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For three years, orders had to be rationed. Demand just went up
and up.
Meanwhile, the Scrabble craze spread to Australia in 1953. In the
same year, it was launched in the UK by J.W. Spear & Sons, where
the game was an instant success.
Brunot eventually sold off the rights to Scrabble in 1968 and Spear's
acquired the rights to the world, outside of the USA, Canada and
Australia. (However, they managed to pick up the Australian rights
at a later date.) The rights to the game remain split in this way
to this day.
In 1986, Selchow and Righter sold out to Coleco who promptly went
bankrupt in 1987. So it was that 53 years after turning the game
down, the rights for Scrabble in the USA and Canada were purchased
by Milton Bradley.
1991 saw the first world championship take place in London. The
second was held in New York City in 1993.
Regrettably, James Brunot died in October 1984. So he didn't live
to see the first championship. But Alfred Butts did. He lived to
be 93, passing away in April 1993.
He took pleasure in playing his game with family and friends to
the end of his life. And this modest, unassuming man lived to see
his brainchild become a worldwide phenomenon.
In 1994, J.W. Spear and Sons were acquired by Mattel Inc., the
largest toy and game company in the world.
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