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Lost their marbles? Not a chance here!
Woodford man makes a living by not losing his marbles

 Jack 'The Marble Man' Hahn uses a drill press to make holes in a Chinese checkers board in his garage workshop at home in Caroline County. Marbles have become an accidental passion and business for Hahn and his wife.
Photos by ROBERT A. MARTIN/THE FREE LANCE-STAR
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Date published: 7/22/2012

By LAURA L. HUTCHISON

Aggies, clearies, and cat's-eyes aren't in the average person's daily vocabulary.

But Jack and Sue Hahn aren't your average people. Their lives revolve around marbles.

"You can't enter a room in this house without there being marbles," said Jack, better known throughout the marbling world as The Marble Man.

And that is a major understatement.

Glass containers shaped like human heads are filled with marbles in the couple's Woodford home in Caroline County. Collector's-item marbles are displayed on wooden shelves. And in the workshop area in the basement, more than 5 tons of assorted marbles await purchase or shipping.

"I don't plan on running out any time soon," Jack said.

It all started innocently enough. Sue inherited a Chinese checkers board her grandfather had given to her grandmother. Living in a home with several other people, they'd have Wednesday night dinners and Chinese checkers tournaments. Sue was doing hand weavings and traveling around to craft shows, so Jack fashioned a couple of Chinese checkers boards to sell at the next show.

"I made six boards out of plywood," he said. "We sold them all before noon."

The Marble Man business was born. Originally they sold single-color marbles for Chinese checkers, but then people started asking if they had any more interesting marbles.

Now they stock at least 60 varieties--clearies, which are made of any color transparent glass; agates, originally made of a quartz material but then adopted by marble manufacturers to describe many different types of marbles; and cat's-eyes, marbles with central eye-shaped colored inserts or cores. "Old-fashioneds" are marbles of randomly swirled glass. They've been made since the 1920s, but the machinery is better now.

Most modern marbles are made by melting recycled glass, which is shaped into globs. The globs are dropped onto rotating coils shaped like the threads of a screw. At the end of the coil, the marbles are round and cool enough to keep their shape when they're dropped into a bucket. When they're completely cool, the marbles are sorted by size.


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Alabaster: A players' term for a "real" marble, one made of marble. Backspin: A players' term describing a highly desirable action on a shooter marble. Also called "English." An advanced player can control the amount of backspin by moving the shooter higher on the thumb knuckle. Edger: The name for a target marble sitting near the edge of the ring; an easy shot. Glassies: A common term for glass marbles used in the United States, in the historic record and still today. Hunching: A term used in the play of marble games, when the player moves his hand forward to propel the marble instead of relying upon the force of his thumb. It's a common mistake among new players who have yet to fully learn the art of holding and shooting a marble. Hunching in U.S. games results in a lost turn and any marbles knocked out of the ring are returned. Lag: The lag is the first operation in Ringer. To lag, the players stand toeing the pitch line, or knuckling down upon it, and toss or shoot their shooters to the lag line across the ring. The player whose shooter comes nearest the lag line, on either side, wins the lag and shoots first in the game. Lost his marbles: A popular term original to marbles but widely used in general speech in the United States, describing one who has lost all of his marbles in a game of Keeps and becomes upset, distraught, crazy, crying and generally thoroughly disappointed with the turn of events. Stick: A players' term specific to Ringer: a highly desired situation, when a player knocks out seven marbles on his first turn and wins the game. In some cases this occurs before the opponent has an opportunity to take a single shot; as in, "She got a stick."

-- americantoymarbles.com