OAKS NORTH

LAWN BOWLING CLUB

San Diego, CA

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TRUTH OR FICTION?
 

To know the exact history of lawn bowling and get some interesting info on the subject we will have to travel back in time to the time of the Egyptian pharaohs. The evidence has been strong as they have found bowls in Egyptian tombs. So the history of the balls is indeed a mystery, we don't know who made the first ball. As far as seven thousand years ago, the bowls went from Egypt to Greece and Rome and then to the English country.

Archeologists in their excavations of what is referred to as the ‘stone age' have accumulated evidence that quite clearly suggests a certain game being played in those times with stones that were rounded and gently hurled or rolled in the direction of a peg or if you may, a marker.

The bowls found at Hawaii were slightly smaller than the ones found at a ancient dig at Tauranga but both resembled each other. All the bowls are shaped with bias such that when they are delivered with a normal bowling action, the biad causes them to take a curved path. When they take this curved path the speed slows down. The maori also used bowls but they were a little larger then the bowls used today. The size of the bowls was such that they could have been used for similar general purposes.

 

 

 

 

 

History of Lawn Bowling in the United States

 

 

The following article is reproduced by permission from the American Lawn Bowls Association

Although the American Lawn Bowls Association was not founded until 1915, the sport of lawn bowling can trace its American beginnings back to the 17th Century when English Colonists brought the game to the new land.

A bowling green was built at Williamsburg VA in 1632, and the game is still played there today on a beautiful green behind the Williamsburg Inn. A Colonel Hoomes built a green on his estate at what is now Bowling Green VA in 1670. Many other of the new states named a town after this ancient sport played in England since the 12th Century.

The bowling green you see today in New York City's Central Park was preceded by many others, the first being a green built by the British in 1664 when they took over the city and named it New York. That first green was erected on the parade ground of Fort Amsterdam, where today the U.S. Customs House sits.

In 1732, George Washington's father put in a green at Mount Vernon, and in that same year a bowling green was established in Battery Park in New York City.

But lawn bowling faded in the early United States of America after the American Revolution (1775-1782), when newly independent citizens began to take an increasingly dim view of the customs and games of their former governors. The sport apparently disappeared in this country for almost a century until Scottish immigrants revived it in the late 19th Century, they started lawn bowls clubs in New York state, New Jersey and Connecticut, beginning in 1879.

By World War I, the spread of lawn bowling and clubs from coast to coast led to the founding of the American Lawn Bowls Association in 1915. Bowlers from Buffalo, Brooklyn and Boston met at the Lafayette Hotel in Buffalo on July 27 that year to form the sport's first national American association.

Played exclusively and then mostly by men in its early days, lawn bowls has attracted many women players in this century. Women bowlers founded their own association in 1970. Today the American Lawn Bowls Association and the American Women's Lawn Bowls Association work closely together to govern and perpetuate the game they love.

   

. . . So I took up bowling to win my hubby back                
and found that what he could do with Kitty,       
I could do with Jack

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