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OLD
WEST LEGENDS
Faro, or "Bucking the Tiger" |
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Playing Faro in an
Arizona
Saloon in 1895.
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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A derivation of the card game Basset, Faro
originated in France in the late 17th century. First known
as Pharaon, it became extremely popular in Europe in the 18th
century. With its name shortened to Pharo or Faro, it soon spread to
America and became the favored game during the
California Gold Rush. The game soon
spread into gambling halls all over the American Frontier, with such
illustrious names as
Doc
Holliday and
Wyatt Earp,
often performing the task of a Faro Dealer.
Not a direct relative
of poker, Faro was played alongside its
other popular counterpart, and played by the masses, due to its fast
action, easy-to-learn rules, and better odds than most games of
chance. From 1825 to 1915, the game was the most popular enticement
in almost every gambling hall in the
American West.
Though the rules are
similar to Mini-Baccarat, Faro is played with only one deck of cards
and allows for any number of players, referred to as "punters.” The
Faro dealer was called the "banker.”
The Faro layout consists of a board where
one card of each denomination is displayed at the top of the table,
usually in the suit of spades. As the game commenced, each player
would lay his stake on one of the 13 cards, or could place multiple
bets on different cards. There was also a "high card” box at the top
of the layout, which players could bet on.

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After the banker burned a
card, he would then deal a card, referred to as the "banker’s card,” and
place it to his right. He would then deal another card, called the
"English card” or "player’s card”, placing it to his left.
The banker would win all the money staked on
the "banker’s card,” while paying double the sums staked to those who had
placed their bet on the "player’s card.” If the banker dealt a pair, he
won half the stakes that were bet on the card. In a fair
game, this provided the only house edge. Gamblers could also wager
on the "High Card” bar at the top of the layout, betting that the
"player’s card” would be higher than the "banker’s card.”
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When these rules are
reviewed, it becomes obvious, that there is no significant edge for the
dealer, or "house, which resulted in cheating by the "banker” becoming
commonplace. Trick decks, sleight of hand, and forms of modified automatic
dealing boxes were employed to give the house a better advantage.
In fact, cheating became so prevalent that
editions of Hoyle’s Rules of Games book began their Faro section
with a disclaimer, warning readers that an honest faro bank could not be
found in the United States.
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Faro in Tonapah,
Nevada ,
1905, commissioned by Harrah's
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Bucking the Tiger
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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One of the better known
cheating dealers was Soapy Smith, who at his Tivoli Club in Denver,
Colorado,
every one of his Faro games was gaffed.
A popular phrase that was often associated
with Faro was "Bucking the Tiger,” which is thought to have come from
early card backs that featured a drawing of a Bengal Tiger. Another
phrase that referred to playing Faro, was "twisting the tiger’s tail.”
Places that sported a number of gambling halls, including alleys, streets
and districts, were often called "tiger town” or "tiger alley.”
Due to the extremely low odds for the house,
legitimate Faro was virtually gone by 1925. However, when the State of
Nevada
legalized gambling in 1931, the game made a short revival, but by the
1950’s, it had gone out of fashion was again, as more profitable house
games such as craps and roulette were promoted by the casinos. |
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By this time there were
only five active faro banks known to have been in existence in
Nevada
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the last of which was in Reno and closed in 1985.
Today, the vast
majority of young American gamblers have never even heard of Faro.
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated September, 2009.
A dollar picked up in the road
is more satisfaction to you than the ninety-and-nine which you had to work
for, and money won at faro or in stock snuggles into your heart in the
same way."
-- Mark Twain in 1892
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Playing
Faro
in 1900.
This
image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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Also See:
Build an Online Poker
Bankroll For Free
Gamblin' Vintage Photos
George Devol
- Card Sharp of the Old West
Poker in the Old West
Saloons of the Wild West
Scoundrels
of the Old West
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Gambling
Vintage Photo Prints - Gambling was as popular during the
days of the
Old West
as it is today. This collection provides a fascinating glimpse into the
faces and games played more than a century ago.
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