marbles

Don’t lose your marbles: American games at the turn of the century

Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

March 2026

Everything Old

Don’t lose your marbles: American games at the turn of the century

by Corbin Crable

Get your favorite cat’s eye polished, because in this issue of Discover Vintage America, we’ll be doing a deep dive into the history of marbles (and, in case you didn’t know, the phrase “lose my marbles” in reference to losing one’s mental faculties, originated in the late 19th century, about the same time as glass marbles themselves). But before we do, let’s take a quick look at other popular American games in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

As work hours decreased in the 19th century, Americans began being able to enjoy a bit more free time. During the Civil War, board games began to fill that gap, taking the nation’s collective mind off the conflict at home. The machinery developed in factories during the Industrial Revolution allowed for more board games to be produced – and with increased speed of production, those games became more affordable to the average American family (in the decades following the war, physical activity options increased as well, with basketball being invented by Dr. James Naismith in 1891). Checkers, chess, dominoes, and backgammon were widely popular.

One might consider the second half of the 19th century to be the golden age of board games, in fact, with the earlier games based on Christian themes of morality and faith; others still were based on nursery rhymes and fables. With the Gilded Age, meanwhile, came board games that placed a focus on building material wealth.

Other games of the late Victorian era were designed to refine one’s habits and behavior in a civilized world. For instance, card games made to help young men and women in the early stages of courting were equipped with topics of conversation to be used as icebreakers, taking some of the awkwardness out of dating and helping the players to become more witty and even flirtatious.

In popular culture, the game Hoop and Stick endures as a symbol of a 19th-century child’s limited, boredom-inducing options for play; in the late 1800s, however, it was popular with America’s children.d across the U.S.).

The idea, of course, was simple – keep a large metal hoop upright by pushing it with a stick. It was cost-effective and simple.

Meanwhile, the toys made for children during these years were meant for children to mimick the tasks in which they would engage as adults. Boys, for instance, might play smaller versions of farming tools or toy tractors, while girls cared for baby dolls and cooked imaginary meals on a small cast iron stovetop. Again, these toys and more were made more affordable to families thanks to the technological innovations born from the Industrial Revolution.

Still, sometimes the most simple toys are best, and the continued popularity of marbles stands as proof positive of that theory. Throughout the centuries, whether made of clay or glass, they’re still highly coveted collectibles – and, like other toys of yesteryear, very affordable, too. As temperatures rise in anticipation of summer, now’s the time to dig out your bag of marbles, play a spirited game, and relive your glory days as a marble master. There’s no better time to take your shot.

Contact Corbin Crable at editor@discovervintageamerica.com​

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