Sunday, November 13, 2011

The History of Crossword Puzzles

PSALM 23-FREE PUZZLE
Arthur Wynne, an immigrant from England invented the first "crossword" puzzle published in the New York World on December 21, 1913. He had designed his first crossword based on word puzzles he saw in magazines as a youth in Liverpool, England.  As a child Wynne would play a puzzle game called "Magic Squares" where the group of words had to be arranged so the letters would read the same way down and across. In remembering this game he would play, he came up with the idea which led to crossword puzzles.  He was in charge of creating the weekly puzzle page, an eight-page comic section in the New York World.  His first puzzle was diamond-shaped, had easy clues, did not have any internal fl squares and was featured in the "Fun" section's "mental exercises" of the New York World. He also created riddles, rebuses, anagrams and word squares for the newspaper but the crossword was by far the most popular.  At the time it was called a "word-cross" and had immediate success as it became a weekly feature.  Being as popular with the readers as they were, readers would send in their crosswords that they had composed. In February 1914 Wynne was using his readers crosswords in his weekly posts, but there came a problem when the many typesetting errors caused the crossword to be dropped.
As the name evolved into "cross-word" the hyphen was dropped.
Crosswords were originally called word squares which can be traced back to the Roman ruins of Pompeii.  They were originally created in the 19th century England as "word squares" and were the basis for crossword puzzles for children, with pictures serving as clues for the answers which had educational value, they were not geared for adults until 1913 at which time adults starting doing them as well.
Arthur Wynne died on January 14, 1945 at the age of 73.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

The History of Word Search Puzzles

On March 1, 1968 Norman E. Gibat  published the first Word Search Puzzle in a small classified listing newspaper called the Selenby Digest in Norman, Oklahoma.
As the puzzle grew in popularity the national newspapers soon began publishing them as well.
The Word Search Puzzle accompanied the Crossword Puzzle, which had been in publication since 1913, in the newspapers.
Word Search Puzzles have had many different names throughout time; Word Search,
Word Find, Word Sleuth, Word Seek and Mystery Word, but Word Search has been the name to stick and be used the most.
As the Word Search Puzzles were published teachers in the area began using the puzzles in the classrooms to help students learn different words and their meanings.
The first Word Search Puzzle contained 34 words which were cities in Norman's home state, Oklahoma.