The Roulette History Of Charles Wells

by Georgina Carwin on July 30, 2010

Few roulette players have achieved the level of fame that Charles Wells did. Charles Wells is the only roulette player to have a song to honor his name. In July 1891 Wells went right into the Monte Carlo in hope of replicating Jagger’s success, and replicate it he did.

Charles Wells had seen and heard of gamblers breaking the bank when the entire table ran out of money. It was the fantasy of many gamblers to someday break the bank. Charles Wells however had bigger ambitions. He not only wanted to break the bank, he wanted to break the entire casino.

Charles Wells was different from his fellow gamblers in more than one way, what I think is especially fascinating is that he held his dreams of breaking the casino since he was a little child. Most of his life he created scam after scam in order to make enough money to attempt to break the casino.

It was 1891 when Charles Wells made his first attempt to destroy the casino. Charles Wells had lied to several investors claiming he was working on a musical jump rope. In reality though he was merely scamming them so he’d have enough money to gamble.

The casinos had no idea what had hit them, they did not know of the typhoon known as Charles Wells. Within half of a day Charles Wells had shut down twelve tables and taken over one million francs from the casino, it was a casinos worst nightmare. At one point it is reported he won 23 straight times.

If the casino thought that the nightmare was over they were terribly mistaken. Charles Well would later return and give an encore performance, again taking dazzling sums of money away from casinos. Desperate and fearful the casinos hired several private detectives but never successfully figured out how Charles Wells had done it.

The popular song The Man Who Broke The Bank At Monte Carlo was written by Fred Gilbert in April 1892, the song is now a tribute to Charles Wells legendary run. This song was later made famous by the then rising comedian Charles Coborn.

It was all luck, Charles Wells eventually confessed, his epic gambling spree can be attributed to sheer luck. He admitted he was using the Martingale betting system. The Martingale is known for eventually draining the bankroll of anybody who uses it; this is exactly what happened to Charles Wells. Charles Wells was then arrested and eventually died with nothing. Still to this day new players now playing online roulette hope to someday experience a run as grand as his.

Keep in mind that when you play Online Roulette you need to do it at the best online casinos using an effective Roulette System that will help you come out on top.

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