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1940 Large Gambling Wheel (Gaming Wheel)-Original Paint

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  • 19thc Wooden Folk Art Gaming Wheel with Original Red Paint & Cardinal Design
    Located in Savannah, GA
    19th Folk Art gaming wheel featuring four cardinals and hand painted numbers, it retains the original red and yellow paint. A charming piece of Americana that would make a colorful w...
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    Antique 1890s American Folk Art Carnival Art

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  • Scratch Built Fairground Wheel
    Located in London, GB
    Scratch built fairground wheel Mounted on a bespoke cast iron detachable support stand, this unique, folk art, scratch-built fairground roulette wheel is still in fully working order. We would say dated from the mid-20th Century the wheel is made from an old bicycle...
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    Vintage 1950s British Folk Art Carnival Art

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  • Large 19th Century Painted Game Wheel
    Located in Nantucket, MA
    Large 19th century wooden gaming wheel with hand-painted face including numbers and central nautical star design. In black, maroon, yellow, and orange paints, with metal dowels sepa...
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    Antique Late 19th Century North American Carnival Art

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  • Colorful Painted Sheet Metal Game Wheel ca 1890-1910
    Located in York County, PA
    COLORFUL PAINTED SHEET METAL GAME WHEEL ON A SHAPED WOODEN FRAME WITH A NICKLE-PLATED SPINNER, circa 1890-1910 Red, black, white, and green game whee...
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  • 19th C Original Painted Game Board
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
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  • Antique Early Gambling Folk Art Gaming Device, Holtz
    Located in Forney, TX
    An exceptionally scarce antique American Folk Art gambling triple stacked wooden arrow spindle spinning wheel gaming device from the late 19th / early 20th century. Believed to be a prototype or for a similar lesser known model of the important, very rare and unusual T. F. HOLTZ made "Three Arrow Trade Stimulator" circa 1896, (displayed in the American Antique Museum, reference L2016.2501.010) Theodore Holtz of San Francisco and early slot machine pioneer Charles Fey's partner in 1894, forming their first partnership as Holtz and Fey Electric Works. For this particular game, upon depositing your nickel and pressing the lever, three arrows will spin on the front dial and if all three stop on the same marker you win. Trade stimulators were countertop or freestanding amusement gaming machines widely used to encourage shoppers to indulge in a game of chance. They became popular in American saloon bar...
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    Antique 19th Century Folk Art Carnival Art

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