Hall and Bancks, Bancks Brothers

Card Types

The card types and dates are detailed and illustrated in M H Goodall,
Minor British Playing Card Makers of the Nineteenth Century.
Volume V: Hall & Bancks, Bancks Brothers, Joseph Reynolds & Sons, Joseph Reynolds & Co., 2002.

The book contains substantial further information...

For a description of terms, see notes at the bottom of the table

 

Maker Type Dates Corners Courts Turned Indices plainbacks Notes
Hall & Bancks HBWB1 c1830 Square

Full

- - - Standard Full length pattern
Hall & Bancks HBWB2 c1830 Square Full - - -

Bassett & Faro (wide borders)

Bancks Brothers HB1 1820-1870 Square Full - - F7 revised pattern
Bancks Brothers HB1.1 1862-1890 Square Double - - M2

Their first double-ended

Hall & Bancks HB2 1830-1840 Round Full - - F9 -
Bancks Brothers HB3 1850-1870 Round Full - - - Smaller frame (=wider border)
Bancks Brothers HB3.1 1850-1870 Round Full - - - larger frame (=narrow border)
Bancks Brothers HB4 1860-1880 Square Double Turned - F46 -
Bancks Brothers HB5 c1830 Square Full - - - Redrawn variant,
cf Hunt / Stopforth
Bancks Brothers HB6 c1880-1890 Square Double Turned - M21 More modern
Bancks Brothers HB6.1 c1880 Square Double Turned - - similar!
Bancks Brothers HBNS1 c1850 Square Double Turned - M58 continental
Bancks Brothers HBNS2 c1870 Square n.a. n.a. - M24 Avant Garde design,
Suit signs dominate

Corners Square or Round:

Rounded corners were introduced to help prevent wear, most makers adopted these from circa 1875

Courts:

Full are traditional figures with legs see P1
DE = double ended, eg M50 (Unturned) M15 (turned left)
DE4h=Double ended with "four hands"! (see KS, KH, KD on M2)

Turned:

blank = unturned, T=Turned, TR=Turned right

In the traditional full-length pattern six pips are placed left (the four kings, JS, QH) and six right.
It became convenient to "turn" 6 courts so all 12 pips are left (or occasionally all 12 are on the right.)
These "turned" courts pre-date the use of indices and serve a similar but more basic purpose.
For Examples see M50 (Unturned) M15 (Turned: Pips all on left)

Indices:

blank=none, A or 1 means with index and "A" or "1" shows ace format

Corner indices conveniently convey the cards to a player without widely fanning the hand.
When indices came in, various experiments were tried.
See these examples...

Index Inside Frame M23
'Eureka', 'Index Pips' or 'Dexter' - indices in suit signs see M40
Triplicates - full cards reproduced in corners! M14 and an earlier US set I8
Modern indices - these Goodall cards M9 from c. 1900 start to seem familiar!