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Shove Ha'penny

Mahogany Boards

The famous English pub game in which players attempt to shove old English ha'penny coins up a board so that they fall between the horizontal lines. At first glance, it appears simple but you can bet your bottom farthing that the pub locals will beat you every time...

Mahogany Shove Ha'penny board

Mahogany board with and without Brass lifts. Click on the pictures to enlarge

The wooden boards are made from solid quarter sawn mahogany in the same traditional way as they were made over 100 years ago.  Selected by the majority of pubs and clubs throughout Britain, these boards have a scoring strips down the side, a wooden retaining board at the end and come complete with a set of genuine old English halfpennies.  A bar under the front of the board butts up against the table to prevent movement. Both boards are 32mm thick and measure approximately 560mm x 330mm (22 x 13 x 1.25 inches). Our boards have regulation 1.25 inch beds - do not settle for anything less!

Note: The manufacturer supplies unsmoothed ha'pennies with these boards - these work fine on the wooden surface.

The Tournament board incorporates hinged brass lifts which are pulled upwards to determine if a coin is within a bed or not - if the ha'penny moves, it doesn't score... 

Availability Update. Jaques have a long-term manufacturing problem with these boards and they have been out of stock for many months. The Jaques family are still working on these issues and assure us that stock will eventually arrive but as at February 2009, new boards are not imminent.

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Mahogany Shove Ha'penny board
Price includes delivery!

£86.09 £99.00 2 + transit time Apologies - out of stock.. Date new stock due: unknown. Email us to be notified when new stock is available.

Mahogany Shove Ha'penny board with brass lifts
Price includes delivery!

£129.57 £149.00 2 + transit time Apologies - out of stock.. Date new stock due: unknown. Email us to be notified when new stock is available.
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The Origins of Sjoelbak, Shuffleboard and Shove Ha'penny

The original English ancestor of most of the games involving shoving discs of some sort on a table was called Shovelboard.  Popular in Tudor times, Shovelboard was played by the English upper classes on enormous narrow tables as long as 30 feet (9 metres). Players shoved metal weights down the tables, attempting to get them as near to the other end of the table without falling off.    

By the 1800's Shovelboard had been abandoned by the aristocracy and nowadays, Shovelboard tables are confined to museums in England but three major derivatives still survive.  In Holland, the game of Sjoelbak came about sometime prior to 1900 and is still big in Holland, Belgium and Germany.  In America, Shuffleboard, became quite popular during the early 1900's in an outdoor format which still survives.   A smaller table version is now reasonably common in American bars and is very similar to the original Shovelboard.

In England, at a much earlier date during the 15th century, an indoor version of Shovelboard for play in taverns developed called Shove Groat.  The game evolved through Slide-thrift and Push-penny and eventually Shove Ha'penny came into existence around 1840.  It would originally have been played on any flat surface that could have the requisite lines inscribed on it but the official board these days should be made of slate or hardwood with indented lines defining the beds.  In all such games, players take turns to push coins up a board with horizontal lines across it.   The areas between each pair of horizontal lines are called a "beds" and the objective is to push the coins so that they land squarely in the beds without touching the horizontal lines.  To win, a player needs to get a coin in each bed 3 times which is no easy task for the beds furthest away from the front of the board. 

You can learn more about the History of Shovelboard, Sjoelbak and Shove Ha'penny from The Online Guide to Traditional Games.

 

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