What does "ouija" mean?  
The word "ouija" is actually a combination of two words, the french  word 
"oui" and the German word "ja." Both words mean "yes" in english.  
A Brief History of the Ouija Board 
>From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thomas Grotenhuis):  
The ancient Egyptians used a device LIKE a ouija board. They used a  ring 
attached to a strand of thread, held over a circular table with  symbols on it, 
and the ring would strike the table to spell out answers.  
The Ouija board, the kind we see in toy stores today, came about in  1889 
when William Fuld of Baltimore, Maryland, and his brother Isaac,  marketed 
Ouija 
boards to the American public. They had a small operation  and the board was 
the hottest item they would ever produce. People bought  the board not as a 
game, but as a device with which they would talk to  their loved ones killed in 
battle (note the two World Wars happening; this  was where the board's 
popularity really soared). During this time, the fad  spread, and so did 
Ouija's 
notorious reputation as being more than just a  "game."  
Finally in about 1960 or thereabouts, Parker Brothers approached the  two 
Fuld brothers since they were having trouble making enough boards to  satisfy 
the 
demand for them. PB then took over the rights to the ouija  board and the 
rest, as they say, is history.  
Ouija came about as kind of a by-product of the whole spiritualist  craze 
that was all the rage in the early 1900's, and during Houdini's time  as he 
debunked many 'mediums'. Table-tipping was being done back then, and  a 
Frenchman, 
who's last name was "planchette", produced a device that  looked like a small 
table like a ouija pointer, that stood on two small  stilts and a pen or 
pencil at the third point. The operator would sit with  his hands as lightly as 
he 
could resting on the planchette, this device  named after it's inventor, and 
the thing would move, producing writing.  
Ouija replaced the messy planchette (the writing was messy cursive  scrawls) 
when a board was used in place of the sheet of paper, and all  three stilts on 
the planchette were covered with felt enabling it to slide  in any direction. 
This made the communications fast, clear, and easy. And  specifically meant 
to be done with a partner, "gentleman and lady  preferred."  
Eugene Orlando adds:  
"William Fuld died in 1927, Isaac in 1939. Since Parker Brothers didn't  take 
over the William Fuld company until 1966, it would have been quite a  trick 
to take it over from the brothers. But then it is  alt.folklore.ghost-stories 
isn't it? Actually, Parker Brothers saw a  bargain when they saw one and bought 
the business from William's kids.  They had moved the factory into a smaller 
building and sold out not  because there was so much demand for the ouija, but 
just the opposite.  Ouija sales had never been worse. It took a Parkers 
advertising blitz to  put the popularity back in the Ouija board."  






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