The Chip Board
Custom Search
   


The Chip Board Archive 24

I think the term came from Gene Trimble

The question came up in the early days of The Chip Board. Gene remembered that the dealer at the 21 table in the early days called a player's natural a 'snapper'. For some reason, that came to be applied by chip collectors to a $2.50 chip as $5 blackjack was becoming common about that time as dollar and 2-dollar tables became scarce.

Some expressed the opinion that 'snapper' came from the sound made when a player "snapped his cards down" on the table to indicate he had a blackjack. This was before shoes became common and players were still allowed to handle the cards dealt to them.

These days, many chip collectors who started out collecting $2.50 chips began adding to their collection the other denominations that have a 50c in the number (like $7.50 chips for a $15 hand and $12.50 for a $25 hand). I did the same.

Other collectors who branched out into foreign casinos started calling every chip denominated in a foreign currency that had the number 250 in it a snapper. Thus you will see some snapper collections with 250, 2500, and even 25000 denominations depending on how cheap the local currency was.

Messages In This Thread

What is a Snapper? I'm stlii learning.
$2.50 Chip is a snapper
Re: $2.50 Chip is a snapper
Re: What is a Snapper? I'm stlii learning.
I think the term came from Gene Trimble
Re: I think the term came from Gene Trimble
Re: I think the term came from Gene Trimble
Early Las Vegas, pink. Not Northern Nevada though

Copyright 2022 David Spragg