Milton Work


[Image:MiltonCWork Cricket1897.jpg|right|thumb| Work in 1897]
Milton Cooper Work was an American authority on whist, bridge whist, auction and contract bridge. At least during the 19th century he was a cricket player, writer, and official.
Work, Sidney Lenz, and Oswald Jacoby were named to its bridge hall of fame by The Bridge World monthly magazine in 1965, which brought the number of members to six. They were all made founding members of the ACBL Hall of Fame in 1995.

Life

Work was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and practiced law from 1887 to 1917. He and Wilbur C. Whitehead toured the country in 1917 "organizing bridge competitions and lecturing on bridge, to promote the sale of Liberty bonds". The tour was successful enough that he made bridge a full-time occupation rather than return to law.

Other sporting activities

Work was the manager of the Philadelphian cricket team that toured England in 1897. He had earlier played for Belmont Cricket Club between at least 1880 and 1887. He also played cricket, tennis and baseball for the University of Pennsylvania in 1887. He edited the American Cricketer magazine.
In 1897 he was a representative of the Belmont Golf Association at a meeting which founded the Golf Association of Philadelphia.

Work Point Count system

In his writings on bridge during the last seven years of his life, Work adopted Bryant McCampbell's 1915 suggestion for evaluating balanced hands using a point count method: Ace = 4, King = 3, Queen = 2 and Jack = 1. Although Work had strongly opposed point count methods for 25 years, beginning about 1927 he became a strong advocate of the 4-3-2-1-½ point count—so much so that it became known as the Work Point Count. Subsequently, his employee and disciple Charles Goren adapted it to value all hands. It is still used by players today. In 1927 Work was named American Bridge League Honorary Member of the Year.

Selected works

Whist of Today: in two parts, 2nd ed., 182 pp. Auction of To-day, 5th ed., 299 pp. Auction Under the Laws of 1915, 104 pp.Auction Declarations, 288 pp.Auction Methods Up-to-Date including the new laws of 1920, 332 pp.Auction for Two or Three, with a new code of laws for these games, 222 pp. – with "appendix giving improved methods for two-handed Canfield and Russian Bank" Par Auction, analysis of play, 59 pp. Auction Bridge in Twelve Lessons, 270 pp. Auction Bridge of 1924, 507 pp.Mah-jongg ... Up-to-Date, 177 pp. – MahjongAuction Bridge Complete, 500 pp. Bridge Pointers and Tests, 192 pp.Contract Bridge 143 pp. – "including the official laws of contract bridge adopted by the Whist club, New York and by the Racquet and Tennis club, New York" Auction Bridge for Beginners, 136 pp.Contract Bridge For All, 243 pp.Lesson hands for use of bridge teachers of the common sense system, 25 pp. Common Sense Contract Bridge, 369 pp. The Gist of Contract Bridge, 56 pp. The official system of contract bridge in a nutshell, 58 pp. Milton C. Work's short-cut to contract official system, 183 pp. The official summary of the new standardized official system of contract bridge, 83 pp. One hundred and one celebrated hands in contract bridge, bid and played, eds. Work and Olive Avery Peterson, 215 pp. The Work–Peterson accurate valuation system of contract bridge, Work and Peterson, 101 pp.
;PeriodicalsAuction Bridge and Mah Jong Magazine, eds. Work and Wilbur C. Whitehead Auction Bridge Magazine, Work and Whitehead