Object Details
maker
Milton Bradley Company
Description
If you are familiar with the board game Life, you might be surprised to learn that while it has roots in the 1860’s the two games are very different in its goals and rules of play. In 1860, Milton Bradley produced the Checkered Game of Life board game, launching his career in board games. It sold out in the first year with a first run of 45,000 and was immensely popular for offering families of all ages an alternative to card games and devoid of the temptations of gambling dice. Multigenerational families could spend leisure time promoting moral, ethical behavior while playing a game. The Museum of Play describes the game as “combining chance and skill to negotiate life's many challenges, players traversed a checkered board of colored squares representing the virtues of honor, truth, and temperance, or the vices of idleness, crime, and drink.”
The game was drastically updated and revised as Game of Life in 1960 to meet the expectations of baby boomers and their parents to play for play money, a dream job, car, spouse, and kids.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Milton Bradley Company, through Millens W. Taft, Jr.
date made
after
after 1910
ID Number
1981.0944.01
accession number
1981.0944
catalog number
1981.0944.01
Object Name
Game
Other Terms
Game; Toys
Physical Description
paper (overall material)
cardboard (overall material)
wood (overall material)
ink (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 42 cm x 38 cm; 16 17/32 in x 14 31/32 in
place made
United States: Massachusetts, Springfield
See more items in
Home and Community Life: Domestic Life
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Subject
Toys
Games
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_321475