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Saturday, November 16, 2019

Ivy League Chess Challenge

It would be nice to see this expand to include other universities, Ivy League and beyond, for whom the priority is academic excellence as opposed to simply throwing scholarship money at top chess players from here and abroad to essentially just play chess with an eye toward Pan Am and final four championships.

From Chessbase.com

Ivy League Chess Challenge redux

by Qiyu Zhou
11/16/2019 – The 2nd Ivy League Chess Challenge was successfully held in Toronto, Canada from November 8th to 10th. With the tournament held over the course of three days, many exciting games were played, and numerous new friendships were made. QIYU ZHOU reports that this tournament is special because it is played by some of the top universities in the world! | Pictured: (L to R) Joseph Bellissimo, Sean Lei (current president of the Hart House Chess Club, and also played as a sub for one game on the team!), Mark Plotkin, arbiter Weiwen Leung, Advait Patel, and your author, Qiyu Zhou | Photo: Panagiotis Tsialas

DGT eBoard Now Enabled at Chess.com

 There is a very specific order to getting ones dgt eBoard ready to function for a game on the Live Chess page at chess.com. Not difficult, but necessary.
1. Begin with dgt board use turned off in the settings screen with no dgt board connected;
2. Turn on dgt board use in settings;
3. Plug in your dgt board;
4. Open the dgt LiveChess program, go to eBoards and check the box for your connected board;
5. Issue or answer a challenge.

St, Johnsbury, VT Open (FIDE Rated) Coming January 18th and 19th

St. Johnsbury Open
Comfort Inn & Suites Near Burke Mountain, Saint Johnsbury, Vermont
Saturday-Sunday, 18-19 January 2020

Grand Prix Points: 6

SECTIONS
  - Two (2): Open (FIDE rated) & U1600

ROUNDS
  - Four (4) Round Swiss

TIME CONTROL 
  - 40/90, SD/30 + 30 sec increment

PRIZE FUND ($1,375 Guaranteed)
  - Open: 1st $300, 2nd $150, U2000 $125, U1800 $125
  - U1600: 1st $250, 2nd $125, U1400 $100, U1200 $100
  - $100 prize for top four scores in club. Other prizes TBA

ENTRY FEE (pay online)
  - https://squareup.com/store/relyea-chess/item/st-johnsbury-open
  - $55 for Open; $40 for U1600 by 11 Jan
  - $60 for Open; $45 for U1600 after 11 Jan and on site
  - $20 less in U1600 section for players rated under 1000 or unrated
  - US Chess Membership Required
  - International online membership included for Canadian residents

REGISTRATION
  - 9:00-9:45 AM on Saturday

ROUND TIMES
  - Sat  10:00 – 4:00; Sun  10:00 – 4:00

LOCATION
  - Comfort Inn & Suites Near Burke Mountain
  - 703 US Route 5 South, Saint Johnsbury VT 05819
  - Hotel Room $169. Call 802-748-1500 and mention Chess Tournament
  - Hotel reserves right to require minimum stay if reservation received at a time after that policy goes generally into effect, so please reserve early.

EQUIPMENT
  - Please bring boards, sets & clocks, none provided

ENTRIES: Alex Relyea, 49 Technology Drive #89, Bedford, NH 03110
INFO: Alex Relyea, relyea@operamail.com, www.relyeachess.com

---------- ENTRY FORM ---------- 
ENTRY FORM (St. Johnsbury Open, 18-19 January 2020)
Name: __________________________________________ Date of Birth:___________________
Address:  ______________________________________________________________________
City: ______________________________State:_____________Zip:_______________________
Email:_________________________________________Phone: __________________________
USCF ID #:_____________________________Expiration Date: __________________________
Section (e.g., Open or U1600): ___________________
Mail to: Alex Relyea, 49 Technology Drive #89, Bedford, NH 03110 
(checks payable to Alex Relyea) 

http://relyeachess.com/subpages/tournaments.html#stj

Will Carlsen Break the Record at Wik (Now Known as Tata Steel)?

From Leonard Barden's column in the Guardian yesterday:
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2019/nov/15/chess-magnus-carlsen-face-teens-hunt-for-unbeaten-streak

Magnus Carlsen, the world champion, will face five opponents aged 21 or younger when he bids for a record eighth victory at Tata Steel Wijk aan Zee in January. The traditional Dutch tournament at the small windswept North Sea town is by general consensus the best all-play-all annual event on the chess calendar and the invited entry for its 2020 version is bold and imaginative.
Fabiano Caruana, the world No 2, and Wesley So, who crushed Carlsen 13.5-2.5 at Fischer Random earlier this month, are in the field, but many dedicated fans will be watching Alireza Firouzja, who at 16 is receiving rave reviews comparing the Iranian teen to the legendary attacking genius Mikhail Tal. Jeffery Xiong, 19, the No 1 US junior, also has a breakthrough opportunity.
For Carlsen, the fifth round at Wijk, which will be played on tour at Eindhoven, could be the day when he sets a world record for the longest run of classical games without defeat. The Norwegian thought he had reached his target when he surpassed Ding Liren’s 100 mark but then there was publicity for the Russian-Dutch GM Sergey Tiviakov’s 110 against weaker opposition. So Carlsen still needs to stay unbeaten in four games at the Grand Tour final at London Olympia on 2-8 December and his first five rounds at Wijk.


Saturday, October 5, 2019

St. Johnsbury Open (FIDE Rated Sections) January 18th and 19th, 2020

St. Johnsbury Open
Comfort Inn & Suites Near Burke Mountain, Saint Johnsbury, Vermont
Saturday-Sunday, 18-19 January 2020

Grand Prix Points: 6

SECTIONS
  - Two (2): Open (FIDE rated) & U1600

ROUNDS
  - Four (4) Round Swiss

TIME CONTROL 
  - 40/90, SD/30 + 30 sec increment

PRIZE FUND ($1,375 Guaranteed)
  - Open: 1st $300, 2nd $150, U2000 $125, U1800 $125
  - U1600: 1st $250, 2nd $125, U1400 $100, U1200 $100
  - $100 prize for top four scores in club. Other prizes TBA

ENTRY FEE (pay online)
  - https://squareup.com/store/relyea-chess/item/st-johnsbury-open
  - $55 for Open; $40 for U1600 by 11 Jan
  - $60 for Open; $45 for U1600 after 11 Jan and on site
  - $20 less in U1600 section for players rated under 1000 or unrated
  - US Chess Membership Required
  - International online membership included for Canadian residents

REGISTRATION
  - 9:00-9:45 AM on Saturday

ROUND TIMES
  - Sat  10:00 – 4:00; Sun  10:00 – 4:00

LOCATION
  - Comfort Inn & Suites Near Burke Mountain
  - 703 US Route 5 South, Saint Johnsbury VT 05819
  - Hotel Room $169. Call 802-748-1500 and mention Chess Tournament
  - Hotel reserves right to require minimum stay if reservation received at a time after that policy goes generally into effect, so please reserve early.

EQUIPMENT
  - Please bring boards, sets & clocks, none provided

ENTRIES: Alex Relyea, 49 Technology Drive #89, Bedford, NH 03110
INFO: Alex Relyea, relyea@operamail.com, www.relyeachess.com

---------- ENTRY FORM ---------- 
ENTRY FORM (St. Johnsbury Open, 18-19 January 2020)
Name: __________________________________________ Date of Birth:___________________
Address:  ______________________________________________________________________
City: ______________________________State:_____________Zip:_______________________
Email:_________________________________________Phone: __________________________
USCF ID #:_____________________________Expiration Date: __________________________
Section (e.g., Open or U1600): ___________________
Mail to: Alex Relyea, 49 Technology Drive #89, Bedford, NH 03110 
(checks payable to Alex Relyea) 

dgt eBoard Use To Be Enabled at Chess.com

I've been told by one of the techies at chess.com that they will be rolling out the ability to interface with their site using dgt eBoards. This is expected within the coming week. Good news for those of us who have use them on ICC which is going downhill rather quickly......

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Yawning in St. Louis--- Rapid/Blitz Playoff at the Sinquefield

Another "classical" tournament to be decided by Rapid/Blitz playoff. As far as I'm concerned Ding has won. He's ahead of Carlsen on both tiebreak and performance rating. 

Perhaps if promoters and FIDE stop having playoffs, the players will try harder to win games knowing that they may lose via TB system.

Monday, April 22, 2019

FIDE Noted In The Mueller Report. Danger for the Reputation of US Chess?

Now that FIDE, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov and Arkady Dvorkovich have been included in the Mueller Report with the point being made by ABC News that FIDE is in some ways an instrument of Putin's foreign policy, what should/is US Chess doing to keep from being tainted by Russian influence which is known for its corruption via wealthy Russian oligarchs who have been sponsors involved with promoting the past two World Championship matches. 

Per ABC News:
"Mueller reported that Kirill Dmitriev, CEO of the Russian sovereign wealth fund, flew to New York for the event and invited George Nader, a mysterious Middle Eastern businessman who was later questioned by Mueller about his meetings with Trump allies, to join him for the opening of the tournament. He asked Nader if there was “a chance to see anyone key from Trump camp," Mueller found, because he "would love to start building for the future," and urged him to invite Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

Nader did not pass along the invitation, the report said, and investigators “did not establish that Trump or any Campaign or Transition Team official attended the event.”

But the invitation to host, which the match’s organizer Ilya Merenzon confirmed to ABC News that Ilyumzhinov extended to Trump, not through official FIDE channels but rather “via his personal connections,” could have established another business relationship between the Trump Organization and an institution [FIDE] with close ties to the Russian government."

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/mueller-investigated-russians-chess-build-bridge-trump/story?id=62518118

One of the people charged by Putin with creating business links to the incoming Trump administration was Kiril Dmitriev as noted in the ABC News Report and this report from The New York Times. 


It should be recalled that Dvorkovich also met with one Mr. Gates of the Trump campaign in Moscow while Dvorkovich was then Russian Prime Minister. Lest was also not forget, our US Chess Executive Director had a recent photo op with Dvorkovich in Washington, D.C.

I would hope that US Chess can find a way to work behind the scenes with other national chess federations (English Chess perhaps) to blunt the association of a FIDE that is now clearly and more openly in Putin's political orbit.


Sunday, April 21, 2019

FIDE in the Mueller Report

From ABC News
"Of all the topics special counsel Robert Mueller put before President Donald Trump during his sweeping 22-month investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election, chess was perhaps the most surprising.
But buried among the myriad of revelations contained in Mueller’s 448-page report, released on Thursday with limited redactions by Attorney General William Barr, was the fact that Trump disclosed to investigators that sanctioned Russian powerbroker Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, then the president of the World Chess Federation (FIDE), invited the Trump Organization to host the 2016 World Chess Championship at Trump Tower.
“During the course of preparing to respond to these questions,” wrote Trump on November 20, 2018, in response to a chess-focused inquiry from Mueller, “I have become aware of documents indicating that in March of 2016, the president of the World Chess Federation invited the Trump Organization to host, at Trump Tower, the 2016 World Chess Championship Match to be held in New York in November 2016.”
That invitation, from a Russian sports chief with ties to the Kremlin, appears to represent both another Russian outreach to Trump and his associates in the height of a political campaign, and another example of the ways in which critics say Russia has used sport in general, and chess in particular, as statecraft.
In the days following Trump’s shocking electoral victory, Russia’s business and political elite, headlined by Vladimir Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov, gathered in Manhattan’s South Street Seaport to watch Russian grandmaster Sergey Karjakin challenge Norwegian world champion Magnus Carlsen at the biennial World Chess Championship.
Mueller, it seems, suspected that someone – perhaps one of the powerful Russians in attendance – may have invited the president-elect to attend the pre-tournament gala.
In response to questions from Mueller, Trump said he did not attend the event and “[does] not remember” being invited. But according to Mueller’s report, the World Chess Championship indeed appears to have been an unlikely nexus of characters central to the Trump-Russia drama.
Mueller reported that Kirill Dmitriev, CEO of the Russian sovereign wealth fund, flew to New York for the event and invited George Nader, a mysterious Middle Eastern businessman who was later questioned by Mueller about his meetings with Trump allies, to join him for the opening of the tournament. He asked Nader if there was “a chance to see anyone key from Trump camp," Mueller found, because he "would love to start building for the future," and urged him to invite Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
Nader did not pass along the invitation, the report said, and investigators “did not establish that Trump or any Campaign or Transition Team official attended the event.”
But the invitation to host, which the match’s organizer Ilya Merenzon confirmed to ABC News that Ilyumzhinov extended to Trump, not through official FIDE channels but rather “via his personal connections,” could have established another business relationship between the Trump Organization and an institution with close ties to the Russian government.
As described in a recent joint investigation undertaken by ABC News and FiveThirtyEight, Ilyumzhinov, the wealthy former governor of the Russian state of Kalmykia, has repeatedly been alleged to have acted as an informal envoy for the Russian government.
The Kremlin denies this characterization, but over the years, Ilyumzhinov maintained a packed travel schedule that saw him unexpectedly appear beside some of the world’s best-known strongmen leaders, typically under the auspices of promoting chess.
In 2003, Ilyumzhinov flew to Iraq, less than two days before the start of the U.S. invasion, where he reportedly met with Saddam Hussein’s son, Uday. In 2011, he flew to Libya, amid an ongoing NATO bombing campaign, where he played a chess match against Moammar Gadhafi. And in 2012, he flew to Syria, shortly after the outbreak of civil war, where he met with Bashar Assad to, in Ilyumzhinov’s telling, deliver chess textbooks to Syrian schoolchildren.
Indeed, Ilyumzhinov’s son David confirmed that his father served a unique role. “It’s not a secret,” David said. “He can go like he is just there for chess, for the chess tournament, but he can deliver a message. And the message won’t get screwed up.”
He was recently forced to step aside as FIDE president -- following a scandal-plagued reign that included allegations of corruption – after struggling for legitimacy in the wake of the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioning him in 2015 "for materially assisting and acting for or on behalf of the Government of Syria."
It was that sanction, in fact, that prevented him from attending the 2016 World Chess Championship, the very event that had drawn Mueller’s attention.
But even without Ilyumzhinov, FIDE and chess remain firmly in the Kremlin orbit, with former Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich, who led Russia’s successful staging of the 2018 FIFA World Cup, succeeding Ilyumzhinov as president. And with 188 national chess federations scattered across the globe, the opportunities for chess diplomacy are all but endless.
With Ilyumzhinov’s outreach to Trump, those opportunities appeared to reach new heights.


Monday, April 15, 2019

Three GMs Take the Top Spots at The Westford Open

The Westford Open was held in, surprise, Westford, MA this past weekend. The FIDE rated Championship section saw three Grandmasters and one International Master battling it out along with Vermont's only US National Master David Carter. Final Standings:
  1. 1.GM Jianchao Zhou (China)
  2. 2.GM Fidel Corrales Jimenez (Cuba now USA)
  3. 3.GM Alexander Ivanov (Russia now USA)

The same format tournament will be run by Kingdom Chess and Alex Relyea this September 7th and 8th in Danville, VT.


GMs Zhou and Jimenez in action. This game was won by Zhou

GM Alexander Ivanov

IM David Vigorito of Andover, MA

GM Zhou in first round action


Thursday, April 11, 2019

The Women's Chess Club of New York

Also known as the Ladies' Chess Club of New York Founded in 1895 and in existence through 1949. They met at the Martha Washington Hotel through 1920.
More on one of the founders, Miss Eliza Foot from Who's Who of American Women (1915)


And this from the Landsburger biography of Steinitz. Miss Foot was apparently a cousin of Steinitz



And this nice summary from Tartajubow On Chess

    In December, 1895 the Women’s Chess Club of New York was incorporated with Miss Foot as the president, a position she held until the time of her death. The club was to become the leading chess organization for women in the US. Members included Nellie Showalter (wife of American champion Jackson W. Showalter) and Harriet Worrall. They elected as honorary members the English women’s champion Mary Rudge (1845-1919) and Irish women’s champion Mrs. Thomas Rowland (Frideswide Beechey) (1843-1919). The Women’s Chess Club of New York lasted until 1949. In 1909 Mrs. Foot wrote a book on chess puzzles, becoming the first American woman chess author. 
   Their meetings were held at the Town and County Club on East Twenty-second Street, on Tuesday afternoons. There were seven chess tables and the code of conduct of the Manhattan Chess Club was displayed on the wall so that in the case of a dispute, the members could refer to it. The rule was that members had to abide by the Manhattan code. Once a month Major Hanham, one of the masters from the Manhattan Chess Club, visited the Women's Club to play simultaneous games against anyone present. Apparently later they moved to the Carnegie Building. 
     The first international chess tournament for women players that was held in London in the summer of 1897 had six cash prizes and a brilliancy prize offered by Baron Albert de Rothschild. The US was represented by Mrs. Harriet Worrall, of Brooklyn and Miss Foot was the reserve. Mrs. Nellie Showalter was selected but she declined to play. 
     According to an article in the New York Tribune dated December 16, 1906 she also served as director of the MacDowell Club. The MacDowell Club of New York was one of many women's clubs by the same name around the country supporting the MacDowell Colony, the artists’ retreat in Peterborough, New Hampshire. The MacDowell Clubs around the country were part of a social movement to promote music and art in America. Organized in 1905, the MacDowell Club was initially located at the old Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. 

On December 6, 1914 near the Manhattan Chess Club during a stormy evening, Miss Foot was carrying an umbrella which apparently blocked her view of an oncoming vehicle as it came around the corner. She was struck and killed instantly; the driver never stopped.
     According to several sources Miss Foot was cousin to Steinitz and in 1893 she challenged him to a correspondence game which he accepted. She won the game and took great pride in her accomplishment although it was reported by a Dr. Pollock that Steinitz had played the game without looking at the board. His play in the complications would seem to confirm that.  Still, Mrs. Foot played a good game and her pride in her accomplishment is understandable. 
http://tartajubow.blogspot.com/2014/09/eliza-campbell-foot.html

And lastly, here is the game played against Steinitz

[Event "Correspondence, Blindfold"]

[Site "USA"]
[Date "1893.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Eliza Campbell Foot"]
[Black "Wilhelm Steinitz"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C59"]
[PlyCount "105"]
[EventDate "1893.??.??"]
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Na5 6. Bb5+ c6 7. dxc6 bxc6 8.
Be2 h6 9. Nf3 e4 10. Ne5 Qc7 11. f4 Bd6 12. d4 O-O 13. c3 c5 14. Na3 a6 15. Nc2
Bb7 16. O-O Rac8 17. Qe1 Nd5 18. Ne3 Ne7 19. Qg3 cxd4 20. cxd4 Qb6 21. Nd7 Qa7
22. Nxf8 Kxf8 23. Bg4 Rc7 24. Bd2 Nac6 25. Kh1 Nxd4 26. Rac1 f5 27. Rxc7 Bxc7
28. Bd1 a5 29. Bc3 Ba6 30. Re1 Bb5 31. a4 Bd3 32. Bb3 Qc5 33. Rc1 Ke8 34. Bd1
Ne6 35. Bh5+ Kd7 36. Bd2 Qb6 37. Nc4 Qb8 38. Ne5+ Bxe5 39. fxe5 Qxb2 40. Qf2
Qd4 41. Qxd4+ Nxd4 42. Bxa5 Ndc6 43. Bc3 g6 44. Bd1 Nd5 45. Kg1 g5 46. Bb2 Nf4
47. Kf2 Na5 48. Bc3 Nc4 49. a5 e3+ 50. Kg1 Be4 51. a6 Bxg2 52. a7 Be4 53. Bc2
1-0



Sunday, March 24, 2019

What To Call It?

Seeking a label for this haircut, other than awful. Not quite a Mohawk. Not quite a mullet. Photo is of Timur Gaeryev at the US Open taking place now in St. Louis. By all reports he's a nice and interesting guy. Tartar heritage from Tashkent now living in Southern California.


Friday, March 22, 2019

US Chess Championships Underway in St. Louis

They can be followed on any number of sites such as chess.com
Ann Sharevich at this year's event

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Sunday Marks the Death of Alexander Alekhine


This Sunday marks the death in Portugal of Alexander Alekhine. Was it at the hands of Soviet agents, a la Trotsky in Mexico, or at the hands of the French Resistance taking revenge? He was not a very nice person. Having read the anti-semetic screeds published under his name by the Nazis during WWII, I can only wish Alekhine had been blessed with the moral integrity of a Dietrich Bonhoeffer. 
In any event, the Kingdom Chess Club will mark his death as a great chess player this Sunday at Cafe Lotti, E. Burke, VT. Bring your hip flask with something to imbibe during your games, or bring a cat to sit on your lap as Alekhine often did. We'll try to play at least one game as Black using the Alekhine Defense. See you Sunday at Cafe Lotti, 2 pm to 4:30 pm.

Something Has to Change


Sunday, March 17, 2019

Ides of March Blitz Tournament at Cafe Lotti, E. Burke, Vermont a Success

The four round tournament was contested by twelve players ranging in age from eight to eighty. Players from Kingdom Chess Club and the St. Johnsbury Academy Chess Club competed and feasted on John Lotti's famous cannolies. The event was won by the Academy's chess coach, Tyler Hartshorn. Brian Lafferty of Kingdom Chess finished second with William Haresch, a student at the Academy, third.



The Asylum Seeker As Chess Champion


“It’s an inspiring example of how life’s challenges do not define a person,” said Jane Hsu, the principal of P.S. 116, which held a pep rally to celebrate Tani’s victory. Hsu noted that while Tani lacks a home, he has enormously supportive parents dedicated to seeing him succeed..........
.......Tani is a reminder that refugees enrich this nation — and that talent is universal, even if opportunity is not. Back in Nigeria, his parents say, his brilliance at chess would never have had an outlet.
“The U.S. is a dream country,” his dad told me. “Thank God I live in the greatest city in the world, which is New York, New York.”
The city so great that they named it twice---New York, New York.

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Susan Polgar to be Inducted Into the World Chess Hall of Fame??!!

The US Chess Trust that has selected Ms. Polgar for induction into the Hall of Fame neglects completely the down side of her actions here in the United States a mere ten years ago. The Trust writes as follows about Polgar:

Susan Polgar 
(1969- ) 

Born in Budapest, Hungary, Susan Polgar immigrated to the United States in 1994. The top-ranked woman in the world at 15, in 1991, she became the first to earn the grandmaster title by norms and rating. Polgar won the Women's World Rapid and Blitz Championships in 1992. Her victory in the 1996 Women's World Championship also made her the first triple crown winner. Polgar won 12 Olympiad medals (five gold, four silver, three bronze) and led the U.S. to second place in 2004. She was undefeated in 56 games played on Board One. Polgar has coached men's college division I teams at Texas Tech University (2011-2012) and Webster University (2012-2018) to a record seven consecutive national championships.



Comment:
As one of some fourteen defendants in Susan Polgar's utterly unsuccessful legal action against US Chess and her critics on and off the US Chess Executive Board, I am appalled that she has been selected for inclusion into the Hall of Fame. 

Tellingly, the announcement of Polgar's nomination makes no mention of her law suit that nearly bankrupted US Chess or the fact that her web master was indicted on thirty four Federal felony counts, eventually pleading guilty to a Federal misdemeanor. The Trust also makes no mention of the misrepresentations she was caught in during her run for the US Chess Executive Board and during her deposition under oath in the litigation she commenced. Shame on the US Chess Trust.  

Perhaps we need a World Chess Hall of Infamy. I nominate Alexander Alekhine and Susan Polgar as initial inductees. 

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Chess Clubs--The Heart and Soul of United States Chess

Chess clubs are and have been the core of chess in the United States. They are important and deserve our support and the support of our national FIDE affiliated organization, US Chess. If you are a member of US Chess, please ask Carol Meyer ( cmeyer@uschess.org ), the Executive Director, what US Chess is actually doing to support and grow local over the board chess clubs. 
From the 19th Century, here are two listings of clubs then existing in the US. Some of them still exist either continuously operating or in revived form. Support your local chess club!


https://books.google.com/books?id=08BAAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA317&lpg=PA317&dq=Batavia+Chess+Club&source=bl&ots=bX0xOP3AsH&sig=ACfU3U0O_jKDcBMl56uxy0WHrbo7rcMoJQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjKk8rtz_LgAhXF7YMKHevrCVgQ6AEwB3oECAAQAQ#v=onepage&q=Batavia%20Chess%20Club&f=false

And from ChessManiac.com 

Early chess clubs in America appeared in almost every major city staring in the early 1800s. It was a place to play chess and hold matches and tournaments. The telegraph was the Internet of the 19th century and many clubs played against other clubs in telegraph matches. Chess clubs are dying now, but here is a list of early chess clubs that had a 100 to as many as 1,000 members at one time. Most are gone now, but a few remain today.

Amateur Chess Club (1859- ) in Philadelphia.
Albany Chess Club (1886- ). Located at the Union Railroad Depot in Albany, New York. Organized in February, 1886.
Anderssen Chess Club (1859- ) in Philadelphia.
Athenuaem Chess Club (1814- ). Chess Club located at 6th Street and Walnut in Philadelphia. It disbanded and re-formed in 1847 at 6th and Adelphi.
Atlanta Chess and Checker Club (1887- ).
Augusta Chess Club (1859- ) in Augusta, Georgia.
Baltimore Chess Club (1881- ). It met at Charles and Saratoga Street and had over 110 members.
Bassford’s Chess Rooms (1837). In New York.
Batavia Chess Club (1898- ). In Batavia, NY.
Beverly Hills Chess Club (1921- ).
Bishops Chess Club (1897- ). Located in Brooklyn.
Boston Chess Club (1845-1848). It started out with 20 members. It was reorganized in 1857 and incorporated in 1888. It met at the corner of Fremont and Montgomery.
Boston Young Men’s Christian Union (YMCU) Chess Club (1855- ).
Boylston Chess Club (1919-Present). Boston chess club still going strong.
Bridgeport Chess Club (1859) in Connecticut.
Brooklyn Chess Club (1852- ). At one time, it was the largest chess club in America.
Brooklyn Institute Chess Club (1911- ).
Buffalo Chess Club (1872- ).
Café Logeling (1877). Located on 49 Bowery Street in Lower Manhattan. It later became the Manhattan CC.
Café Europa (1870-1872). Chess club located in New York.
Camden Chess Club (1897- ). In New Jersey.
Carrollton Chess Club (1887- ). Located in Carrollton, Georgia.
Caxton Club (1895) at 1411 Fulton Street in Brooklyn.
Charleston Chess Club (1858- ).
Chicago Chess Club (1859- ). It met at 85 Dearborn St and the Portland Block.
Cincinnati Chess Club (1859- ).
Cleveland Chess Club (1855- ). It met at 216 Superior St.
Columbia Chess Club (1887- ). Chess club at Columbia College in New York.
Columbus Chess Club (1859) in Columbus. Ohio. Its first president was A.B. Buttles.
Cornell Chess Club (1868-1869 ).
Cosmopolitan Chess Club (1872- ). Located at the Café Cosmopolitan in New York City.
Dallas Chess Club (1885- ).
Damiano Chess Club (1896- ) at the College of the City of New York.
Danites Chess Club (1878- ). Located in Brooklyn.
Dayton Chess Club (1888).
Denver Chess Club (1859).
Detroit Chess Club (1881- ). Its first president was H.M. Keeler.
Dubuque Chess Club (1858- ). Founded by Louis Paulsen (1833-1891) in Iowa.
Federal City Chess Club (1835- ). Located in Washington, DC.
Franklin Chess Club (1884-1955). Located at 1037 Walnut Street in Philadelphia.
Galveston Chess and Whist Club (1891- )
Germantown Chess Club (1897- ). Met at the YMCA in Germantown, PA.
Grand Rapids Chess Club (1888- ).
Golden Gate Chess Club (1885- ). Located in San Francisco. Its first president was Dr. Benjamin Marshall.
Harvard Chess Club (1874-Present).
Herman Steiner chess Club (1932). Founded by Herman Steiner in Hollywood, California.
Indianapolis Chess Club (1885- ).
Jeffersonian Chess Club (1888- ). Located at 101 West 10th Street in New York City.
Kenosha Chess Club (1867- ) in Wisconsin.
Knights Chess Club (1896) in Brooklyn.
La Bourdonnais Chess Club (1888) at Columbia College in NY.
Lafayette Chess Club (1859) in Indiana.
Leadville Chess Club (1885- ). Located in Leadville, CO.
Lexington Chess Club (1846- ). Located in Lexington, KY.
Log Cabin Chess Club (1934- ). Founded by E. Forry Laucks in West Oranged, NJ.
Louisville Chess Club (1846 – ). It met at the Polytechnic Building on Fourth Ave.
Manhattan Chess Club (1877-2002). It started out with 37 members.
Marshall Chess Club (1915-Present).
Mechanics’ Institute Chess Club (1854-Present). Its original building was destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. It was rebuilt in 1909.
Memphis Chess, Checkers & Whist Club (1896-Present). It was located above the Southern Express Office on North Court.
Milwaukee Chess Club (1857-1883). The chess club burned down in 1883 and was re-formed in 1887.
Minneapolis Chess Club (1887- ). Located in St. Paul, MN.
Monumental Chess Club (1858) in Baltimore.
Morphy Chess Club (1859) in Washington, DC.
Mount Auburn Chess Club (1886- ). Located in Cincinnati.
Nashville Chess Club (1881).
New Haven Chess Club (1859- ) in Connecticut.
New Orleans Chess Club (1838-1841, 1857-). In 1857, Paul Morphy was its President.
New Orleans Chess, Checker, and Whist Club (1880-1935). At one time, it had over 1,000 members. In 1890, it burned down, destroying all of its Morphy memorabilia. It was located at the corner of Baronne and Canal Streets.
New York Chess Club (1803-1804, 1869- ). Perhaps the first chess club in the United States. It was located at the Carlton House.
New York Divan (1835-1837).
Newark Chess Club (1887- ). Located at 842 Broad St. at Beecenow’s Restaurant.
Norfolk Chess Club (1840- ). Located in Norfolk, VA.
North Saint Louis Chess Club (1887- ).
Omaha Chess Club (1890).
Paul Morphy Chess Club (1881- ). Located in Brooklyn in Werney’s Place.
Philadelphia Chess Club (1827-1830). Formed after a visit by Maelzel and the Turk automaton.
Philadelphia Chess Club (1859-1867). Formed after a visit by Paul Morphy to the city.
Philidor Chess Club (1875- ). Chess club located on Meserole Street in Brooklyn.
Pittsburgh Library Chess Club (1881- ).
Pollock Chess Club (1890- ). Located in Hagerstown, Maryland.
Press Chess Club (1864-1874). An active chess club in Philadelphia.
Princeton Chess Club (1883- ).
Providence Chess Club (1887- ). Located in Providence, Rhode Island.
Quaker City Chess Club (1883- ) in Philadelphia.
Quincy Chess Club (1859- ) in Quincy, Massachusetts.
Richmond Chess Club (1884- ). Located in Richmond, VA.
Rochester Chess Club (1897- ). Located in Rochester, NY.
Rockford Chess Club (1878). Located at Rockford Female Seminary in Illinois.
Rutherford Chess Club (1888- ). Located in Rutherford, NJ.
Sacramento Chess Club (1897). Its first president was G. Dixon.
Saginaw Chess Club (1897- ). Located in Saginaw, NY.
Saint Louis Chess Club. Founded by Max Judd in the 1840s. It met at the corner of Ninth and Olive Streets.
Saint Paul Chess Club (1888- ). Located in St Paul, MN.
San Antonio Chess Club (1888-Present). Oldest chess club in Texas.
Scranton Chess Club (1887- ). Located in Scranton, PA.
Seattle Chess Club (1879- )
Spokane Chess Club (1899-Present)
Springfield Chess and Checker Club (1897) in Springfield, MA. It was held at the Union Christian Association.
Staten Island Chess Club (1890- ) at 10 Bay Street, Tompkinsville.
Steinitz Chess Club (1897- ). Located in Brooklyn.
Syracuse Chess Club (1858- ) in New York.
Tacoma Chess Club (1891-Present). My first chess club.
Toledo Chess Club (1888- ).
Trenton Chess Club (1897- ). Located in Trenton, NJ.
Turn-Verein Chess Club (1887- )
Union Chess Club (1859- ). It was located at 224 Grand Street in New York and composed mostly of Germans.
University of Pennsylvania Chess Club (1895- ).
Washington Chess Club (1839). Located in Washington, DC. It met at the St. Cloud Building on 9th and F Streets.
West Point Chess Club (1845- ). Founded by Hyacinth Agnel. Meetings were held at the quarters of the professors or officers.
Wilkes Barre Chess Club (1887- ). Located in Wilkes-Barre, PA.
Wilmington Chess Club (1887- ). Located in Wilmington, Delaware.
Women’s Chess Club (1894-1949). Located in New York.
Yale Chess Club (1856- ).

Other 19th century chess clubs: Burlington, Cactus in Kansas, Castle CC in Brooklyn, Elizabeth in NJ, Kenwood CC in Chicago, Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City, Spartanburg, Urbana.

– Bill Wall

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Major Cheating Discovered at 2018 US Chess Scholastic Nationals--Coach Banned for Life

From the US Chess Ethics Committee decision. Chapeau to Elizabeth Spiegel! The complete decision can be found here. 

From the decision:
"The committee majority finds this behavior by Coach Ramirez to be absolutely unforgivable. This majority takes the position that an adult who uses his position of authority to influence children to commit unethical acts has committed the most serious violation of the Code of Ethics. It is also worth noting that while he was apparently trying to enhance the self-esteem of his players by gaining them undeserved prizes at the national scholastics, he was simultaneously crushing the dreams of players from other schools, many of whom were also poor and facing serious challenges at home. The committee majority therefore agrees that its recommendation of a permanent membership revocation is fully justified."

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Censorship Rife on the US Chess Member Discussion Forums

You won't see this topic being discussed in the US Chess Forums. What is US Chess leadership afraid of? It can be found on the chess.com forum and elsewhere.

US Chess Leadership Meets With Arkady Dvorkovich in Washington, D.C.




Such happy, smiling faces. Reminder: Dvorkovich has been mentioned widely in the press in relation to the Mueller investigation because he met with Carter Page during the 2016 campaign. 
From The Washington Post on 2/21, the day after the US Chess meeting with Dvorkovich in DC.

"What campaign staff members were told about George Papadopoulos’s and Carter Page’s interactions with Russia? In March 2016, as he battled for the Republican presidential nomination, Trump introduced a slate of foreign policy advisers meant to demonstrate the robustness of his campaign in that arena. Two of those advisers, Papadopoulos and Page, soon came under investigation by federal authorities for their links to Russia.

Papadopoulos was told in April 2016 — shortly after the DNC network and Podesta’s email had been accessed — that the Russians had a cache of incriminating emails for use against Clinton. The next day, he emailed a Trump campaign official to say that he had “some interesting messages coming in from Moscow about a trip when the time is right.” The comment about a “trip” probably refers to Papadopoulos’s efforts to get Trump to travel to Russia — but it’s not clear what else he might have shared about what he learned.

Page traveled to Moscow in July 2016 with the campaign’s permission. After speaking at an event, he emailed the campaign to say that he’d had a conversation with then-Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich. Dvorkovich, Page wrote, had “expressed strong support for Mr. Trump and a desire to work together toward devising better solutions in response to the vast range of current international problems.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics ... 2b7d74dafb

Arkady is also presently on a US Treasury department list of 250 Russians  potentially subject to sanctions as Kirsan was and is. 

The IOC just rejected Dvorkovich's Paris initiative announced last week in Paris with a photo op with the lovely French IM Sophie MIllett. The speed of the IOC rejection raises the obvious question of how much of a shadow Putin's man Arkady casts over the organization and all who interact with him and FIDE.

One hopes for the best for US Chess. Still, no one should be surprised if the leadership gets up one morning with a flea infestation. 

Monday, February 25, 2019

European Chess Union Planning To Leave FIDE In 2019?

Will the European Chess Union Withdraw From FIDE? As reported by Kevin Spraggett, there are indications that such a split may be in the making. It appears that the shadow of Putin that follows Arkady Dvorkovich may be too much for some federations. 
http://www.spraggettonchess.com/fide-in-crisis/

Dvorkovich, a close Putin ally mentioned publicly in connection with the Mueller probe of  possible Trump election campaign involvement with Russia, may have enough of Putin's shadow following him to finally give pause in some quarters. This apparently doesn't bother Executive Board member of US Chess, despite having been made aware of the shadow. US Chess leadership increased their working relationship with FIDE at this past October's FIDE Congress. 

To be continued.........

IOC Quickly Rejects FIDE Inclusion Overture

"It took less than 10 days for the rain to fall on Kouatly and Dvorkovich’s parade. On Tuesday February 12, readers might recall, FIDE officially started an optimisticcampaign to try to become part of the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics.

But on the Thursday of the following week a resounding ‘no’ was communicated to FIDE. Of course, this per se was not a surprise to me, but the speed with which the decision was made definitely surprised me.

And what is more, even today none of Chess.Com, ChessBase or other popular chess sites, which so enthusiastically reported the start of the campaign, have given their readers the news. Are they still in SHOCK? Must be…"