Origin of the game Originally,
Red Rover was a regular tag and running game with several players on one side and one person (the "Red Rover") placed in the center of the playing field. The person in the center calls,
"Red Rover, Red Rover, let [player's name]
come over!" to challenge and catch one of the players who tries to reach the other side of the playing area. If the Red Rover succeeds, they both return to the center. Each player tagged joins the center and helps tag the others. The game was first recorded in New York in 1891 in
Stewart Culin's publication
Street Games of Boys in Brooklyn, N. Y.. It also appeared in 1916 in
London Street Games, a book by
Norman Douglas, although British folklorists
Iona and Peter Opie stated that no record of
Red Rover has been found in the
United Kingdom before 1922. The game of
Red Rover was sometimes confused with the British game of
Warning!, and in the
U.S. with a game called
Red Lion, which are both tag games but with different playing instructions. The confusion was mainly due to the similarity of names (in
Moray, Scotland, the game of
Warning! was primarily known by the name of
Johnny Rover). Parallels, on the other hand, exist with
Bar the Door, a game that was described in 1901 by
Robert Craig Maclagan in
The Games & Diversions of Argyleshire.
The missing link In the second half of the 1930s, the game rules started to change. A variation, representing the missing link between the original
Red Rover and the team game, was published in 1945 in the United States by
Neva Leona Boyd in the
Handbook of Games. The game combines the rules of the traditional pastime, such as calling and tagging players individually by a catcher placed in the center of the playground, with those of the team game, which comes into being when the increasing number of players caught in the middle forms a chain by grasping each other's hand. The chain must be broken by the remaining players. By the end of the decade, the transformation process of the game was fully completed. In March 1949, Warren E. Roberts of the
Indiana University Folklore Institute explained that two versions of
Red Rover exist. In his article ''Children's Games and Game Rhymes
, Roberts tried to delineate the particularities between the traditional Red Rover
and the combat game of the same name and phrase. Since the beginning of the 1950s, Red Rover'' has been described primarily as a team game. It remained unclear why the playing rules had been modified over time. ==
Red Rover as a team game ==