Hoopers Automatics
- slotalot
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
Hi, welcome to the forumjefrilig wrote:Can anybody tell me what happened to Hoopers Automatics (1930/40's)?

a quick search shows a few references to Hoopers here, https://www.thegazette.co.uk/all-notice ... Automatics
It may tell you what you want to know

Can I ask you what your interest in Hoopers is?

Re: Hoopers Automatics
Thanks for this. Lots of interesting info about liquidation but I haven't been able to find out much about the company when it was operating. As a child, I remember playing with Hooper Automatic machines whilst visiting my grandmother. I believe that her family / brother(s) owned the company in the 1930/'40s but I don't know if they sold it after that. I have a photograph somewhere of the shop front from this period.
- slotalot
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
Hi, I have done a scan of the "Hoopers" information in Paul Brathwaite's book Arcades & Slot machines, it may be of help to you.
I/ we would love to see the photo of the shop front
If you manage to find it, would you be willing to donate a copy for my own website? http://www.slotmachines.bravehost.com/page8.html I am always looking for vintage slot photo's.

I/ we would love to see the photo of the shop front

If you manage to find it, would you be willing to donate a copy for my own website? http://www.slotmachines.bravehost.com/page8.html I am always looking for vintage slot photo's.

Re: Hoopers Automatics
Thanks so much for this as it fills some gaps in my family history. My father was born in Penton Street (I assume that this was where the Penton Arms was). This is just round the corner from Pentonville Road. My Grandmother lived in Bounds Green, after the family moved from there so this all fits nicely. I'll certainly know if I find the photograph and you are more than welcome to have a copy. I wish I had some of the original slot machines, I know that my grandmother had some in her back room when I was about 10, together with piles of old pennies, but I believe that she decided to clear them out one day and they we're put in a skip. All I have now is a few of the pennies!
- slotalot
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
jefrilig wrote: but I believe that she decided to clear them out one day and they we're put in a skip.



I wish I had a pound for every time I have heard that story... so sad.
I did have two Hooper's machines in my collection up until a few months ago, I let them go to make room "& money" for other machines.

Do you remember them??
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
Would this one be from the same stable. Just missed it last night!
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Nice-Antique-Oa ... v4exp=true

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Nice-Antique-Oa ... v4exp=true
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
Nic Costa provides quite a detailed history of Bill Hooper's company on page 119 of More Automatic Pleasures.
Output consisted mostly of single reel conversion one arm bandits and tivoli type wall machines. The bandits pre-dated the more famous Tom Boland of Leeds conversions and continued into the 1950s. They included the Screen Stars, Stock Exchange and Greyhound Racer. Judging by the picture below, little was retained of the donor mechanisms and the unusual front-mounted knob, together with the 40 stop screen stars drum in place of the three reel fruit symbols, was part of the effort not to resemble a one arm bandit. Designed by Charles Stickland, "a turbine engineer from Brighton", they were very Plain Jane, lacking the pizazz of Boland's conversions and had low predetermined payouts (2d - 6d). Some even adopted the future pay system. Clearly great care was taken to keep their product legal, even more so with their tivoli games, none of which offered automatic payout.
Additional to their bandit conversions and tivolis like the Discotelle (1934), Silver Whirl Trials (1939) and Skill Score, etc. they built the aforementioned Skill Score pintable, a small counter-top Volta electric shocker, a horoscope converted from a Bovril vender (possibly Mystic Ball of 1938) and continued production of BM Co.'s Electric Rifle shooter when that company folded. Nothing they produced was very ambitious or very successful but they maintained a niche within the industry which kept Bill Hooper in business from 1899 until his death in 1956.
The London Gazette records an Extraordinary General Meeting of Hoopers Automatic Supply Ltd. on the 31st December 1971 to wind up the company. W.G. Hooper is named as Company Secretary at that time.

Three Tivoli types
Output consisted mostly of single reel conversion one arm bandits and tivoli type wall machines. The bandits pre-dated the more famous Tom Boland of Leeds conversions and continued into the 1950s. They included the Screen Stars, Stock Exchange and Greyhound Racer. Judging by the picture below, little was retained of the donor mechanisms and the unusual front-mounted knob, together with the 40 stop screen stars drum in place of the three reel fruit symbols, was part of the effort not to resemble a one arm bandit. Designed by Charles Stickland, "a turbine engineer from Brighton", they were very Plain Jane, lacking the pizazz of Boland's conversions and had low predetermined payouts (2d - 6d). Some even adopted the future pay system. Clearly great care was taken to keep their product legal, even more so with their tivoli games, none of which offered automatic payout.
Additional to their bandit conversions and tivolis like the Discotelle (1934), Silver Whirl Trials (1939) and Skill Score, etc. they built the aforementioned Skill Score pintable, a small counter-top Volta electric shocker, a horoscope converted from a Bovril vender (possibly Mystic Ball of 1938) and continued production of BM Co.'s Electric Rifle shooter when that company folded. Nothing they produced was very ambitious or very successful but they maintained a niche within the industry which kept Bill Hooper in business from 1899 until his death in 1956.
The London Gazette records an Extraordinary General Meeting of Hoopers Automatic Supply Ltd. on the 31st December 1971 to wind up the company. W.G. Hooper is named as Company Secretary at that time.
Three Tivoli types
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Re: Hoopers Automatics
Sorry Siverbitz, the machine found a new home in Belgium.
Thank you for the great info on this forum! It is a surprise that the machine dates from the 1930s.
Thank you for the great info on this forum! It is a surprise that the machine dates from the 1930s.
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