Saturday, October 28, 2023

exploring the arcade in 1992-01 TVムック故郷は欧州 意外なパチンコ進化論 / TV Mook Mystery Journey: Surprising theory of pachinko evolution

I just recently was able to share 1992-01 TVムック故郷は欧州 意外なパチンコ進化論 / TV Mook Mystery Journey: Surprising theory of pachinko evolution in another post, so of course we need to dive in and focus on the games!  The machines here follow the video, and so we early games from Japan, USA, UK, and France.


Be sure to check out the post about the video, but here is the English subtitled version again:





ダービー2 (Derby 2) by 京楽 (Kyoraku)


The next 2 games are toy Corinthian game bagatelles from Japan.  They do not use a plunger, they are played by using a small wooden cue to hit/push the ball up the shooter lane.  While most USA bagatelle toys had plungers, many places around the world still loved the versions where you used a small cue.




These next two photos show large Corinthian bagatelle games, probably from the 1930s.
large Corinthian tables, part of the birth of smartball

this is most likely a sign for a Corinthian parlor

In this shot we see two single-shot pachinko machines, probably from the late 1950s.

I can't place the machine exactly, but here is a similar machine to the one on the left.  These were common, and mostly very similar, pachinko machines from the 1950s

Masamura Gauge ALL 15 (1957, Hokuku Yuki)
the machine in the above screenshot looks like it might have a center tulip, and if so that would push it to about 1962.


Let's take a quick look at the pachinko that Kei Tani takes with him around the world.





This exact machine appears in the book パチンコ歴史事典 (Pachinko history encyclopedia).  If you zoom in on any of the wear on the paint or metal, you'll see it exactly lines up with Tani's machine.  There is a brief period after the war where one sen metal pachinko was still made.
1947~ メダルパチンコ (medal pachinko)
The coin slot on the right is a post-war style.  Metal pachinko, called so because the playfield is metal, were still made up until 1952 or 1953, though not nearly as common as celluloid playfields.  (celluloid playfields existed before the war, but were not common then)

They briefly cut to this famous patent drawing...

1901 Log Cabin by Caille Brothers [early version]




The next little bit of footage is all from before WW2 and are what I consider some of the rarest machines from Japan.  There are almost no surviving copies of these machines.  
On the left there are two machines that look quite similar to this machine by 岡 (Oka).  You can even see heart shapes on playfield on one of them.  It would be a a good presumption to say those two are by Oka, but there no way to know for sure.
1931~ 岡式電気自動球遊機 (Oka-style electric ball play machine) by 岡 (Oka)
(for reference only)

This next machine has cups that are quite distinctive, and I've only ever seen these on an Oka machine residing at the Birth Of Pachinko Museum in Japan.  This is NOT the same machine, but it might be a clue that this is an earlier Oka model.  As we slowly piece together clues of 1920s Japanese machines, this will hopefully be clarified.

Similar winning cups:
1929~ 岡式電氣自動球遊機 (Oka-style electric ball play machine) by 岡 (Oka) 
(for reference only)


I do not have a better photo of this next pachinko, but the panning camera allows us to assemble what it looks like. 


unknown sen pachinko

on the leftmost pachinko, we can see two strips that seem to alternate different coloured squares.  While I have never seen this pachinko machine before, a similar design was used for a machine by the company 陣内 (Jinnai), so perhaps they made this machine as well.

1920s one sen pachinko by 陣内 (Jinnai)
(for reference only)


this is a very special photograph from 1933!  Using a different sources, we can get a somewhat better view of these games.

~1933 バスケットボール (basketball)

~1933 空中爆突戦 (Aerial Bombardment)


~1933 菓子販賣機付玉運び機 (ball carrier with confectionery machine) by 日本娯楽機製作所 (Nippon Amusement Machine Manufacturing)





The next segment is at Richard M. Bueschel's house, where his bagatelles are on display for the camera.



1931 Baffle Ball Home Game by Gottlieb
(photo from Ed Nickels)








1937 Big Shot by Gotham

1932 Super Gold Star by Lindstrom
(photo courtesy Ed Nickels)


UNKNOWN: I am unable to find the exact model, but the right-most machine appear to be a small Redgrave-style parlor bagatelle.








1932 Poker Ball Square by Lindstrom

UNKNOWN: I am unable to identify this bright green bagatellle.

UNKNOWN: Redgrave-style table with 2 bells, each with 2 circles of nails surrounding them.
I have seen many Redgrave boards with 2 bells with a double circle around the lower bell, but this is the only time I've seen both bells have the double circle.


1929 Whoopee Game by In And Out Games Company
(there exists a taller version of this, with double-rings of nail circles)


1934 M-W Pin by Lindstrom





Flip-M-Up by Northwestern
this advertisement is from 1935

this is the more common version of Flip-M-Up


Bagatelle - small tin game, made in USA







the left-most board looks like a generic Corinthian 10 board, but in lighter wood.



'Tivoli Game of Chinese  Billiard'

UNKNOWN: unable to see this one well enough to identify, perhaps someone else knows?

UNKNOWN: red-surface Redgraves-style parlor bagatelle.  Seen many similar, but none with that specific layout.



1876 parlor bagatelle by Redgrave


1898 One Star Two Bell Parlor Bagatelle by Redgrave
(photo courtesy Ed Nickels)


Poosh-M-Up by Northwestern



It is hard to see, but Bueschel seems to be holding an early Redgrave Parlor Bagatelle, like
parlor bagatelle by Redgrave
(kind of guessing at the specific table)




1901 Little Manhattan by Caille
(note: different version!  Bueschel's only has one trough at the front.)



these 3 appear to be Singer bagatelles


1890 bagatelle 'one bell' by J. H. Singer
(photo courtesy Ed Nickels)


1898 One Star Two Bell Parlor Bagatelle by Redgrave
(photo courtesy Ed Nickels)









Corinthian 21T bagatelle




The to England, to learn a bit about 9-hole bagatelle billiards

in this display we see a collection of toy bagatelle games.  There is a tiny one at the top center called Bulletelle, a red one beneath it, a 1932 Super Gold Star by Lindstrom (see above) in the upper-right corner, and some kind of set in the bottom right.

1914 Bulletelle by R. Farmer & Sons

UNKNOWN: small red toy bagatelle


these are toy-sized 9-hole English bagatelle tables from James Masters' collection.
These ones do not have a hinge to fold. The one in the TV show looks to be even shorter!

another shot of the very small 9-hole table

this is a classic 9-hole English bagatelle table.  These were made from the 1800s and even past ww2 though I do not know if any modern makers build them.  Sold tables like this are sturdy and made for the bar.  Most 9-hole bagatelle tables you see have a fold in the center, allowing them to store more compactly, but that is not as much of a consideration in a commercial establishment.
 
an Enlgish bagatelle table from the 1972 Brunswick catalogue



 
The next segment is at Nic Costa's house:

this beautiful peacock is a flasher from an old carnival game where the lights would flash in sequence and you'd win if you bet on a lit lamp.


While this article about "The Flashing Flag", it shows a similar kind of game idea.  The Flag article would have been from 1923-1925.  It is a fascinating early example of electricity being employed in gaming devices, and exciting because the electricity is utilized to make the game crooked.
from the Bunco Games To Beware Of article.





1930s Chinese Crystal Gazer by unnamed Blackpool, UK maker


https://www.proantic.com/galerie/fourreldefrettes/img/1197037-650d3a2014135.jpg
'Egyptian Bell' Mills-Firman conversion

https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2006/CSK/2006_CSK_04107_0012_000(113132).jpg?mode=max
1935 Rol-A-Top by Watling



https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2006/CSK/2006_CSK_04107_0014_000(113132).jpg?mode=max
1931 'Silent Bell' War Eagle by Mills Novelty

https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2006/CSK/2006_CSK_04107_0015_000(113132).jpg?mode=max
1933 'Silent Golden Bell' (Roman head) by Mills Novelty

1920 Perfect Muscle Developer by Mills Novelty


there are two machines by Automatic Sports Co / Matthewson in this scene.  While we don't get to see above the handles on the machine behind Mr. Costa, I am told that it was a Golf machine.

1903 Golf by Automatic Sports Co




this is a bit of a blurry freeze frame, but the caliber of coinop here is a bit hard to take in.  Behind Kei Tani are 5 incredibly sought after antique coinop items.  

1920 Eierlegende Henne by MUM Automaten GmbH


 
1890 Try Your Grip by Barrett

1895 Test Your Grip by Mechanical Trading Company
from Automatic Pleasures



1901 Electric Treatment shock machine by Imperial Electric
This machine is over Tani's shoulder, and does not have the blue marquee plate in the screenshot.

1901 Electric Treatment shock machine by Imperial Electric
an image of the machine in the TV show, taken from Automatic Pleasures




this shot gives us a slightly better look at these two

1896 The Football Game by Matthewson

1904 Ajax Puncher by Caille



On the left we can see part of the middle shelf, but we can't see any of the machines on the bottom shelf, just the cases

This shot shows the top shelf and the middle shelf.  We have a better shot of the right side top shelf below, so for now we're just focusing on the machines on the middle and bottom shelves, plus the ones front-and-center.


Middle shelf:
1915 Le Jeu De Cartes by Le Dentu, Paris

1916 Allies Flags by Automatic Novelty Co., London


1910 Le Marabout by Le Dentu



1933 Pin Royal by BMCo


I asked Nic Costa about this: 
"A clockwork working model of the famous big wheel built in 1897 in Vienna. Probably made as an exhibition piece one off."





top shelf, to the right

 
UNKNOWN: have not yet identified.  This one has a very odd inner rail, that ends while pointing directly down.  That's very rarely seen.  Here is a near identical machine below.

Vinst Pa Rott (that is what I glimpse from the label, I doubt I'm correct.)\
(for reference only: note how the track ends pointing down)

It seems to have a shield graphic like this one, but note how far the upper spiral circles down on the above mode.
The Allwin No. IV
(reference only: note the shape of the label)




French target-ball wall machine

1912 Footballer




This view gives us a peak at the machine behind Nic's shoulders

there it is!

1924 Motorman wall machine by Pessers, Moody, Wraith & Gurr, London





Immediately about Tani's head is a rare fortune teller / vending machine. The graphic is different, but if we utilize another angle, we'll see the bottom lines up perfectly.

Note the bottom of the machine

Is Marriage A Failure by Haydon & Urry
The graphic is removed from this machine picture, just showing the hard holders behind it.  There were many variants of this, where they would change the image, the sign, and the cards, but note how perfectly the marquee lines up here.





Top row:

some might think it folly to try and identify a machine up in the back corner like this, but.,...
cup catcher by Pessers, Moody, Wraith & Gurr Ltd


1908 Mother Shipton by The Argyle Automatic Co., London


1915 Success by Bussoz Freres, Paris



1910 Le Paramour by Bussoz Freres



late 1800s The Fairy by Barnes Funland Supplies Reading
(maker confirmed by Nic Costa)





Bottom row:
1925 Simplex wall machine with electric shock by Max Jentsch & Meerz, Leipzig, German

bulldog catcher by Jentzsch & Meerz of Leipzig, Germany

1910 Nulli Secundus by Phoenix Works, Birmingham

1910 St. Huberts Shooting Game by Original Musikwerke, P. Lochman, Zenteuroda, Germany


Then on the right, foreground:

these two fortune tellers use the same case, but the left machine has the "Heaven & Hell" graphic below.  It seems to appear in a number of cabinet variations, as this is a fortune teller machine.



1952 Heaven & Hell by Bollands


Fortune Teller wall machine

~1901 Ping Pong by BMCo
(from Nic Costa: "This dates from c 1901/2 when ping pong was all the rage in the UK. Somewhere I uncovered the patent for it.")


 

We're at the bottom of the stairs.  Let's start with the first two machines, and then work our way up.

1910 wall bagatelle machine


1908 The Improved Pickwick by Pessers & Moody, London




2 more machines



1900 Pickwick by H. Klein & Company, London


1905 The Improved Pickwick, by Pessers, Moody, Writh & Gurr, London





and then the final 3


Fortuna by John Jofeh

1900 Heureka by Polyphon Musikwerke, Leipzig, Germany
this is the first Allwin-style machine


1899 Game of Skill by Price & Castell, London




Seaside pier arcade in Hastings, UK: 



1920 Mutoscope

1973 Zodiac Fortune Teller [mkII] by Nixsales







1940 Spitfire


1933 Disposition Register by Exhibit Supply
The Love Test machine looks very similar to this machine, though the proportions look different.  The ones below seem appropriate:

 
love machines from the 1939 Mike Munves catalogue
these machines seems to be the proper proportions of what we see in the arcade




1934 Payramid by Bryans

1955 Elevenses by Bryans



this is apparently a 1938 version of 24 Winning Cups.  The one below is from the 1950s

1950s 24 Winning Cups by Wondermatics




This segments is with Andre Simon in France:


1905 Le Phenix by Pierre-Able Nau




this is as far left as we get to see, so let's start at the left and look at the first 4 machines...
plus the one on the ground, barely in the frame.


1905 Commercial by Caille

horse race single wheel roulette by Bussoz, Paris

unknown allwin
THREE COIN SLOTS???  Oh I love the French machines.  The top carving seems to match that of Le Double by Lombard (France, 1909) so perhaps that is a clue to the manufacturer.

1909 Mistigri by Jules Le Cavelie [via Machines de Zinc]




L'Auto Sport by Elce-Paris
(reference only: this machine gives a better view of the rare triple horizontal coin slots)



1920s Le Mamillion (france)
(reference only: a slot with a similar (though not exact) carved top and 3 different coin slots, but aligned differently.)




this next one counts as a "maybe":
~1901 La Roulette Nouvelle by Pierre-Able Nau
The machine pictured here has a lever on the front, but if we look at Simon's machine, the lever is on the side.  According to the book Arcadia, earlier versions of roulette machines by Nau had the side lever but the design was quickly changed to a front lever.  That would explain why most pictures you see are the front lever style.
I think Simon's machine is an early version of La Roulette Nouvelle.
The graphic on Simon's machine is colourful psychedelic waves, which you can see if you look up images of their La Precieuse Musical Upright Slot.  




This is in the lower-left of the frame and looks like Le Pingouin by Bussoz, with the curved top and the spinning wheel with the inner ring.  But above the wheel we have two coin bits of metal, similar to the 1911 Roulette Bussoz below.  The distance between the metal is consistent with some of the Bussoz machines of the 1910s, though some machines of that era did have wider gaps.  There are other machines with a similar shape and two pieces of metal there, like the 1934 Roulette Lebout, but the metal casting are further separated on that model. 
Just below the coin areas, on the far left and right side, we see two small metal bolts/nubs.  Because of that, I believe this to be a Roulette Mickey.  But since there were so many machines inspired by this design, I'm prepared to be wrong. :)

~1937 Le Pingouin by Bussoz
(reference only)

1937 Roulette Mickey bv Ducros, France




moving down the line...
...we can see to the end of the shelf


1910 Le Bachelet by Oswin Franke
I would very much like to find a better photograph of this machine.  But here are some detail shots that appear in the video.







Update 2024-02-03: André Simon has provided this photo:
1910 Le Bachelet by Oswin Franke
(h/t Machines de Zinc for the maker)





1911 Roulette Bussoz by Bussoz, Paris



Le Coq Phenix by Pierre Abel-Nau


unknown machine

another angle of that unknown machine, showing a bit of the detail



1910s Le Royalty





The last two machines are hard are much easier to see in this shot.


ENHANCE!

1901 La Roulette Nouvelle by Pierre-Abel Nau
I do not fully understand the differences between the Nau machines, but you can see the body of this machine is different than the other "La Roulette Nouvelle" we have showcased on this page.  There are also less metal plates along the top.  Simon's machine seems to have a larger base that gives it a few more inches of height.
It is important to note the small elliptical plaque on the left, near the payout cup, which does not seem to appear on similarly shaped Nau machines.


1925 Le Chien Savant by unnamed France or German maker







The scene with Kaichi Endo showcases an extremely rare and beautiful catalogue from around 1937.  I have further comments about this catalog at the top of my eremeka research notes.  It is especially important to note how I have been handling dates for the entire eremeka project, and list machines at their earliest date we've been able to find it in.

note: the camera lens seems to have distended the image here. 
We have seen the first machine, on the left, earlier in this post.

~1937 玉遊菓子自動販賣機 (Tama asobi confectionery vending machine) by 日本娯楽機製作所 (Japan Amusement Machine Manufacturing)


the rest of the machines glanced at in this catalog can be found on my eremeka site.


I want to pay respects to Endo here by showing off my favourite photograph of him, proudly showcasing his beautiful luxury omikuji machine in 1930.  An omikuji machine is a fortune dispenser, but in Japan they employed automaton technology that had been very popular in places like Germany to create an animated scene where your fortune is dispensed from a beautiful shrine.

photo republished in Game Machine magazine 2001-02-15
captain: In June 1930, Mr. Kaichi Endo (third from the right) watches over an automatic fortune machine installed on the roof of Ueno Matsuzakaya. Mr. Endo was 31 years old at the time. The second person from the left is Matsuzakaya's General Affairs Manager Saito.




Postlude: this was the largest arcade exploration I've ever done, and the majority of machines are from before the 2nd world war.  This show brought together 3 highly knowledgeable and passionate collectors with an incredibly deep collections.  
Here is a glimpse of all of the books I had strewn around while trying to put this post together:

books from my library





The following section is to assist me in finding the missing entries.  You can safely ignore it, or if you like identifying machines you can use this as shorthand to assist in the quest!



UNKNOWN: I am unable to find the exact model, but the right-most machine appear to be a small Redgrave-style parlor bagatelle.

UNKNOWN: I am unable to identify this bright green bagatellle.

UNKNOWN: Redgrave-style table with 2 bells, each with 2 circles of nails surrounding them.
I have seen many Redgrave boards with 2 bells with a double circle around the lower bell, but this is the only time I've seen both bells have the double circle.



UNKNOWN: unable to see this one well enough to identify, perhaps someone else knows?

UNKNOWN: red-surface Redgraves-style parlor bagatelle.  Seen many similar, but none with that specific layout.


UNKNOWN: small red toy bagatelle


unknown sen pachinko



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