cards. This game soon spread to Mississippi riverboats, where con artists
used a 52-card variant to bilk unwary travelers and claim their "pokes,"
or gambling money stashes. Author Jonathan H. Green described this "cheating
card game" in one of his books, and some give Green credit for coining
the final term of "Poker."
Stud Poker emerged during the American
Civil War. Some attribute the invention of stud, or stud-horse as it was
sometimes called, to cowboys around Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. 5 Card
Stud was the first version played, appearing in The American Hoyle as an
"official" Poker variant in 1864. Still, draw Poker was the favored variation
until someone--no one is certain exactly whom--introduced 7 Card Stud in
the early 20th century. The game remained the most popular form of professional
and casino Poker until the 1980's, when a slight twist on 7 Card Stud called
Texas Hold 'Em overtook the traditional version to become the favorite
among gamblers and casual players alike.
The majority of Poker tournaments
are based on core games of 7 Card Stud or variations of it. Binions Casino,
the founder of the largest professional Poker tournament in existence--the
World Series of Poker--began a Poker Hall of Fame to commemorate the greatest
Poker players in history. Among them are "Wild Bill" Hicock, who was shot
and killed during a Poker game holding a two-pair hand of aces over eights
(which is still known as a "dead man's hand" among gamblers); and "Red"
Hodges, considered the greatest 7 Card Stud Poker player to have ever lived.
7 Card Stud is still an immensely popular game in Vegas, home games and
Internet casinos.
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