Difference between revisions of "Chapter 3"

Line 1: Line 1:
 +
==Page 16==
 +
'''Smoky Gooden's policy joint'''<br />
 +
Milwaukee gambling kingpin Smoky Gooden, an African-American, ran a "policy joint" from his cigar shop on Sixth Street. Policy – also known as the numbers – was first introduced to Milwaukee around 1870. He would pay off the vice police. The concept of the game is very similar to the variety of state lottery games that exist today. Players chose a series of numbers from between 1 and 78 and placed a bet on those numbers being drawn on the local “wheel.” Payouts were based on the amount of money bet and the length of the series of numbers.
 +
 
==Page 26==
 
==Page 26==
 
'''D and D'''<br />
 
'''D and D'''<br />
 
Drunk and Disorderly
 
Drunk and Disorderly

Revision as of 15:28, 28 September 2025

Page 16

Smoky Gooden's policy joint
Milwaukee gambling kingpin Smoky Gooden, an African-American, ran a "policy joint" from his cigar shop on Sixth Street. Policy – also known as the numbers – was first introduced to Milwaukee around 1870. He would pay off the vice police. The concept of the game is very similar to the variety of state lottery games that exist today. Players chose a series of numbers from between 1 and 78 and placed a bet on those numbers being drawn on the local “wheel.” Payouts were based on the amount of money bet and the length of the series of numbers.

Page 26

D and D
Drunk and Disorderly

Personal tools