
Poker History
It is likely that Poker derived its present day form from elements
of many different games.
Jonathan H. Green makes one of the earliest written references to
Poker in 1834. In his writing, Green mentions rules to what he called
the "cheating game," which was then being played on Mississippi
riverboats. He soon realized that his was the first such reference
to the game, and since it was not mentioned in the current American
Hoyle, he chose to call the game Poker.
The game he described was played with 20 cards, using only the aces,
kings, queens, jacks and tens. Two to four people could play, and
each was dealt five cards. By the time Green wrote about it, poker
had become the number one cheating game on the Mississippi boats,
receiving even more action than Three-Card Monte. Most people taken
by Three-Card Monte thought the 20-card poker seemed more a legitimate
game, and they came back time and time again. It would certainly
appear, then, that Poker was developed by the cardsharps.

