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#14.1continuous #billiardshistory #blackwidow #cesarmorales #efrenreyes #emmettblankenship #englishbilliards #germanpool #jeanettelee #jeromekeogh #JerseyRed #nineball #one-pocket #onepocket #poolhistory #PoolHustler #straightpool #wimpylassiter 14.1 18.2 Alfredo De Oro balkline Calvin Demarest caroms Cisero Murphy Dieter Müller Don WIllis EarlStrickland Efren Reyes English Billiards Erich Hagenlocher Eufaula Kid George Jansco Glenn Womack Harold Worst Hugo Kerkau Jack Breit Jean Balukas Jersey Red John Schmidt Johnston City Louis Fox Masako Katsura Michael Phelan nine-ball Ralph Greenleaf UJ Puckett Walter Lindrum Willie Mosconi World Pool
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
Calvin Demarest was born on June 20, 1888 and died on June 12, 1925. He took the 18.2 billiard championship in December 1909, and his final match to win it (against George Sutton), may have been the fastest 18.2 match ever played: it took Demarest just over an hour to score the requisite 500 points. Demarest suffered a mental breakdown in 1915, attacking both his wife and his mother with a knife. He died while still institutionalized.
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
Calvin Demarest was born on June 20, 1888 and died on June 12, 1925. He took the 18.2 billiard championship in December 1909, and his final match to win it (against George Sutton), may have been the fastest 18.2 match ever played: it took Demarest just over an hour to score the requisite 500 points. Demarest suffered a mental breakdown in 1915, attacking both his wife and his mother with a knife. He died while still institutionalized.
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
Jerome Keogh, the man generally credited with inventing 14.1 Continuous, also known as straight pool, was born to Irish immigrants in Friendsville, Pa., on May 26,1872. Mr. Keogh eventually moved to Scranton where he established a billiard academy. He not only won five world titles during his lifetime, but also saw two of his pupils, Thomas Hueston and Irving Crane of Livonia, become world champions. He died on Jan. 12, 1953. #POOLhistory #straightpool #jeromekeogh
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