Not really history per se but after my previous mistake I thought I might as well post this.
There is a Sherlock Holmes story called "The Dancing Men". It is in the collection called "The Return of Sherlock Holmes". (The text is probably on the internet somewhere). By this stage Conan Doyle was running out of ideas and his stories had become somewhat formulaeic. They started with some wonderful observation which perplexed Watson. That is the interest of this story to a snooker enthusiast. Holmes mentions the chalk on Watson's hand the night before as being evidence that he had been playing billiards with his friend Thurston. I think the interest is that Doyle had been looking for yet another idea before he wrote this one and linked the game of billiards with the name Thurston. That makes me think that he had probably owned or at least played on a Thurston table.
Well I thought it was interesting!
There is a Sherlock Holmes story called "The Dancing Men". It is in the collection called "The Return of Sherlock Holmes". (The text is probably on the internet somewhere). By this stage Conan Doyle was running out of ideas and his stories had become somewhat formulaeic. They started with some wonderful observation which perplexed Watson. That is the interest of this story to a snooker enthusiast. Holmes mentions the chalk on Watson's hand the night before as being evidence that he had been playing billiards with his friend Thurston. I think the interest is that Doyle had been looking for yet another idea before he wrote this one and linked the game of billiards with the name Thurston. That makes me think that he had probably owned or at least played on a Thurston table.
Well I thought it was interesting!
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