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www.bridgeguys.com Mr. Ely
Culbertson,
was born July 22, 1891, and died
December 27, 1955. He was
considered the foremost authority
in America on contract bridge for
many years, and he was credited
with making the game an
international popular pastime.
His efforts in making the game
popular lay in the fact that paid
off, and the game of bridge
became very fashionable and
socially accepted and acceptable.
The bridge player of today must
realize that card playing was
considered idle work and a
pastime of the devil during that
era.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson was also an author and
lecturer on mass psychology and
political science, which perhaps
gave him an edge in popularizing
the game.
He was
born in Romania but was an
American citizen from birth by
registration with the US Consul,
being the son of Ahilon
Culbertson, an American mining
engineer, who had been retained
by the Russian government to
develop thc Caucasian oil fields
and who had married a Russian
woman, Xenia Rogoznaya, daughter
of a Cossack Atamon or Chief.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson belonged to a pioneer
American family that settled near
Titusville and Oil City,
Pennsylvania, and later joined
the Sons of the American
Revolution to refute rumors that
he had changed his name or
falsified his ancestry. The
political upheaval of that time
can be read in many history
books, and the life on the social
level was difficult at many times
for many individuals.
He
attended gymnasia, a form of
schooling, in Russia and
matriculated at Yale in 1908 and
Cornell in 1910, but remained
only a few months at each
prestigious university. Later in
1913 and 1914 he studied
political science at LEcole
des Sciences Economiques et
Politiques at the University of
Paris, the Sorbonnes, and in 1915
at the University of Geneva in
Switzerland. But Mr. Ely
Culbertson was largely
self-educated, and the knowledge
and education for which he was
admired can principally he
attributed to a self-imposed and
invariable regimen of reading a
book designed to improve his
knowledge at least one hour
before going to bed each night.
Mr. Ely Culbertson had an
aptitude for languages and he
could speak and read fluently
Russian, English, French, German,
Czech, Spanish and Italian. He
also had a working knowledge of
Slavic, Polish, Swedish and
Danish-Norwegian in addition to
Latin and Greek.
In 1907
Mr. Ely Culbertson participated
as student in one of the abortive
Russian revolutions actions
closely observed by the American
government. It was only ten years
later that the Romanov Family was
overthrown. Many students of the
time thought it quite fashionable
and politically correct. He
pursued his revolutionary ideals
and ideas in labor disputes in
the American Northwest and in
Mexico and Spain during the years
1911 and 1912, where he served as
an agitator for the Union and
syndicalist sides. It is
necessary to understand the times
and the political upheavals of
that time to understand Mr. Ely
Culbertson. After the Russian
revolution in 1917, the family
fortune was lost and confiscated
by the Russian State. The family
was forced into exile to Paris,
France, where they stayed for
four years, and then lived in
several other European cities.
The main source of income was
derived from the talent of Mr.
Ely Culbertson as a skilled card
player, and not only in the game
of bridge, which was just an
emerging game.
Considering
the aftermath of the First World
War, it is no wonder that Mr. Ely
Culbertson decided to make the
trip to New York in 1921. He was
almost a pauper and lived
primarily from his winnings at
card games. Two years later, in
1923, he married Mrs. Josephine
Murphy Dillon, one of the highly
reputed bridge teachers in New
York City. Using his card talents
and her influence, the two soon
became a successful pair as
tournament players and were
considered bridge authorities.
Between 1926 and 1929, the new
form of the game of bridge,
called Contract Bridge, began
replacing the game of Auction
Bridge.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson recognized the
business opportunity in this
development in the game of bridge
and attempted to establish
himself as the main authority on
Contract Bridge. He planned a
long-term campaign that included
the construction of a dogmatic
System by issuing a magazine
publication, which would appeal
to the group leaders in Contract
Bridge. He wrote a bridge book,
which was highly regarded as the
Bible of all contract bridge
players. He organized a group of
professional bridge teachers, and
above all, he was instrumental in
convincing the general public
that card playing was not idle
work, or the work of the Devil.
The religious obstacle was
perhaps the most difficult
hindrance to his plan to
popularize the game of Contract
Bridge.
The plan
proved conspicuously successful.
Mr. Ely Culbertson founded his
magazine, The Bridge World, in
1929, and through the same
corporation published his
earliest bridge books, all of
which were best sellers. He
manufactured and sold bridge
players' supplies including the
introduction of Kem playing
cards. Kem cards were the first
successful plastic playing cards
and have been manufactured in
America since 1934, and each year
several new designs are
introduced. Mr. Ely Culbertson
maintained an organization of
bridge teachers called the
Culbertson National Studios,
which at its peak had 6000
members, and he conducted bridge
competitions through the United
States Bridge Association and the
World Bridge Olympics and
American Bridge Olympics. In its
best year, 1937, The Bridge World
Inc. grossed more than
$1,000,000, of which $220,000
were royalties payable to Mr. Ely
Culbertson before profits were
calculated. His long-term plan
had finally paid off. The
following picture depicts Mr. Ely
Culbertson at the age of
thirty-five.
Concerning
the magazine, The Bridge World,
it must be admitted that it
helped to popularize the game of
bridge tremendously. A short
history follows:
The
Bridge World is the oldest
continuously published
magazine dealing with
Contract Bridge. This is an
established fact. The
magazine was the idea of Mr.
Ely Culbertson and was first
published in October 1929.
The Bridge World is published
on a monthly basis and the
initial success convinced the
publishers to continue the
magazine. Public interest was
generated by such bridge
matches and events such as
the Culbertson-Lenz Match of
1931-1932 and the
Culbertson-Sims match.
Mr.
Ely Culbertson was the Editor
In Chief until 1943. Several
decisions made concerning the
sale of the magazine proved
unsuccessful, and the
publication itself became
uneconomical. However, the
magazine held a certain
reputation and the better
than average bridge player
remained a subscriber. Over
the years, the magazine also
became the springboard from
which to promote and
advertise new ideas and
concepts in the bridge
community.
The
Bridge World was the first
magazine to publish concepts
and conventions such as the
Stayman Convention, the
Roth-Stone and
Kaplan-Sheinwold Systems,
Lavinthal suit-preference
signals, the Unusual No Trump
Convention, the Key Card
Blackwood variation, and the
many modern treatments and
methods using transfers and
doubles.
The
Master Solvers Club was
initiated to debate and
discuss these Conventions,
Systems, and Treatments, and
consisted of a panel of
bridge experts who would vote
for or against the new idea
or concept and give their
reasons for their particular
vote. This "Bridge Think
Tank" concept has been
adopted by many other
publications, and is still a
popular section of The Bridge
World magazine.
The
list of Editors and
Contributors contains many
pioneers in the bridge
community. Among them are B.
Jay Becker, Sam Fry Jr.,
Charles Goren, William Huske,
Oswald Jacoby, Theodore
Lightner, Walter Malowan,
Geoffrey Mott-Smith, Alfred
Sheinwold, Alexander Sobel,
Alan Truscott, Bobby Wolff,
Waldemar von Zedtwitz, Edwin
Kantar, Eric Kokish, Kit
Woolsey, and many more not
mentioned here.
The
history of the magazine is
like that of any other
magazine. There were
successful times and not so
successful times. In 1943,
the publication was taken
over by Albert H. Morehead,
who edited it in association
with Richard L. Frey,
Josephine Culbertson,
Alphonse Moyse Jr. until
1946. Alphonse Moyse, Jr.
continued the publication
under the aegis of Mr. Ely
Culbertson and his wife,
Josephine Culbertson until
their deaths, December 1955
and 1956 respectively. At
this time, Alphonse Moyse Jr.
became the sole owner and
editor of the magazine.
In
November 1963, the magazine
was purchased by the McCall
Corporation and Alphonse
Moyse, Jr. was retained as
Editor. Upon the retirement
of Alphonse Moyse, Jr.,
McCall Corporation decided to
sell the publication to Edgar
Kaplan and Jeff Rubens, who
then became the sole owners.
Edgar Kaplan held the title
of Editor and Jeff Rubens
held the title of Co-Editor.
Jeff Rubens had been writing
for the publication Bridge
Journal (bold) and now his
articles appeared in The
Bridge World.
The
Bridge World continues to be
published and is also
represented on the Internet
since 1996 and can be reached
at http://www.bridgeworld.com.
As a
regular tournament competitor Mr.
Ely Culbertson had the best
record in the earliest years of
Contract Bridge. In 1930 he won
the Vanderbilt and American
Bridge League Knockout Team
events, also the American Bridge
League Board-a-Match Team Event,
and finished second in the Master
Pairs. That year he led a team
that played the first
international match, in England,
and defeated several teams there.
In 1933 and 1934 his teams won
the Schwab Cup. After 1934 Mr.
Ely Culbertson seldom played
tournament bridge, but he was
second in the ABL's 1935
matchpoint team contest and in
the International Bridge League's
first intercontinental tournament
in 1937. Mr. Ely Culbertson
continued to play high-stakes
Rubber Bridge until about two
years before his death. The
success of Culbertson's Blue Book
in 1930 caused the established
auction bridge authorities to
join forces to combat his
threatened domination of contract
bridge.
During
these pioneer days of the game of
Contract Bridge, it was not
possible for one person to
dictate to the bridge playing
community how the game should be
played, and who made all the
rules and regulations required.
Mr. Ely Culbertson, supported by
his tremendous efforts and
success, rather assumed this
position, which became a threat
to the game itself. The other
bridge authorities decided that a
panel of bridge experts conceive
an Official System.
Official
System
This Official System
represented a system of
Contract Bridge Bidding
devised and endorsed by a
group of leading American
bridge authorities in 1931
and 1932, in opposition to
Mr. Ely Culbertson and his
assumption of being the
single and foremost
authority.
The
future of the game of
Contract Bridge had taken a
new course with the decisions
of Milton C. Work, Sidney S.
Lenz, Wilbur C. Whitehead,
Winfield Liggett Jr., and F.
Dudley Courtenay. They had
formed an Advisory Council
for Contract Bridge with
contributors such as Shepard
Barclay, Fred G. French,
Henry P. Jaeger, Madeleine
Kerwin and E.V. Shapard.
Three
of the principles, which the
Official System advocated,
again in opposition to Mr.
Ely Culbertson, still have
their place in the game.
First is the employment of
the 4-3-2-1 count for No
Trump bidding. Second is the
incorporation of an
intermediate game invitation,
non-forcing, suit bid on the
Two Level. Three is the
employment of an original
opening and forcing bid, or
the artificial Two-Club
Convention, designed for game
and slam.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson witnessed the demise
of his influence over the game of
Contract Bridge and countered by
challenging the leading player
among his opposition, Sidney
Lenz, to a test match, offering
5-1 odds. He was still a betting
man. Mr. Ely Culbertson's victory
in this match, played in the
winter of 1931 and 1932,
fortified his leading position
among the playing community. The
Culbertson-Lenz match was closely
watched and followed. The great
publicity accorded the match
enriched Mr. Ely Culbertson. The
fact was that he and his wife
both acquired contracts for
widely syndicated newspaper
articles, and he made a series of
movie shorts for $360,000, and he
received $10,000 a week for
network radio broadcasts.
For a
short history and the final tally
of the Culbertson-Lenz Match,
please click on the following:
Culberton-Lenz
Match
However,
the panelists listed above who
introduced the Official System
were making headway within the
bridge playing community. In 1935
Mr. Ely Culbertson attempted to
recapture the magic of his
victory against Lenz by playing a
similar match against R Hal and
Dorothy Sims. This became bridge
history as the Culbertson-Sims
Match and was again closely
watched and followed. But
although the Culbertsons won this
match also, there was no such
publicity advantage as accrued
from the Lenz match.
The
publicity accorded Mr. Ely
Culbertson throughout his
professional career can be
attributed equally to his
unquestioned abilities, his
colorful personality and his
flamboyant way of life. Mr. Ely
Culbertson lived in the grand
manner, with total disregard of
expense whether at the moment he
happened to be rich or penniless.
The story is told of how he once
walked into Sulkas on Fifth
Avenue in New York and bought
$5,000 worth of shirts. He smoked
a private blend of cigarettes
that cost him $7 a day. When he
decided to buy a Duesenberg
automobile in 1934 he did not
sell his Rolls Royce, but gave it
away. His home for years was an
estate in Ridgefield Connecticut,
with a 45-room house, several
miles of paved and lighted roads,
greenhouses, cottages, lakes, and
an enclosed swimming pool with
orchids growing along its
periphery. He always had caviar
with his tea and made special
trips to Italy to buy his
neckties. When he died in 1955,
he owned five houses for his own
use, four of them with swimming
pools. Mr. Ely Culbertson
rationalized these extravagances
as publicity devices. He actually
lived in one small room with a
cot and a table, and he spent
most of his time pacing the floor
and thinking, as the rumor has
it.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson's contributions to the
science of Contract Bridge, both
practical and theoretical, were
basic and timeless. He devised
the markings on duplicate boards
for vulnerability and the bonuses
for games and partscores. He was
the first authority to treat
distribution as equal or superior
to high cards in formulating the
requirements for bids. Forcing
bids, including the one-over-one,
were original Culbertson
concepts, as were four-card suit
bids, limited No Trump bids, the
strong Two Bid, and wholesale
Ace-Showing including the 4 No
Trump slam try. These were
presented in the historic Lesson
Sheets on the Approach-Forcing
System devised in 1927, and in
numerous magazine articles
written by Mr. Ely Culbertson in
the Twenties and early Thirties.
Specific bridge principles
attributable to Mr. Ely
Culbertson, separately described,
include among others Asking Bids,
the Grand Slam Force, Jump Bids,
and the New-Suit Forcing
principle, which Mr. Ely
Culbertson first introduced and
later repudiated.
As odd as
it may seem to the reader, Mr.
Ely Culbertson, during 1938, with
war imminent in Europe, lost
interest in bridge and decided to
devote his time to seeking some
grand achievement in political
science. To effect world peace he
proposed international control of
decisive weapons and a quota for
each major nation in tactical
forces. After formation of the
United Nations to which the ideas
of Mr. Ely Culbertson made a
discernible contribution, he
persisted in a campaign to give
it adequate police power. At one
time 17 US Senators and 42 US
Congressmen subscribed to a
proposed joint resolution of
Congress advocating the proposals
of Mr. Ely Culbertson. It seems
that the gentleman attacked each
field with the same vigor and
vitality, with the same amount of
energy and time.
However,
in the course of these activities
Mr. Ely Culbertson lost his
position as the leading bridge
authority; which was waning
before practically changing
careers, by 1950 or earlier.
Charles Goren had surpassed him
in the sale of books and other
bridge writings and in the
adherence of bridge teachers and
players.
However,
when a bridge Hall of Fame was
inaugurated in 1964, nine years
after his death, Mr. Ely
Culbertson had the honor of being
the first person elected. Though
he was at no time an ACBL Life
Master, he was named Honorary
Member in 1938.
Ely and
Josephine Culbertson were
divorced in 1938, and in 1947 Mr.
Ely Culbertson married Dorothy
Renata Bachne, who was 35 years
younger. There were two children
by each of his marriages.
Culbertson suffered in later
years from lung congestion
diagnosed as emphysema, and died
at his last home, in Brattleboro,
Vermont, of a common cold that
proved fatal because of the lung
condition.
Minor
works by Mr. Ely Culbertson, such
as paperbound books and
pamphlets, are literally too
numerous to mention, and all or
nearly all were written by
members of Mr. Ely Culbertson's
staff under his direction, as
also were most of the newspaper
and magazine articles published
under Culbertson's name from 1932
on. Earlier articles in bridge
periodicals were written by Mr.
Ely Culbertson, as were his major
books listed above.
Mr. Ely
Culbertson was a pioneer of the
game of bridge, and inspired many
to take the game seriously. He
overcame the notions of society,
battled the traditions of a
religious society, and was an
icon to many bridge players and
authorities of his time. He may
have assumed too much, but he did
tremendous work in establishing a
foundation for future bridge
players. He should not be
forgotten.
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