All fours (card game)

All fours
All fours, depicted in 1783
OriginEngland
Alternative namesHigh-low-jack, old sledge, seven up
TypeTrick-taking
FamilyAll fours
Players2 or more
SkillsMemory, attention
Cards52 cards
DeckEnglish pattern
Rank (high→low)A K Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
PlayClockwise (US, England) or anticlockwise (Trinidad and Tobago)
Playing time15 minutes approximately
ChanceModerate
Related games
Pitch • Auction Pitch • Cinch • Pedro • Phat
Remarks: 6 cards dealt; players may either follow or trump; points for high, low, jack and game.

All fours is a traditional English card game, once popular in pubs and taverns as well as among the gentry, that flourished as a gambling game until the end of the 19th century. It is a trick-taking card game that was originally designed for two players, but developed variants for more players. According to Charles Cotton, the game originated in Kent,[1] but spread to the whole of England and eventually abroad. It is the eponymous and earliest recorded game of a family that flourished most in 19th century North America and whose progeny include pitch, pedro and cinch, games that even competed with poker and euchre. Nowadays the original game is especially popular in Trinidad and Tobago, but regional variants have also survived in England. The game's "great mark of distinction" is that it gave the name 'jack' to the card previously known as the knave.[2][3]

The game has a number of unusual features. In trick play, players are allowed to trump instead of following suit even if they could. The title refers to the possibility of winning all four game points for high, low, jack and game for holding (later winning) the highest and lowest trump in play and the jack of trumps and for winning the greatest number of card points.[4]

  1. ^ Cotton 1674, pp. 111–113.
  2. ^ Parlett 1990.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference mcleod was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Parlett 1990.