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Talk:Albert Hodges Morehead

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Birthplace

[edit]
First of multiple sections -P64

We say both Flintstone, Georgia (without linking) and Taylor County, Georgia. Is there a Flintstone in Taylor County?

The only Flintstone, Georgia, with a page here is in Walker County, Georgia. That is outside Chattanooga, Tennessee, a location that superficially fits well.

--P64 (talk) 18:40, 23 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Noted and agreed. Although by deductive reasoning it is likely that the birthplace is the Flintstone of Walker County and not of Taylor County (the Flintstone of Walker County is adjacent to Chattanooga, Tennessee - a later place of residency for the family), I believe it best for now to remove the Taylor County reference and simply state the birthplace as Flintstone, Georgia until a more specific reference is established as to the correct county identity. Two of the external links also refer only to Flintstone, Georgia without stipulating a county. Newwhist (talk) 14:34, 25 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]
This article reference[1] cites the place of birth for AHM as "Flintstone, GA, Crutchfield farm". See "Selected Stories and Essays / AHM residences.' A search on 'Crutchfield, Flintstone' results in a hit on a Crutchfield entity in Walker County, providing support for the tentaive conclusion that the birthplace is in Walker County and not Taylor County. Is this OR? Is it reasonable evidence to at least remove Taylor County? As an inclusionist, I support replacing Taylor County with Walker County. Comments? Newwhist (talk) 20:52, 4 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Hoyle, card games

[edit]
Multiple new sections -P64
  • "With Ely Culbertson and Geoffrey Mott-Smith, Morehead wrote the book Hoyle: The New Encyclopedia of Games, with Official Rules in 1950." --quoting section 3, Albert Hodges Morehead#Bridge

Evidently this was Culbertson as publisher, or simply as a name analogous to Hoyle, homage/marketing. See one bookseller's Culbertson's Hoyle (1950). We should learn whether the contents of that one were identical to some other Hoyle by Morehead & Mott-Smith.

Neither WorldCat nor Library of Congress mentions Culbertson in relation to any Hoyles by Morehead. Three "Hoyles" are among Morehead's top 20 works/titles in WorldCat libraries--that is, as those libraries catalog their holdings. WorldCat: Morehead, Albert H.

  • Hoyle's Rules of Games: descriptions of indoor games of skill and chance, with advice on skillful play Formats and Editions
--Morehead, Mott-Smith (New American Library, 1954) --"Newly rev. [i.e. 5th]"; "Published in 1946 under title: The Penguin Hoyle." {OCLC|993034}}
  • The New Complete Hoyle: the official rules of all popular games of skill and chance, with most authoritative advice on winning play Formats and Editions
--Morehead (Doubleday, 1947) OCLC 19472077
some other formats and editions name Morehead, Richard L. Frey, Mott-Smith; some name only Morehead, eg (Doubleday, 1964) OCLC 317948255
  • The New Complete Hoyle, revised: the authoritative guide to the official rules of all popular games of skill and chance
--Morehead, Richard L. Frey, Mott-Smith (Bantam Doubleday Dell, 1986) OCLC 867935330 --1st ed.
--same (Doubleday, 1991) OCLC 777417229 --"Rev ed. of : Hoyle's rules of games. 1983"

--P64 (talk) 18:50, 23 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

References

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  1. ^ "A Tribute to Albert H. Morehead 1909–1966: Games expert and Lexicographer". patphil.com (daughter-in-law Patricia and son Philip Morehead). Retrieved 2007-08-21. Multiple pages with numerous reprints including some secondary sources.
      Quote: Albert Morehead, the six-foot-four, erudite panelist of CBS-TV's new audience participation series, "I'll Buy That", is one of those many-sided geniuses in cosmopolitan New York whose list of vocations and avocations is literally a yard long. He is a book editor, magazine writer, games authority, author, tunesmith, newspaper columnist, lexicographer, businessman, translator, amateur criminologist and a half dozen other lesser things besides.