> Does anyone know where…
> Does anyone know where I can find the rules for the game hopscoth Try http://www.streetplay.com/thegames/hopscotch.htm. We don’t have diagrams just yet, but this should get you started. -Hugh McNally /
> Does anyone know where I can find the rules for the game hopscoth Try http://www.streetplay.com/thegames/hopscotch.htm. We don’t have diagrams just yet, but this should get you started. -Hugh McNally /
Does anyone know where I can find the rules for the game hopscoth (or potsy) and a diagram of the layout to be drawn on the sidewal
I was born in 1954 and grew up across the street from P.S. 194 in the Marine Park section of Brooklyn. Right in front of our apartment building, someone would draw the “potsy” board (never hopscotch), and we’d just start playing… Free but lots of fun! Personally, my housekey was my tool of choice. I remember my mother warning me that I would wear out the teeth on the key and I wouldn’t be able to open the door anymore… What funny memories!
I grew up in the Bronx too in the 1950’s. We NEVER called it Hopscotch – it was ALWAYS Potsy on Perry Avenue. We used bunches of safety pins, erasers, keys. Great game. Wonder if it is played anywhere in the city these days.
I grew up in the Bronx too and we never used the word Hopscotch, only POTSY! I lived on Perry Avenue, I’m 62 so you know how long it is since I played. We used keychains, erasers, saftey pins bunched together. Loved that game. Ethel Schwartz Bock
We also played potsy and punchball in the “playgrounds” – which were really just fenced in squares at the apartments at 215th street, near 47th and 48th Ave in Bayside. I always prefered a Spaldeen to a pensy-pinkie.