Education
Reading The Origins of the World War by professor Sidney Bradshaw Fay, whose class he attended, finally galvanized Calhamer.
Reading The Origins of the World War by professor Sidney Bradshaw Fay, whose class he attended, finally galvanized Calhamer.
Calhamer speculated that his original inspiration for Diplomacy was an article in Life magazine about the Congress of Vienna he read in 1945 at age 13. In 1954, while still enrolled, he developed a game of strategy and alliances that put seven players in control of the major powers of the pre-World War I era. He quit law school after one year, and Sylvain Labs hired him as a systems analyst.
He also worked as tour guide for the Statue of Liberty during this period.
In 1959, Calhamer published his game as Diplomacy and printed 500 copies. After selling all of them in six months, he licensed the game to a publisher.
Over the years, Diplomacy has been published in North America by Games Research, Avalon Hill, and Hasbro, and has been published in several different languages in other nations by various publishers. Calhamer"s original face-to-face board game has also been played by mail since 1963.
More recently, there are internet Diplomacy games, games run through email or in online games with a human game master.
Calhamer wrote a book, Calhamer on Diplomacy: The Boardgame "Diplomacy" and Diplomatic History, but the game did not provide him with a living. In the 1990s he retired from working as a mail carrier and lived his last years in Louisiana Grange Park. Mike Webb, vice president of marketing and data services for Alliance Game Distributors, said in a posthumous interview, "In many ways, the hobby-game industry as we know it owes its existence to Allan Calhamer" thanks to Diplomacy"s numerous gameplay innovations, specifically the ability to negotiate and deceive other players.
Military Intelligence (1960)
On Strengthening the hand of Austria-Hungary (1960)
The Tactics of Diplomacy (1961)
A Dozen Years of Diplomacy (1966)
On the Play of Postal Diplomacy by Allan Calhamer (1966)
The Invention of Diplomacy (1974)
Across the Whole Board (1974)
Objectives Other Than Winning (1974)
Introduction to Diplomacy (1975)
The Coast of Moscow.