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Minor Pieces 17: Bashley and Wallace Britten
On 8 April 1882, Edward Griffith Brewer posted an advertisement in the Surrey Comet. The great Joseph Henry Blackburne was going to give a blindfold simultaneous display at Twickenham Chess Club. The following week, they published a report: As local papers usually did, and still do, they got it wrong, quite apart from calling a simul a tournament. George Edward Norwood Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 16: Nicholas Demetrio
Last time I wrote about Oliver Harcourt Labone. Further research has revealed more information about his mother and both his (probable) biological and step-fathers, along with further coincidences. No chess, this time, I’m afraid, but some great stories. Let’s start with Richard Austwick Westbrook. He was a solicitor, born in 1815: his father, also Richard, would, Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 15: Oliver Harcourt Labone
There are a few chess players who, while not being outstanding exponents themselves, achieved immortality through a flash of inspiration. Saavedra is one example, and another is the subject of this article: Oliver Harcourt Labone. You might have seen something like this before, either this position or a similar position published by Lasker ten years Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 14: Dr Abraham Emanuel Learner
We’re going to leave Twickenham for a bit, but don’t worry. We’ll be back there soon. I’ve received a couple of requests for information on other players, both of whom (and they had a few things in common) seemed suitable for a Minor Pieces post. I received an email the other day from my friend Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 13: Henry Francis Limpus and Edward Griffith Brewer
Continuing my series of articles on members of Twickenham Chess Club between 1880 and 1906, I consulted the 1882 edition of the Chess player’s Annual and Club Directory, edited by W R Bland. This confirms that the club was established in 1880, met at the Town Hall, had 60 members, the entrance fee and subscription were Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 12: George Edward Norwood Ryan
The chess players of Richmond and Twickenham had more than two decade to wait before another club arose in their area. A chess club in Twickenham opened its doors for the first time, probably in Autumn 1880. This is the first of a series of articles looking at some of their members between 1881 and Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 11: William Dobell Hutchings
If, like me, you enjoy family and social history, you’re probably a fan of David Olusoga’s documentary series A House Through Time. Here’s an idea for a new series: A Book Through Time. If you’ve read my article about Henry George Bohn, you’ll have seen this before. It’s my first edition of Staunton’s Chess-Player’s Handbook. I acquired this Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 10: Henry George Bohn
We know that the first Richmond Chess Club only ran for a few years in the mid 1850s, seemingly disbanded when its prime mover, William Harris, left London. Who were its other members? Howard Staunton and Johann Jacob Löwenthal were involved, but, one would imagine, they didn’t play an active part on a week to week basis. They enjoyed seeing Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 9: William Harris
This is the first of what will be many posts considering the history of chess clubs in Richmond, Twickenham and surrounding areas. If you’re good, I’ll tell you another story as well. The first chess club in Richmond whose foundation we can date goes back to the year 1853 (although there is some evidence that Continue reading
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Minor Pieces 8: Clifford Bridle
John Upham recently chanced upon a 1947 game in which an otherwise unknown English player, C Bridle, defeated former World Championship challenger Bogoljubov in a tournament in Flensburg, Germany. I’d come across the game myself many years ago, in Fred Reinfeld’s 1950 anthology A Treasury of British Chess Masterpieces, and wondered about C Bridle, a name Continue reading