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  1. The earliest surviving action game of Tennis on a table is a set made by David Foster, patented in England in 1890 (No.11037): Parlour Table Games, which included table versions of Lawn Tennis, Cricket and Football.

  2. On 16 July 1891 - a full year after David Foster's Table Tennis game in 1890 - John Jaques & Son of Hatton Garden, London, England registered Gossima (Trademark number 157,615). It used vellum drum battledores - first seen in a shuttlecock game, a large 50mm webbed cork ball and a 30cm high net.

  3. Feb 6, 2023 · In 1890, Englishman David Foster, attracted by the wide appeal the game had garnered, introduced the first game of table tennis on an actual table. Seven years following Foster’s innovation, table tennis held its first national championship tournament in Hungary.

  4. David Foster (1848 – 1928) : Merchant, Politician and Inventor of Table Tennis. A locally-important trader devises an indoor game for amusement during the winter months which becomes one of the world’s most popular pastimes. Foster was a local businessman, mainly dealing in dairy products and cheese. Although originally from Hull, from 1885, fo.

  5. Dec 27, 2023 · Learn how David Foster patented the first table tennis-style game in 1890, and how it evolved into the sport we know today. Discover the history of ping pong, its names, equipment, rules, and global impact.

  6. Feb 22, 2024 · While most credit David Foster for creating Parlour Table Games in 1890, he was not the first to create indoor lawn tennis games. Both James Devonshire and Ralph Slazenger registered patents for such games, although neither materialized into sellable products.

  7. Learn about the origins of table tennis, a game that descended from royal tennis and was played with cigar box lids and wine corks. See the earliest evidence of a table tennis game made by David Foster, patented in England in 1890.

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