Origins was devised to evade a
Baltimore law prohibiting nine-pin bowling.|right|thumb Standardized rules and organization of nine-pins were developed by the American Bowling Congress in 1895. Nine-pins was the most popular form of bowling in much of the United States from colonial times until the 1830s, when several cities in the
United States banned nine-pin bowling out of
moral panic over the supposed destruction of the
work ethic,
gambling, and
organized crime. Ten-pin bowling is said to have been invented in order to meet the letter of these laws, even with evidence of outdoor bowling games in 1810 England being bowled with ten pins set in an equilateral triangle as is done today in ten-pin bowling. Today, nine-pin bowling has disappeared from all of the United States except Texas, where, by 1837, ninepin alleys were numerous enough that rather than a ban, the
1st Congress of the Republic of Texas chose to subject them to an annual tax of $150 (), and all forms of bowling have remained legal and subject to taxation in Texas ever since. By
World War I most Texas bowling establishments, both private and commercial, had changed to ten-pin. However, nine-pin remained popular in predominantly German communities like
Fredericksburg,
New Braunfels and
Bulverde, until the introduction of fully automated pin-setting machinery in the 1950s caused most of them to make the change as well. Those bowlers who still preferred the teamwork and camaraderie of nine-pins then moved to the nine-pins clubs in small outlying communities of
Bexar,
Comal, and
Guadalupe counties.
Equipment The American variation of nine-pin bowling is played with the same lane as in conventional ten-pin bowling. The difference is the lack of automatic
pinsetter and
electronic scoring system. Both of these are done manually, similar to how ten-pin bowling was in the early 20th century. The lane is usually under a
dry lane condition (without oil), or rarely oiled in
typical house shot, allowing players to release a
hook ball in a similar fashion as ten-pin bowling. The pins used in the Texas version of nine-pins are the same dimensions as those used in ten-pins, and the bowlers use ten-pin balls, with finger and thumb holes drilled in them.
Scoring Scoring in nine-pin is also different. Each frame begins with a
full house. If a bowler
knocks down all nine pins in a
full house, that bowler has achieved a
nine-ringer and is given a score of 9 with a circle around it. There are no additional points for a
ringer. If a bowler knocks down all the pins except for the center pin in a
full house, that bowler has achieved a
twelve-ringer and is given a score of 12 with a circle around it. If a bowler's roll does not result in either “9” or “12” points, that bowler's roll is given a “-“ (dash) or a “√” (check) which carries no point value. The one exception to this is the last ball rolled by the last bowler in the frame. This bowler will receive credit for the number of pins knocked down. For example, if the last bowler has rolled their second ball for this frame, and three pins remain standing (six pins knocked down), that bowler will receive credit for those six pins, regardless if that bowler knocked these six pins down or not. When a bowler takes a turn and knocks down the remaining pins, that bowler receives nine points for that shot, regardless of the number of pins knocked down to receive these nine points. If a bowler knocks down the remaining pins, except for the center pin, that bowler receives 12 points for that shot regardless of the number of pins knocked down to receive those 12 points. Because bowlers face the pins their teammates have left, the better teams are those who have a mix of bowlers that can hit the left side, hit the right side, or can "roll ringers". This leads to specialization. A good team captain can also help their team by sending the bowlers in the order that maximizes their success. == See also ==