The Women's Professional Billiards Championship was an English billiards tournament held from 1930 to 1950. The tournament was first organised by Burroughes and Watts in 1930 and 1931, before the WBA ran the event until its conclusion in 1950. Joyce Gardner won the tournament on seven of the fourteen times that it was held, and was runner-up six times; the only time that she was not in the final was the 1940 tournament. The other players to hold the title were Thelma Carpenter who won four times, and Ruth Harrison who took three championship titles. Harrison's break of 197 in 1937 remains a women's record in competitive billiards.
The first six tournaments were held at Burroughes Hall in London. Apart from in 1939, when it was again at Burroughes Hall, all the subsequent editions were played at Thurston's Hall, which was closed due to bomb damage in 1940 and reopened in 1947 as Leicester Square Hall.
History
Although there were female players of cue sports since the games were invented,[1] their progress in the game has been held back by sexism,[2] with men typically not taking female players seriously, or claiming that the women were seeking male attention by playing.[1][a]
In the mid-19th century, few women played cue sports, but they became more popular among wealthy women across Europe towards the end of the century.[1][6] In 1905, John Roberts Jr. announced that he would be promoting a "Madame Strebor" as a professional;[7] Strebor played Eva Collins in an English billiards series at Burroughes Hall in 1906. The Sporting Life commented that public matches between women were unusual enough that the series was likely to attract public interest, but that "many attempts have been made to popularise the game with ladies, with results anything but flattering".[8]
Margaret Lennan beat Joyce Gardner 1,000–960 at Hull in August 1928 in a 1,000-up (first to 1,000 points) English billiards match that was billed as the Ladies' Championship of England and Scotland. Billiard cloth manufacturers Howard and Powell provided a silver rose bowl for the winner.[9] In 1930, the cue sports company Burroughes and Watts organised a British Women's Billiards Championship,[10] also known as the Burwat Cup.[11] Another edition was held in 1931.[11] In 1931, the Women's Billiards Association (WBA) was formed at a meeting chaired by Teresa Billington-Greig, with the aim of controlling the amateur and professional women's championships. It was agreed with the Billiards Association and Control Council that the WBA would take over the running of the competition as a world championship from 1932, with the same trophy that was used in 1930 and 1932.[12]
Joyce Gardner was champion each year until 1934, when Ruth Harrison won the first of her three titles.[13] The first century break in the competition, 100, by Gardner was compiled in 1934.[14] Lennan made two centuries, 113 and then 153 in the 1936 competition.[15]Ruth Harrison's break of 197 in 1937 remains a women's record in competitive billiards.[16][17]Thelma Carpenter won her first title in 1940,[18] before the championship was suspended during World War II.[19] Carpenter was champion again when the tournament was next held in 1948,[20][13] and retained the title in 1949.[21] In 1950, she was watched by her 10-year-old son as she beat Joyce Gardner to win her fourth title.[22] This was to be the last women's professional championship to be held.[23] The World Women's Billiards Championship is viewed as a continuation of the amateur championship rather than of the Women's Professional Billiards Championship.[16]
Tournaments
In some years the match winner was the first to reach a pre-determined points target, and in other years the winner was the player to score most points in a set playing time.
Women's Professional Billiards Championship (also known as the Burwat Cup)
There were four entrants to the event, which was called the British Women's Billiards Tournament. In the semi-finals, Joyce Gardner defeated Mrs Watts 750–259 on 31 March, and Eva Collins eliminated Muriel Barber 750–422 the following day. In the final, held on 3 April, Gardner made a break of 96.
There were three entrants. Gardner received a bye into the final, where she faced Collins, who defeated Muriel Barber 750–382 in the semi-final. Lady Wedgewood presented the winner's cup to Gardner.
There were four entrants. Harrison defeated Collins 1,000–563 in one-semi-final, and Gardner recorded a 1,000–356 win against Muriel Barber in the other. The highest break of the tournament was 83 by Gardner, in the final.
There were four entrants. Gardner made a break of 100, a record for the championship. She won 1,000–303 against Irene Armes, and Collins eliminated Collins 1,000–523 in the other semi-final.
There were five entrants. Carpenter won 1,000–699 against Collins but was then eliminated 1,054–1,500 by Gardner. Harrison won her semi-final against Lennan 1,500–790. Harrison made two breaks of 101, the highest of the competition, and also a 99, during the final. Gardner's average score of 18.5 points per visit against Carpenter was a new Championship record.
There were five entrants. Lennan reached the final with wins over Collins (1,000–466) and Harrison (1,500–1,098), whilst Gardner eliminated Carpenter 1,500–1,149
There were five entrants. Harrison eliminated Collins 1,178–469 and then Lennan 2,166–1,132. Against Lennan, Harrison made breaks of 197 (the championship record), 126, and 110. Gardner defeated Carpenter 1,633–1,338 in the semi-finals and made a break of 154 in the final.
There were five entrants. Carpenter progressed past Lennan, 941–595, and Harrison, 1,599–1,386, to face Gardner, who eliminated Barbara Meston 1,871–979.
There were five entrants. Carpenter eliminated Barbara Meston 1,964–905 in the heat, then lost 1,396–1,602 to Harrison. Gardner won 2,143–681 against Collins.
There were three entrants. In the semi-final, Gardner defeated Harrison 1,256–1,037. Carpenter averaged 11.92 per visit to Gardner's 7.92 points in the final, and made the highest break of the tournament, 90.
Cumulative scores after each session (Carpenter first) were: 328–261, 619–567, 890–801, 1,275–1,002, 1,557–1,346, 1,992–1,531, 2,162–1,795, 2,484–1,986, 2,753–2,279, 3,120–2,528. The highest break was 73, by Gardner.
^More recently, the 2018 World Women's Billiards Championship runner-up Rebecca Kenna was prevented from playing in her local snooker league in 2019, on the basis of her sex.[3] The same year, in Kuwait, journalist Nawara Fattahova reported that women had been banned from her local billiard hall.[4] A research study published in 2021 looking at attitudes to 14 sports in China concluded that billiard sports were perceived as "hypermasculine".[5]
^Thurston's Hall was damaged by a bomb in October 1940. It reopened as Leicester Square Hall on 3 October 1947.[41]
References
^ abcShamos, Mike (1999). The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards. New York: The Lyons Press. p. 276. ISBN1558217975.
^Morrison, Ian (1987). The Hamlyn Encyclopedia of Snooker - revised edition. Twickenham: Hamlyn Publishing Group. p. 156. ISBN9780600556046.
^Xu, Qingru; Fan, Minghui; Brown, Kenon A. (2021). "Men's Sports or Women's Sports?: Gender Norms, Sports Participation, and Media Consumption as Predictors of Sports Gender Typing in China". Communication & Sport. 9 (2): 264–86. doi:10.1177/2167479519860209. hdl:11323/9505. S2CID199142177.
^"Women and billiards". South Wales Daily News. 28 August 1895. p. 3.
^"Roberts's last match". Birmingham Daily Gazette. 4 June 1906. p. 6.
^"The fair sex at billiards". Sporting Life. 22 October 1906. p. 6.