Calvin W. Demarest of Chicago, was a national amateur and professional carom billiards champion from Chicago in the early 20th century known for an open, crowd-pleasing style of play.
Background
He later gained notoriety for stabbing his wife and injuring his mother during a suicidal psychotic episode. Demarest was born in June 1886 in Illinois. His mother was Ida B. Demarest (1862-?) of Ohio He studied music as a child, his father an organist in Chicago, and his mother a singer.
Career
At an early age he developed an interest in pool and balkline billiards. On March 9, 1907, he set a new record 14.2 balkline billiards average of 27 3–11 during the national amateur championship tournament in New York City beating the record set by Justus Ferdinand Poggenburg III. On March 14, 1908, he broke the world"s amateur record for the high run in the opening game of the national amateur 14.2 balkline billiards tournament with an impressive high run of 168. He was competing against Clarence Jackson of Chicago.
Starting in 1909, he competed in professional as well as amateur tournaments, winning at least three professional championships.
By the mid-1910s, Demarest"s mental state began to deteriorate. His mother attempted to restrain him and was cut on the hand.
He was deemed unfit to stand trial and was remanded to the Elgin Asylum for the insane. He was reported to have died there eight months later, on February 22, 1916, but the following day"s New York Times ran an item titled "Calvin Demarest Not Dead", in which the paper wrote "Doctor Hawley, Deputy Superintendent at the asylum, is at a loss to explain how the report of Demarest"s death occurred." Demarest would die on June 12, 1925 at the Elgin Asylum in Elgin, Illinois.