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Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie

The Sandman 09 Mar 21 - 07:17 AM
Stilly River Sage 09 Mar 21 - 10:35 AM
The Sandman 09 Mar 21 - 12:22 PM
Mrrzy 09 Mar 21 - 01:29 PM
The Sandman 09 Mar 21 - 02:20 PM
Mrrzy 09 Mar 21 - 09:43 PM
Joe Offer 09 Mar 21 - 11:38 PM
Stilly River Sage 10 Mar 21 - 12:01 PM
SPB-Cooperator 10 Mar 21 - 01:56 PM
Jos 10 Mar 21 - 02:02 PM
Bonzo3legs 10 Mar 21 - 04:47 PM
Jon Freeman 11 Mar 21 - 04:36 AM
Bonzo3legs 13 Mar 21 - 05:14 AM
Raedwulf 15 Mar 21 - 07:51 AM
JHW 17 Mar 21 - 06:32 AM
Bonzo3legs 17 Mar 21 - 04:40 PM
Jos 17 Mar 21 - 05:10 PM
Raedwulf 20 Mar 21 - 12:29 AM
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Subject: BS: Monopoly its origins etc
From: The Sandman
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 07:17 AM

Monopoly’s Inventor: The Progressive Who Didn’t Pass ‘Go’

The Landlord’s Game, which became Monopoly, was created by Elizabeth Magie Phillips.
The Landlord’s Game, which became Monopoly, was created by Elizabeth Magie Phillips.Credit...The Strong

By Mary Pilon

    Feb. 13, 2015

For generations, the story of Monopoly’s Depression-era origins delighted fans almost as much as the board game itself.

The tale, repeated for decades and often tucked into the game’s box along with the Community Chest and Chance cards, was that an unemployed man named Charles Darrow dreamed up Monopoly in the 1930s. He sold it and became a millionaire, his inventiveness saving him — and Parker Brothers, the beloved New England board game maker — from the brink of destruction.

This month, fans of the game learned that Hasbro, which has owned the brand since 1991, would tuck real money into a handful of Monopoly sets as part of the game’s 80th “anniversary” celebration.

The trouble is, that origin story isn’t exactly true.

It turns out that Monopoly’s origins begin not with Darrow 80 years ago, but decades before with a bold, progressive woman named Elizabeth Magie, who until recently has largely been lost to history, and in some cases deliberately written out of it.

Magie lived a highly unusual life. Unlike most women of her era, she supported herself and didn’t marry until the advanced age of 44. In addition to working as a stenographer and a secretary, she wrote poetry and short stories and did comedic routines onstage. She also spent her leisure time creating a board game that was an expression of her strongly held political beliefs.



Magie filed a legal claim for her Landlord’s Game in 1903, more than three decades before Parker Brothers began manufacturing Monopoly. She actually designed the game as a protest against the big monopolists of her time — people like Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller.
ImageElizabeth Magie Phillips, in a circa 1937 portrait.
Elizabeth Magie Phillips, in a circa 1937 portrait.Credit...The Strong in Rochester, New York

She created two sets of rules for her game: an anti-monopolist set in which all were rewarded when wealth was created, and a monopolist set in which the goal was to create monopolies and crush opponents. Her dualistic approach was a teaching tool meant to demonstrate that the first set of rules was morally superior.

And yet it was the monopolist version of the game that caught on, with Darrow claiming a version of it as his own and selling it to Parker Brothers. While Darrow made millions and struck an agreement that ensured he would receive royalties, Magie’s income for her creation was reported to be a mere $500.

Amid the press surrounding Darrow and the nationwide Monopoly craze, Magie lashed out. In 1936 interviews with The Washington Post and The Evening Star she expressed anger at Darrow’s appropriation of her idea. Then elderly, her gray hair tied back in a bun, she hoisted her own game boards before a photographer’s lens to prove that she was the game’s true creator.

“Probably, if one counts lawyer’s, printer’s and Patent Office fees used up in developing it,” The Evening Star said, “the game has cost her more than she made from it.”

In 1948, Magie died in relative obscurity, a widow without children. Neither her headstone nor her obituary mentions her role in the creation of Monopoly.

A Born Provocateur

Elizabeth Magie was born in Macomb, Ill., in 1866, the year after the Civil War ended and Abraham Lincoln was assassinated. Her father, James Magie, was a newspaper publisher and an abolitionist who accompanied Lincoln as he traveled around Illinois in the late 1850s debating politics with Stephen Douglas.

James Magie gained a reputation as a rousing stump speaker. “I have often been called a ‘chip off the old block,’ ” Elizabeth said of her relationship with her father, “which I consider quite a compliment, for I am proud of my father for being the kind of an ‘old block’ that he is.”
Image
Henry George, a politician, economist and proponent of the idea of shifting the tax burden to wealthy landowners, provided inspiration for The Landlord's Game.
Henry George, a politician, economist and proponent of the idea of shifting the tax burden to wealthy landowners, provided inspiration for The Landlord's Game.Credit...Library of Congress

Because of her father’s part ownership of The Canton Register, Elizabeth was exposed to journalism at an early age. She also watched and listened as, shortly after the Civil War, her father clerked in the Illinois legislature and ran for office on an anti-monopoly ticket — an election that he lost.
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The seeds of the Monopoly game were planted when James Magie shared with his daughter a copy of Henry George’s best-selling book, “Progress and Poverty,” written in 1879.

As an anti-monopolist, James Magie drew from the theories of George, a charismatic politician and economist who believed that individuals should own 100 percent of what they made or created, but that everything found in nature, particularly land, should belong to everyone. George was a proponent of the “land value tax,” also known as the “single tax.” The general idea was to tax land, and only land, shifting the tax burden to wealthy landlords. His message resonated with many Americans in the late 1800s, when poverty and squalor were on full display in the country’s urban centers.

The anti-monopoly movement also served as a staging area for women’s rights advocates, attracting followers like James and Elizabeth Magie.

In the early 1880s, Elizabeth Magie worked as a stenographer. At the time, stenography was a growing profession, one that opened up to women as the Civil War removed many men from the work force. The typewriter was gaining commercial popularity, leaving many to ponder a strange new world in which typists sat at desks, hands fixed to keys, memorizing seemingly illogical arrangements of letters on the new qwerty keyboards.

When she wasn’t working, Magie, known to her friends as Lizzie, struggled to be heard creatively. In the evenings, she pursued her literary ambitions, and as a player in Washington’s nascent theater scene, performed on the stage, where she earned praise for her comedic roles. Though small-framed, she had a presence — an audience at the Masonic Hall exploded with laughter at her comical rendition of a simpering old woman.

She also spent her time drawing and redrawing, thinking and rethinking the game that she wanted to be based on the theories of George, who died in 1897.
Image
The oldest known version of the game called Monopoly, handmade by Charles Darrow, is in the Strong Museum in Rochester.
The oldest known version of the game called Monopoly, handmade by Charles Darrow, is in the Strong Museum in Rochester.Credit...The Strong, via Associated Press

When she applied for a patent for her game in 1903, Magie was in her 30s. She represented the less than 1 percent of all patent applicants at the time who were women. (Magie also dabbled in engineering; in her 20s, she invented a gadget that allowed paper to pass through typewriter rollers with more ease.)

Unusually, Magie was the head of her household. She had saved up for and bought her home near Washington, along with several acres of property.

It hadn’t been easy. Several years after she obtained the patent for her game, and finding it difficult to support herself on the $10 a week she was earning as a stenographer, Magie staged an audacious stunt mocking marriage as the only option for women; it made national headlines. Purchasing an advertisement, she offered herself for sale as a “young woman American slave” to the highest bidder. Her ad said that she was “not beautiful, but very attractive,” and that she had “features full of character and strength, yet truly feminine.”

The ad quickly became the subject of news stories and gossip columns in newspapers around the country. The goal of the stunt, Magie told reporters, was to make a statement about the dismal position of women. “We are not machines,” Magie said. “Girls have minds, desires, hopes and ambition.”

If Magie’s goal had been to gain an audience for her ideas, she succeeded. In the fall of 1906 she took a job as a newspaper reporter. Four years later, she married a businessman, Albert Phillips, who, at 54, was 10 years Lizzie’s senior. The union was an unusual one — a woman in the 40s embarking on a first marriage, and a man marrying a woman who had publicly expressed her skepticism of marriage as an institution.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 10:35 AM

We a long time ago had a rule about not posting whole articles - partly because it doesn't look good, and partly because of copyright. In future just pick a few paragraphs and link to the rest. This came from the New York Times:

Monopoly’s Inventor: The Progressive Who Didn’t Pass ‘Go’


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: The Sandman
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 12:22 PM

She created two sets of rules for her game: an anti-monopolist set in which all were rewarded when wealth was created, and a monopolist set in which the goal was to create monopolies and crush opponents
an anti-monopolist set
this was what i found particularly interesting.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Mrrzy
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 01:29 PM

Quakers rule!


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: The Sandman
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 02:20 PM

yes well i went to a quaker school


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Mrrzy
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 09:43 PM

Those of us with Quakers in our family tree kinda knew this. I found out when complaining to my dad, when I was quite small, about not enjoying the game because of having no interest in either amassing wealth nor taking others', and he said Ah, I should play by the original rules...


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Joe Offer
Date: 09 Mar 21 - 11:38 PM

SRS, the long-ago rule was against posting more than one screenful of information, because there were a couple of people who were dominating threads by throwing lengthy copy-pastes back and forth at each other and leaving no room for actual human discussion. The information should be credited to the source, but we've never prohibited posting copy-pasted information in the forum. We've generally encouraged people to post factual information in its entirety, not just a link.
And this is a downright interesting article, and should be posted in its entirety.
We've rarely had a question about copyright infringement, but we do take things down if the copyright holder asks us to.
-Joe-


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 10 Mar 21 - 12:01 PM

I didn't edit the article because it was from 2015, I did ask Dick for the link and pulled out the germane part that linked back to the New York Times. The New York Times makes a point of having durable links to their archives and they will always be there where they can be found again, so this article didn't need to be printed in full. That said, many other journals and websites aren't so fastidious about maintaining the articles and addresses to them. Those that are germane to Mudcat should be copied and pasted (obituaries in particular).

You don't want the copyright police to come start insisting on stuff being removed.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: SPB-Cooperator
Date: 10 Mar 21 - 01:56 PM

Interesting about the other set of rules. Sounds like an exercise I did with a couple of friends back in the 80s at an ICOM AGM.

We called it co-opoly, to be played on an identical monopoly board. The main difference was that rather than one person holding property, there was the option of shared ownership - ie the rents collected were shared between all the owners, property development was subject to consensus agreement, and building costs were shared. The objective was to see if co-opoly could be a win-win game.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Jos
Date: 10 Mar 21 - 02:02 PM

And was it a win-win game?


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 10 Mar 21 - 04:47 PM

My paternal grandmother had Monopoly, Totopoly and Bulls & Bears, which I always thought were made by Waddingtons, and were all played at family Christmas gatherings.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Jon Freeman
Date: 11 Mar 21 - 04:36 AM

Bonzo, Waddingtons made the UK version of Monopoly under licence from Parker Brothers. Both companies were taken over by Hasbro.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 13 Mar 21 - 05:14 AM

Ah that explains it - I wonder who won the first prize in a beauty contest!!


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Raedwulf
Date: 15 Mar 21 - 07:51 AM

Jon - What actually happened is that Waddingtons sent the card game Lexicon to Parker Brothers, in hope of interesting them in it. Parkers sent back Monopoly, ditto. I have no idea who has been considered the more successful! l-)


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: JHW
Date: 17 Mar 21 - 06:32 AM

I had a French one, set in Paris. Lent it out and now remember never got it back. Who made it? No idea.
A downside of being able to Google anything is you don't know what to believe any more. The planet is full of flat earthers.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 17 Mar 21 - 04:40 PM

Did anyone play Totopoly or Bulls & Bears?


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Jos
Date: 17 Mar 21 - 05:10 PM

We had Lexicon when I was a child, but I don't remember ever really playing it. The cards were good for building card houses, but once we discovered Scrabble, Lexicon couldn't compete as a game - not so good for building card houses though.


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Subject: RE: Monopoly its origins- 1st made by Elizabeth Magie
From: Raedwulf
Date: 20 Mar 21 - 12:29 AM

Yep, we had Totopoly. I can even remember my eldest (boring!) brother pointing out that I couldn't rename one of the horses to "Red Rum" cos Totopoly was a flat race! Bulls & Bears I've never heard of.

On a tangential note... I had (still have!) Subbuteo Football, Subbuteo Cricket, a mate up the road had Subbuteo Rugby... Did you know Subbuteo also did an angling game? It was strictly a board & card game (a la Monopoly), but it was rather good. Family holidays were always down in the West Country, where we'd spend a day visiting Morwenna, one of Mum's old work friends. She had it...


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