Among those who ran a regular game was Ninian Whiteside, who had been drawn to the area during the mining boom of the 1840s. There was little popular outrage about the presence of the game or the tendency of respectable residents to wager money while playing.
įaro, a card game with origins in France, was among the most popular games of chance in early Milwaukee. A crooked dealer was “liable to serve as a target for some inconsiderate opponent who preferred a shooting affray to losing against a sure thing,” according to an 1895 remembrance in the Milwaukee Journal. These men, flush with cash and accustomed to a rugged lifestyle, made sure that the village’s earliest card games were honest. The area’s earliest gambling dens catered to lead miners from across southeastern Wisconsin. As is the case with most matters of vice, gambling has a history in Milwaukee that dates back to the community’s foundations.