California and Chess
Chess moved west with the earliest wagon trains. Some of the diaries of journeys mention chess
play during the long trip. Chess had
presumably been introduced in California by the Spanish.
In March 1848, chess sets were advertised for sale in the
California Star newspaper.
In March 1849, chess tables were advertised for sale in the Weekly
Alta newspaper.
In 1850, a chess room existed at the Stockton Club in Stockton,
California.
In 1850, an article appeared in the Sacramento Transcript stating
that chess was not a standard for measuring the abilities of your
acquaintances, nor a subject for daily toil and nightly meditation. Chess should be simply a recreation.
In 1851, a description of the Sutter Hotel in Sacramento mentioned
that the saloon had chess pieces set up on their marble tables.
On July 21, 1851, chess master Pierre Charles Fournier de
Saint-Amant (1800-1872) arrived in San Francisco. He was the French consul to California.
In November 1851, the San Francisco Chess Club was formed, meeting
in a building at No. 32 Merchant Street.
St. Amant gave a chess exhibition there.
In December 1851, the California Institute in San Francisco had a
back room with tables for chess players.
In 1852, the Mercantile Library Association was formed. It consisted of a chess room, which was
frequented by its members.
The Mechanics’ Institute (on Polk Street) chess club had it first
meeting on December 11, 1854. The
Institute was incorporated on April 24, 1855.
In 1855, a chess room was established in the Sacramento Club in
Sacramento, California.
In 1855, the Pioneer Chess Club was formed in San Francisco. The club met at the Pioneer Association Hall
and had about 20 members. The President
was Willard B. Farwell. The Vice
President was William Rufus Wheaton (1814-1887). Secretary and Treasurer was John H. Gardiner. Other founding members were H. O. Burrows and
T. J. Grotjan.
In 1855, the German Chess Club, San Francisco was formed. Its president was Professor William (Wilhelm)
Schleiden.
In 1856, The German Chess Club defeated the Pioneer Chess Club in
a correspondence match. The German Chess
Club won a supper.
In 1856, a chess game between Schleiden and Grotjan was
played. It is the earliest recorded game
in California.
In December 1856, the Sacramento Chess Club was formed. The officers were Dr. B.B. Brown, President;
Joseph Mogridge, Secretary; and Dr. T.B. Baillie, Treasurer.
In December 1856, the San Francisco German Chess Club challenged
the San Francisco Pioneer Chess Club in a correspondence match. The moves were published in the local
newspapers. The German Chess Club won
the game and the match after checkmating in 42 moves.
In March 1857, P. Vertimer was elected President of the Sacramento
Chess Club. J. Weston was elected
Secretary and Treasurer.
In April 1857, the Sacramento Chess Club (Jackson and T. B.
Baillie) challenged the San Francisco Pioneer Club (Shaw and Grotfau). Two correspondence games were played at the
same time.
In 1857, Selim Franklin (1814-1884) of San Francisco was on the
Planning & Rules Committee for the first American Chess Congress in New
York, won by Paul Morphy.
In October 1857, there were four members on the “Committee of
Cooperation” of the First American Chess Congress from California. These members were T. B. Baillie, Selim
Franklin, T. J. Grotjan, and William R. Wheaton.
In December 1857, a chess tournament was held at the Mercantile
Library. Players included R. H. Bacon,
Brigham, Castle, Cook, Farley, Goodwin, Hammond, Hunter, Krause, Lapsley, Matthew,
Matthews, Miller, Roberts, Seymour, Shaw, Stone, Sullock, Tagliaboe, Wallace,
and G. Webb.
In March 1858 there was a California Chess Congress (also called
the Pacific Chess Tournament or Grand Chess Tournament). It was the first major chess tournament in
California. Three San Francisco chess
clubs joined together to host the Congress: the Mechanics’ Institute, the
German Chess Club of San Francisco, and the Pioneer Chess Club. The President of the Congress was Selim
Franklin. Members of the Committee of
Management included R. H. Bacon , Thomas Byrne, M.
Elias, Willard B. Farwell, George Pen Johnston, Edward Jones, Charles Mayne,
Daniel S. Roberts, Wilhelm Schleiden, B.F. Voorhees, and William Rufus
Wheaton. Other committee members
included John E. Ager, Dr. Edward Autenreith, Dr. T.B. Baillie, Thomas H.
Blythe, O. Hoffman Burrows, Dr. B.B. Brown, Judge J.D. Carr, T. H. Caswell,
A.P. Crittenden, A. Despecher, John S. Ellis, John M. Freeman, J.H. Gardiner, Rodmond
Gibbons, J.B. Haggin, Charles J. Hughes, Thomas D. Johns, M. M. Harvey, P.
Kalkman, Capt. E.D. Keyes, James B. McMinn, Joseph Mogridge, John A. Monroe, J.P.
Nourse, Joseph A. Nunes, E. S. Osgood, A.B. Perkins, Julius K. Rose, Otis V. Sawyer, George F.
Sharp, John Shaw, S.C. Simmons, and Lloyd Tevis. The entrance fee was $5. The spectator fee was $2.50. Ladies accompanied by subscribers were
admitted free. On fair days, there were
nearly 400 spectators for this tournament.
On March 22, 1858, the California Chess Congress began at the Hall
in Hunt’s Building in San Francisco, at the corner of Sacramento and Kearny
Streets with 46 players. There were 8
players in the First Class, 26 players in the First Division of the Second
Class, and 12 players in the Second Division of the Second Class.
The 8 players in the First Class (no odds) included Edward Jones,
E. Justh, Selim Franklin, Philip Kalkman, Daniel S. Roberts, Wilhelm Schleiden,
John Shaw, and Charles Sutro.
The 26 players of the First Division of the Second Class
(receiving knight odds from the First Class) included R. H. Bacon, E. D. Baker,
Thomas Byrne, M. Castle, J.C. Cattan, Albert Charter, M. Elias, John S. Ellis,
W. B. Farwell, R. Gibbon, George Grotjan, C.E. Hawley, Leopold Hyam, George Pen
Johnston, Theodore Kintrel, J. Levinson, Lewis Levinson, Matthews, John McKee,
L. B. Mizner, Julius K. Rose, A. F. Scott, S. C. Simmons, J. Stamper, Struver, and
W. R. Wheaton.
The 12 players of the Second Division of the Second Class
(receiving rook odds from the First Class) included James Fuller, J.H.
Gardiner, George Ladd, E.A. McLemore, James B. McMinn, E. J. Muygridge, Charles
A. Parsons, E. L. Ritter, Otis V. Sawyer, George F. Sharp, B. F. Voorhies, and
George O. Whitney.
Selim Franklin won 1st prize, a gold watch. Edward Jones took 2nd prize, an
inlaid rosewood chess table. John S.
Ellis won 1st prize in the First Division of the Second Class, a
chess set. R. H. Bacon won 2nd
prize, a gold specimen watch seal. J.H.
Gardiner won 1st prize in the Second Division of the Second Class, a
quartz specimen seal. George F. Sharpe
won 2nd prize, also a quartz specimen seal. The problem solving tournament was won by
William Wheaton, a Staunton chess set.
In October 1858, a chess club was organized in Downieville,
California (population 5,000).
In December 1858, the Shasta Chess Club challenged the Yreka Chess
Club in a correspondence game. Well
Fargo was used to bring the moves each trip.
On January 18, 1859, the Cosmopolitan Chess Club was formed in San
Francisco on Montgomery Street. Its President
was Daniel S. Roberts. Vice President
was William Schleiden. Secretary was
Washington Bartlett. Treasurer was Thomas
Bull. Directors included John S.
Ellis, John Shaw, John H. Gardiner, Herman Siering, and Thomas D. Johns. There were about 150 members and was at one
time the largest chess club in the United States.
From May to July 1859, the Cosmopolitan Chess Club had a chess
tournament. In Class 1, Division 1:
Jones, Justh, Roberts, Schleiden, Shaw, Siering, and Sutro. In Class 1, Division 2: Baker, Bereolzheimer,
Blumenthal, Byrne, Chater, Ellis, Farwell, Kinzel, J. Levinson, L. Levinson,
Meyer, Mizner, Monroe, Moore, Scott, Struver, Vertimer, and Wheaton. In Class 2, Division 1: Bowman, Dewey, Johns,
Kemp, Lupton, Nourse, Pincus, Rose, Rosenbaum, Swasey, and Tyler. In Class 2, Division 2: Barrett, Bartlett,
Carlton, Dow, Hill, Hudson, Labatt, Ladd, Lupton, and Whitney. John Shaw won in Class 1, Division 1. Tyler won his section.
In 1859, a chess tournament was held during the California State
Fair in Sacramento.
In 1860, the Olympic Club opened in San Francisco. It was one of the best gymnastic clubs in the
country. It also had a chess room.
In 1861, the Mercantile Library Association had a large and
beautiful chess room for the accommodation of its members. It had 16 chess tables with daily and nightly
chess players playing chess.
By 1868, the Mercantile Library had 20 chess tables.
In 1869, the San Francisco Mercantile Library advertised that
chess, reading and lounging were the correct thing to do at the comfortable
rooms of the library during the cold season.
In January 1872, an executive committee was formed at the
Mechanics’ Institute Chess Club. It
included J. Browning, A.L. De Laguna, W.J. Stoddart, William Stout, and P. L.
Webb.
In May 1872, the Mechanics Institute chess tournament was won by
William P. Stout, followed by John Stone and A. Summerfield.
In December 1873, the San Bernardino chess club challenged any
chess club in Los Angeles.
On Jan 6, 1874 the annual meeting of the Mechanics’ Chess Club
elected its officers. They were:
President, W.P. Stout; VP, L. Summerfield; Treasurer, J. Browning; Secretary,
W. Freer; Editor, W.W. Smith.
In December 1874, a meeting to form a chess club at the Sacramento
Library did not have enough people to justify a chess club.
In 1875, a chess player asked the board of directors of the Los
Angeles library whether anything in the bylaws prevented people from playing
chess on Sundays.
In the fall of 1879 a chess club was started in Livermore,
California.
In 1880, the Los Angeles Athletic Club was founded, 226 South
Spring Street.. It included a chess room.
In 1881 a Mercantile Library chess team (one of the players was
Joseph Redding) played a match against the Mechanics’ Institute chess team.
In 1881, Professor Fritz Peipers (1844-1918), a music teacher,
played four boards blindfolded simultaneously in San Francisco. He won all 4 games.
In 1882, chess players in Los Angeles met at Paynes &
Stanton’s Photograph Gallery. There was
also a chess room apart from the general library at the Los Angeles Public
Library.
On January 5, 1884, the Argonaut, a weekly literary magazine
published in San Francisco, began a chess column edited by J. Fennimore Welsh.
It was the first regular chess column on the Pacific Coast. Mr. Welsh was
succeeded by J.E. Tippett, who conducted the chess column, called "The
Chess-Player," from 1884 to March 6,1886. Tippett
later moved to Boston. It was later
edited by Dr. H. J. Ralston (1906-1993).
In 1884, Johann Zukertort (1842-1888) spent a month in San
Francisco, giving some simultaneous chess exhibitions from July 2 to 25. His visit was arranged by Joseph D. Redding
(1858-1932) and J. E. Tippett. A
reception committee consisted of Judge O. Hoffman, Jeremiah Lynch, and H. Heinemann. A Committee of Arrangements consisted of E.
Yerworth, J. Holstein, J. F. Welsh, Louis Van Vliet (born in Amsterdam in 1854),
B. Marshall, F. Peipers, J. F. Pope, Theodore Payne, R. O. Oakley, Captain
Scott, M. M. Estee, and J. W. Jefferson.
On July 3, 1884, Zukertort played 7 games at the Mercantile
Library, winning 6 and losing 1. He lost
to J. F. Welch.
On July 8, 1884, Zukertort played 12 boards blindfolded at Irving
Hall (139 Post Street). He won 9, lost
2, and drew 1. He played against Joseph D.
Redding, Herman Heineman, E. Yerworth, Dr. B. Marshall, L. Van Vliet, Selim Franklin,
Jules Holstein, Fritz Pipers, F. Waldstein, M. Critcher, R. Oakley and J. F. Welch. He lost to Redding and Welch. He drew his game with Waldstein.
A few days later, Zukertort played 9 players.
On July 21, 1884, Zukertort defeated Selim Franklin in a chess
game played at the Chess Room of the Mechanics’ Institute.
Joseph Redding won three games from Zukertort in July 1884 at the
Mechanics' Institute and claimed the California championship in 1884-85.
Redding became president of the San Francisco Art Association in 1886.
Zukertort was paid $354.50 for his chess exhibitions fees while in
San Francisco.
On
April 18, 1885, the Golden Gate Chess Club was formed in San Francisco. Its
president was Dr. Benjamin Marshall, a correspondent of the San Francisco
Chronicle. Vice President was N. Manson; secretary was Fritz Peipers; treasurer
was F. Waldstein. The first Golden
Gate Chess Club champion was Waldstein.
Other top players were Manson, Peipers, and Seligsohn.
In
August 1885, J. Waldstein won a tournament held at the Mechanics' Institute
Chess Club followed by N.J. Manson, Fritz Peipers, and Seligsohn. First place
prize was a $20 chess set.
A
second tournament in 1885 was held at the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club and
was won by H. I. Heinemann, who won 8 straight games. His prize was an oil
painting of Tampa Bay, Florida, valued at $100.
The other players in the tournament included Halwegan, Hansom, Lynch, Richard
Ott, Peck, Peipers, Redding, Reis, Scott, and Van Vliet. An additional prize of one year’s
subscription to the British Chess Magazine was offered by the chess
editor of the Argonaut for the most
brilliant game of the tournament.
In
June-July 1886, a match was played between Van Vliet and Joseph D. Redding. Van
Vliet won the match.
In February-March 1887, a match was played between Louis M. Van
Vliet and J. H. Jefferson in San Francisco.
Van Vliet won the match.
Earlier San Francisco players included Montgomery, Wise, Franklin,
J. H. Jefferson, Welsh, Van Vliet, Holstein, Carey and Shipman.
In May 1888, San Francisco was visited by leading British chess
player George Hatfeild Dingley Gossip (1841-1907). Gossip played several games with J. Redding.
In October 1888, the Sacramento Chess Club was formed. Officers included Professor J.C. Bainbridge, President;
G. W. Railton, Vice-President; Edward D. Tesreau, Secretary-Treasurer; Miss
R.R. Patton, Edward R. Marcus, H. O. Gregory, and L. F. Griffin, Trustees. There were over 20 club members.
In 1888, Redding won a San Francisco tournament by beating Dr. B.
Marshall and Dr. Walter Romaine Lovegrove (1869-1956). Redding was called the Pacific Coast chess
champion in local papers.
In 1889, Redding won a telegraph match played against the entire
Sacramento Chess Club.
In 1889 Dr. Walter Romaine Lovegrove defeated Crichton in a match
held in San Francisco.
In September 1890, the automaton Ajeeb was at the Mechanics’
Institute Fair in San Francisco. It took
on all comers in chess and checkers. It
was also exhibited at the State Fair at Sacramento.
In 1891, the Los Angeles Chess Club moved to the Wilson block in
Los Angeles where they had comfortable quarters.
In 1891, Walter R. Lovegrove won the first California chess
championship. He won a match from Joseph D. Redding (1858-1932), who claimed
the championship of the Pacific Coast. The claim was based in a magazine
article by Johann Zukertort that Redding was the best player on the Pacific
coast. Lovegrove won by the score of
7-1.
In February 1891, Jackson Whipps Showalter (1860-1935), 5-time
U.S. chess champion, visited San Francisco and gave some chess exhibitions at
the Mechanics’ Institute. He said that
the chess players in San Francisco were stronger than those of Boston, Chicago,
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
In November 1891, the San Francisco Chess and Whist Club was organized. The
club officers were: Joseph D. Redding, President; P. J. Tormey and H. J.
Summerhayes, Vice-Presidents; M. F. Clafling, Secretary; A. S. Baker, Treasurer;
S. A. Foster, G. S. Simons, and R. Kindrick on the Governing Committee. The dues were $1 a month. The club met at the Supreme Court Building at
Larkin and McAllister streets.
In March 1892, chess players of the Mechanics’ Institute and the
Chess, Checker and Whist Club got together to organize a chess tournament. Dr. Marshall presided, and Dr. W. R.
Lovegrove, R. Kendrick, Dr. A. L. Scholl, G. Miller, T. D. Condon, N. J. Manson
and Max Levy were present.
In December 1892, several living chess games were played during
the evenings at the Mechanics’ Institute in association with the World’s International
Candle Contest and Baby Show.
In February 1893, there was a resolution to close the chess room
in the Oakland library. The chess
players were becoming a nuisance. Men
came and played chess all day and requested the privileges of smoking in the
library while playing chess. The final
straw was when a group sat there morning til night and finally asked to be
provided with a deck of cards.
In March 1893, a University of California at Berkeley Chess Club
was formed. The president of the club
was R. H. Parkhurst (died in 1953).
In March 1893, a chess club was organized in Mill Valley, with
Mrs. L. E. Bundy chosen as President,
After winning the U.S. championship match against Showalter,
Samuel Lipschuetz (1863-1905) gave up his New York printing business and moved
to Los Angeles, California in 1893, thinking its climate would be healthier for
him. Upon his departure, Showalter re-claimed the vacant title.
In the early 1890s a whist and chess club was formed in Vallejo.
In 1894, the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club chess champion was
Walter Lovegrove.
In August 1894, Lipschutz gave a 20-board simultaneous exhibition
at the Athletic Club in Los Angeles.
In 1894 Lovegrove visited Los Angeles where he met and beat Samuel
Lipschutz by the score of 3.5-0.5.
In September 1894, a chess match was held between the Los Angeles
Athletic Club (H. Jones-Bateman, W. G.
White, C. F. Pierce, C. A. Miller, and H. J. Hastings) and the Los Angeles YMCA
and 2nd and Broadway (J. H. Cook, D. F. Sheldon, G. E. Scammon, R.
B. Howell, and J. B. Smith). The
Athletic Club won the match by the score of 27.5 to 22.5
In December 1894, C. F. Pierce won the chess championship of the
Los Angeles Athletic Club. He was
followed by C. A. Miller, H. Jones-Bateman, W. Y. White, H. Morris, R. B.
Howell, H. J. Hastings, A. Grunewold, R. L. Cozner, J. S. Merrill, G. E.
Harpham, H. Kerckhoff, De Camp, P. Orlan, H. P. Anderson, A. W. H. Peyton,
J.Chanslor, P. W. Dooner, W. O. Welch, and F. G. Tweed.
From February to December 1894, a Southern California chess
correspondence tourney was held. C. F.
Pierce of Los Angeles took 1st prize. Arthur Johnston of Santa Ana took 2nd
prize. C. W. Waterman of Los Angeles
took 3rd prize. Other
Southern California players included: Bateman, Walter Bennett, Candler, R. L.
Cuzner, Johnson, A. Johnston, H. Jones, H. Kerchkovv, C. A. Miller, L. Morris,
Peipers, Sheldon.
In 1895, Lipschuetz edited a chess column in the Los Angeles Herald.
In 1895, a chess club was organized in San Diego.
In 1895, a series of games was played for the Los Angeles chess championship between C. F. Pierce and L. S. Candler.
In February 1895, Lipschutz played 15 players simultaneously
at the Athletic Club in Los Angeles, winning 14 and losing 1, to A. Johnson.
In May 1895, a cable match was planned between San Francisco and
Victoria, Canada, but the cable broke.
In May-June 1895, the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club played a
cable match against the Victoria Chess Club in British Columbia.
In June 1895, the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club played a cable
match against the Vancouver, British Columbia Chess Club. The San Francisco team of Kendrick, Redding,
and Franklin won.
In June-August 1895, a chess tournament was held at the Mechanics’
Institute. The first class players were Quiroga, Samuels,
Walter Franklin, George Thompson, T. A. Martin, Palmer and Harding. The second class players were Fairweather,
Nevill, Cole, Durkin, Johnson, Hirsch, Lazarus, Denton, Asman, Newman, Thomas,
Torres and Spalding. The event was won
by George R. Thompson.
In July 1895, a telegraph match was held between the Mechanics’
Institute in San Francisco and Seattle.
On August 3, 1895, San Francisco played Seattle in a telegraph
match. San Francisco (Kendrick and
Lovegrove) won 2
games and drew a 3rd game (Howe).
In the 1896, the Pickwick Club was formed in Los Angeles which
included chess play and chess tournaments.
Promoters of the chess club included Edmondson, Gruendike, Hurdig,
Kernaghen, Lockwood, Orban, Stoutenberg, Thomas and Ward.
In
1896, a chess club was formed at Stanford University. Officers included C. Serpas, C. J. Dulley,
and B. Block.
In
1896, the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Walter S. Franklin.
In
1896, promoters of chess in the Los Angeles area included Edmonson, Gruendike,
Hurdig, Kernaghan, Lockwood, Orban, Stoutenberg, Thomas, and Ward.
In
January 1897, a telegraph re-match was played between the Mechanics’ Institute and
the Victoria, British Columbia Chess Club.
The game was a draw. The
Mechanics’ Institute players were Rodney Kendrick, Walter Franklin, Oscar
Samuels and Valentine Huber.
In
February 1897, the Pasadena Chess Club was organized. Officers were John B. Stoutenburg, president,
and Rev. W. H. Ratcliffe, secretary and treasurer.
In
March 1897, a chess tournament was held at the Los Angeles YMCA between 12 of
the leading players in Los Angeles. Among
the leading players were Sibble, Pierce, Chandler, Griffin and Stone.
In
April 1897, the first intercollegiate chess match between Stanford and Berkeley
was held.
In
1897, the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Oscar Samuels.
In
1897, the Sacramento Chess Club, an annex to the Sacramento Whist Club, was
formed and Dr. G. Dixon was its first president. Presley B. Johnson was its secretary, Other members
included James Bailey, G. A. Bryan, W. D. Lawton, Alvin Bruner, Rev. Dr. C. L.
Miel, Colonel R. L. Peeler, T. A. Pudan, A. S. Wallin, C. J. Corwon, and Major
W. H. Sherburn.
In 1897, a movement had been started by President De Laguna of the
University of California Chess Club to arrange an intercollegiate contest with
Stanford.
In March 1897, the University of California at Berkeley Chess Club
defeated the Stanford University Chess Club.
In 1897 a telegraph match was being negotiated between the
University of California at Berkeley and Harvard. H. W. Lewis, champion of Harvard during 1894
and 1894, had been in San Francisco representing Harvard in making the
arrangements. A San Francisco newspaper
volunteered to furnish the telegraph for the match. Harvard later declined the challenge.
In 1897 the Berkeley College Chess Club was organized. Its club champion was R. H. S. Parkhurst.
In December 1897, the U.C. Berkeley Chess Club defeated the
Episcopalian Chess Club of San Francisco.
In January 1898, the Sacramento Chess and Whist Club completed its
first chess tournament. The winner was
Colonel R. L. Peeler, followed by A. S. Wallin.
In March 1898, the
University of California Chess Club (Epstein, W. Hohfeld, Parkhurst, Tewle,
Baugh, and Euphrat) defeated Stanford (Serpas, Arnold, Veuve, Knecht, Van
Kathoven, and Bixby) by the score of 4.5 to 1.5.
In 1898 the
Capital City Chess Club, an annex of the Sacramento Whist Club, was formed. Members included William W. Macfarlane, A. S.
Wallin, Joseph Bailey, John W. Barrett, Mrs, J. W. Barrett, James Morris, Alvin
J. Bruner, Thomas A. Pudan and George A. Bryon.
In November 1898,
the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Walter Lovegrove after a
play-off with J. O. Chilton. Other
players included Cutting, Denton, Durkin, Fairweather, Torres, Mitchell,
Neville, Eppinger, Ott, Samuels, and Spaulding.
In February 1899,
the San Francisco Chess and Whist Club defeated the University of California
Berkeley Chess Club by the score of 7-3.
On May 30, 1899,
a telegraph match was played between the San Francisco Chess and Whist Club and
the Seattle Chess Club. It was won by
San Francisco. Members of the San Francisco team included Rodney Kendrick, A.
J. Kuh, Dr. W. R. Lovegrove, N. J. Manson, J. J. Dolan and Oscar Samuels. Seven games were played. San Francisco won 3, drew 3, and lost 1.
In 1899, J. J.
Dolan won the annual handicap chess tournament of the Mechanics’ Institute.
In July 1900, the
Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist Club, was organized and located at the
Pacific Railroad Building, 316 W. Fourth Street in Los Angeles. The strongest
player at the time was probably Charles W. Waterman (1846-1915) of Los Angeles.
Other members included C. S. Candler, J.
F. Thompson, Dr. Hamilton Fraulein, George S. Hupp and F. S. Hopewell. Officers were C. W. Waterman, president; Dr.
Hamilton Forline, vice president; George S. Hupp, treasurer. The club had over 40 members.
In October 1900,
C. W. Waterman won the championship of the Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist
Club. 2nd place went to
Robert B. Griffith (1876-1937). Griffith
was a former University of Pennsylvania Chess Champion.
In November 1900,
the annual handicap chess tournament of the Mechanics’ Institute began. Some of the players included Dr. Marshall,
Lovegrove, Neville, Lyon, Torres, Jones, Chilton, Huber, Sternberg, Daner,
Denton, Palmer, Parker and J. J. Dolan.
In April 1901,
the Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist Club had a rapid transit chess
tournament of 15 seconds per move. The
event was won by C. W. Waterman.
In July 1901, S.
C. Candler won a tournament at the Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist Club. Other players of the continuous tournament
were Beyer, Burns, Clark, Cooper, Albert Greenwood, Harrison, Hupp, Murphy,
Miller, Mitchell, Stokes, Salisbury, Taylor, C. W. Waterman and W. S. Waterman. The President of the Club was Albert
Greenwood.
In 1901, the Mechanics'
Institute Chess Club champion was Valentine Huber.
In October 1901,
the Western Addition Chess, Checker and Whist Club was organized in San
Francisco at 2206 Fillmore street. The president was Gideon P. Woodward; vice
president was Sidney M. Van Wyck; secretaries were Dr. Tobriner and Franklin
Pearson; treasurer was C. W. Moores.
Other members included J. H. Harboar and F. L. de Long. There were over 50 members after a year.
In March 1902,
Los Angeles chess players defeated the San Francisco chess players in a
telegraph match. Six boards were played
over a leased wire of the Postal Telegraph Company. The Los Angeles players gathered at the rooms
of the Los Angeles Chess and Checker Club and the San Francisco team played at
the Mechanics’ Institute. The Los
Angeles players were W. S. Waterman, R. B. Griffith, S. C. Candler, C. W.
Waterman, G. E. Northrop, and E. R. Wickersham.
The San Francisco players were Kendrick, Howe, Manson, Yerwartt,
Lovegrove, and Neville.
In March 1902,
San Francisco defeated Sacramento in a 7-board telegraph match, with 3 wins, 1
loss, and 3 games drawn.
In May 1902, Los
Angeles chess players defeated the San Francisco chess players in a telegraph
match again. The Los Angeles team won 3
games, lost 1 game, and drew 2 games.
The Los Angeles players were C. W. Waterman, R. B. Griffith, Albert
Greenwood, S. C. Candler, W. S. Waterman, and E. R.
Wickersham. The San Francisco players
were Epstein, Martin, Welham, Manson, Lovegrove, and Yerworth.
In 1902, the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Hobart Eels.
In June 1902, C.
W. Waterman won the championship of the Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist
Club, defeating S. C. Candler in a match.
Waterman won 2 games and drew 1 game.
In December 1902,
Dr. Emanuel Lasker visited San Francisco for two weeks. He gave simuls at the Mechanics’ Institute,
the Western Addition Chess, Checker and Whist Club, and the San Francisco Whist
and Chess Club. He lost a game to Dr. Lovegrove at the Mechanics’ Institute.
On December 23,
1902, Lasker played 18 players at the San Francisco Whist and Chess Club. He won 14 (W. R. Lovegrove, A. J. Kuh, R.
Kendrick, S. Meyer, M. Ettlinger, J. D. McKee, C. W. Morres, William Wolff, R.
M. Royce, F. L. De Long, E, Nevill, R. B. Motchell, H. G. Meyer, and N. J.
Manson), drew 3 (J. P. Cowdry, T. D. Black, and Walter Franklin), and lost 1
(to R. B. Griffith).
On December 26,
1902, Lasker played 22 players at the Western Addition Chess, Checker and Whist
Club. He won 16, drew 4, and lost 2 (to
George Halwegan and I. Schonfeld).
On December 27,
1902, Lasker played 5 blindfold chess games at the Mechanics’ Institute,
winning 4 and losing 1. He won against
T. D. Black, Harvey Dana, Richard Ott, and J.J. Dolan. He lost to Dr. B. Marshall.
In January 1903,
Lasker visited Los Angeles but played no chess.
Lasker asked for $250 and the payment of his hotel bill in return for a
chess exhibition. The local players
thought this was more than the visit was worth and declined to extend the
invitation.
In March 1903,
the annual meeting of the Los Angeles Chess, Checker and Whist Club was
held. The elected officers were;
president, Albert Greenwood; vice president, F. J. Harrison; secretary, J. E.
Grant; treasurer, George Hupp. Other
members included S. B. Robnson, F. W. Taylor, R. B. Griffith, W. S. Waterman,
W. E. stokes, T.J. Murphy, L. Weston, and Captain Hall.
In 1903, the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Nathaniel J. Manson.
In 1903, a chess
match between Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley
ended in a tie. They played at the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club.
Members of the
Stanford Chess Club include N. E. Dole, W. C. Maloy, F. B. Whitaker, M. L.
Lewis, J. E. Turner, R. A. Fuller, O. F. Kehrlein, J. C. Cahoon, L. J. Mayreis,
R. J. McFadden, S. C. Haver, N. C. Powers, A. T. Parsons, and J. H. Page.
In 1904, the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Wallace E. Nevill, followed by
Martin, Spaulding, Jones, Thompson, Colesworthy, Cleve, Durkin, and Sterberg.. The Mechanics'
Institute Chess Club was located at 320 Sansome Street, Room 10, San Francisco, California.
Its president was N. J. Manson.
In 1904, there
was a Philidor chess club established in Pasadena. Its president was William
Ogden.
In 1904, a chess
match between Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley
ended in a tie. They played at the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club.
In March 1904, Harry
Pillsbury visited Los Angeles. At the
Los Angeles Chess Club, he played 12 players blindfolded. He lost two games (to F. W. Harrison and C.
W. Waterman), drew one game (R. B. Griffith) and won 9 games (T. D. Black, C.
A. Miller, J. N. Epstein, W. S. Waterman, J. E. Grant, E. R. Wickersham, L.
Weston, F. Neilson, and J. N. Harris).
He blamed his loss on fatigue and loss of sleep after a long train ride.
In April 1904,
Pillsbury visited San Francisco. He
played 16 members of the San Francisco Chess and Whist Club. He lost one game to Arthur Stamer.
In April 1905, a
chess match between Stanford University and the University of California at
Berkeley ended in a tie for the third year in a row. They played at the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club. The
Stanford team included F. P. Whitaker, R. A. Fuller, E. W. Doane, M. M.
Stearns, H. W. Strong, G. E. Dole, and L. Newland. The Berkeley team included E. K. Strong, A.
D. Weitbee, W. Scotcher, E. Kohnke, E. Gibbs, P. C. Dickson, and P. Johnson.
In 1905, Wallace
E. Nevill of San Francisco wrote a book called “Chess-Humanics” – A Philosophy
of Chess , A Sociological Allegory.
In November 1905
the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Arthur Blaine Stamer
(1884-1964).
On April 18,
1906, the San Francisco earthquake destroyed the Mechanics' Institute and all
of its records, burning it to the ground. It was later rebuilt. During this
time, Adolph Fink (1890-1956) took an interest in chess. He played chess while
camping on the hills and seeking refuge from the earthquake and fires. He later
became a major figure in California chess.
In April 1907,
the University of California at Berkeley defeated Stanford with the score of
4.5-2.5. This was the first time in 4
years that Berkeley beat Stanford in their annual chess match.
In 1907, members
of the Los Angeles Chess Club included Dr. R. B. Griffith, J. E. Grant, A. K.
Goodwin, Dr. Hedderley, E. L. Hedderley, Frank A. Garbutt, H. T. Rudisill,
Frank Taylor, Mel Nordlinger, George S. Hupp, Ray Dunnigan, T. Staunton, P. M.
Newhall, W. Chandler and Walter Fisher.
In 1908, the
University of California at Berkeley chess team included R. B. Cooke, R. L.
Egenhoff, D. J. Whitney, N.D. Baker and Charles Robinson.
In 1908, the
Stanford chess team included T. Figg-Hoblyn, E. J. Cummings, C. I. Chandler, W.
M. Davidson, S. B. Show, J. H. Pratt, L. Newland and T, Mimi.
In July 1908, the
Los Angeles Police Department raided the Los Angeles Chess Club because the
chess players were playing poker. T. W.
Burton, S. L. Godman, C. W. Watermanm L. Watson, W. S. Waterman and J. H. Jones
were all arrested and booked for gambling.
Subsequently they were released on $25 bail.
In March 1909,
the Mechanics' Institute chess club defeated the Alameda chess club, scoring
4-0.
In 1909, the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club champion was Dr. Henry Epsteen.
In April 1910,
Stanford defeated Berkeley in their annual intercollegiate chess match.
In 1911, Ernest
J. Clarke (1877-1948) won the Pacific Coast chess championship.
In 1913, J. J.
Dolan was the president of the Mechanics’ Institute chess club.
In July 1913,
Frank Marshall visited Los Angeles. On
his first evening, he gave a 23-board simultaneous exhibition, winning 21 and
losing 2. The next evening, he played 27
boards, winning 23, losing 1, and drawing 3.
From 1913 to
1926, a series of telegraph matches were played between San Francisco and Los
Angeles.
In 1914, Los
Angeles defeated San Francisco in a telegraph match.
In 1915, Elmer W.
Gruer (1890-1931) won the Mechanics’ Institute chess championship.
In 1915, Frank
Marshall visited San Francisco and gave several exhibitions. He played 15 opponents, winning 13 and losing
2. In another simul against 20
opponents, he won 8, lost 8 and drew 4.
He lost to W. R. Lovegren, Dr. Henry Epsteen, R. C. Stephenson, S. C.
Candler, J. Drouillard, F. Sternberg, B. Smith and F. C. de Long. He drew toF. W. Huber, G. Branch, A. Epsteen
and E. W. Gruer and E. J. Clarke in consultation.
The first
Hollywood silent film to depict a chess scene may have been A Fool There Was, filmed in 1915,
directed by Frank Powell and starring Theda Bara (1885-1955) as the Vamp, one
of the first sex symbols of the early 20th century.
In 1915, the San
Francisco Chess and Checker Club was formed, organized
by S. Rubinstein.
In September
1915, San Francisco defeated Los Angeles in a telegraph match, 9.5 to 5.5.
In 1916, a chess
column appeared in the San Francisco Bulletin, probably edited by J. O.
Chilton.
In 1916, a chess
column appeared in the Los Angeles Examiner, edited by Stasch Mlotkowski until
1921, then by Harry Borochow (1898-1993).
In June 1917, a
telegraph match was played between California and New York.
In 1919, the
Pasadena Chess Club was formed.
In 1920, a chess
column appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, edited by E. J. Clarke.
In October 1921,
a telegraph match was played between San Francisco and Portland, Oregon. San
Francisco won 9.5 to 2.5.
In the 1920s, the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club played a cable match against Los Angeles.
In the 1920s, the
Beverly Hills Chess Club was formed by Dr. Charles L. Lindley.
In the 1920s, the
Los Angeles Athletic Club (LAAC) formed an active chess club.
In March 1921,
E.R. Perry, librarian at the Los Angeles Public Library and former Harvard
University champion, won the Los Angeles Chess and Checker Club with an 8-0
score. 2nd place went to Harry Borochow.
In June 1921,
Sammy Reshevsky (Rzeschewski) (1911-1992), age 9, gave a 20-board simul at the
Los Angeles Athletic Club and met several Hollywood stars such as Charlie
Chaplin (1899-1977) and 5-year-old Jackie Coogan (1914-1984) at the simul.
Coogan and Reshevsky were wearing boxing gloves for a publicity photo when
Coogan punched Reshevsky in the face, giving him a black eye. The only person
to beat Reshevsky in the 20-board simul was Dr. Robert B. Griffith (1876-1937),
a physician for the film industry in Hollywood.
Reshevsky later
gave a 12-board simul at the Hamburger Department Store in Los Angeles, where
he lost one game and burst out crying (because it was a boy who won rather than
an adult).
In 1921, the
silent version of The Three Musketeers, starring Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.
(1883-1939) was one of the first films to use chess as a crucial part of the
narrative in the film.
In 1921-22, Elmer
Gruer (1890-1931) won the 1st California State Championship, held at the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club in San Francisco. Gruer won with a perfect 10-0
score. There were 11 players in the event. 2nd place went to Stasch Mlotkowski,
followed by E.J. Clarke, Harry Borochow, A.J. Fink, W. Metzke, Dr. W.R.
Lovegrove, Charles Woskoff, George Hallwegen, Bernardo Smith, and S. Swanson.
In September
1922, Adolph J. Fink (1890-1956) won the 2nd California State Championship,
held at the Los Angeles Athletic Club. He scored 9-2. 2nd-3rd went to Harry
Borochow and R.F. Lyon, followed by E.F. Schrader, S. Mlotkowski, Bernardo
Smith, Donald Mugridge, E.W. Grabill, G.S.G. Patterson, C.H. Whipple, E.R.
Perry, and J.F. Smyth.
From July 28 to
August 4, 1923, the 24th Western Chess Association (24th US Open)
was held in San Francisco. Stasch Mlotkowski (1881-1943) and Norman Whitaker
(1890-1975) tied for 1st with 9 out of 11 points. Each won $150. Samuel Factor
took 3rd place, followed by Adolph Fink, Elmer Gruer, Walter Lovegrove, F.M.
Currier, G.E. Branch, A.W. Ryder, Donald Mugridge, George Patterson, and A.M.
Feldman. Mlotkowski won the 3rd California State Championship title for being
the top Californian in the Western Chess Association tournament.
In August 1925,
Stasch Mlotsowski won the 4th California State Championship, held in Los
Angeles. He was followed by A.J. Fink, E.W. Gruer, and E.F. Scharder.
In 1926, Elmer W.
Gruer of Oakland won the 5th California State Championship after a play-off
with A.J. Fink. The event was held at the Athens Athletic Club in Oakland. 3rd
place went to S. Weinbaum. 4th place went to Henry Gross.
On November 14,
1926, the first North-South match between players of Northern California and
Southern California met at San Luis Obispo. The South won 7.5 to 4.5.
In August 1927,
the 6th California State Championship was held in Los Angeles. E.W. Greur won
the event with an 8-1 score. 2nd place went to Don Mugridge, followed by Harry
Borochow, A.J. Fink, Henry Gross, S. Rubinstein, G.S.G. Petterson, H.
Bierwirth, Bateman, and W. Smith.
In October 1927,
Cliff Sherwood started a chess column in the Los Angeles Times. He was the editor of the chess column until
1933.
In 1928, A.J.
Fink won the 7th California State Championship after winning a play-off with
Henry Gross. They were followed by W.R. Lovegrove and D.N. Vedensky. The event
was held at the Mechanics' Institute in San Francisco.
In September
1929, A.J. Fink won the 8th California State Championship, held in Los Angeles.
Fink won the Brock Trophy for having won three California chess championships.
2nd-3rd place went to Harry Borochow and Dr. M. Scholtz. They were followed by
Charles Bagby, S. Weinbaum, C.H. Whipple, E.P. Elliott, E.W. Grabill, and H.
Bierwirth.
In 1930, Ernest
Clarke (1877-1948) was editor of a weekly chess column in the San Francisco
Chronicle.
In 1930, George
Patterson won the Los Angeles Chess Championship.
In August, 1930,
Harry Borochow (1898-1993) of Los Angeles won the 9th California State Chess
Championship, held at the Mechanics' Institute in San Francisco. 2nd place went
to W. Lamb, followed by G.S.G. Patterson, Charles Bagby, Henry Gross, J.
Tippan, A.J. Fink, Irving Spero, and R. Kilian.
In October, 1930,
the California Intercollegiate Chess League was formed.
In January, 1931,
Harry Borochow won the Southern California chess championship (Tallman Trophy).
In 1931, the
University of California won the California Intercollegiate championship. The
individual winner was Guthrie McClain (1910-1991).
On March 26,
1931, Dr. Charles L. Lindley died in Los Angeles. He was the founder of the
Beverly Hills Chess Club.
In April, 1931,
the first issue of The Chess Reporter was published by Henry MacMahon of
Beverly Hills.
On April 18,
1931, San Francisco beat the East Bay by the score of 14.5 to 10.5. The event
was held at the Mechanics' Institute in San Francisco.
In May, 1931, the
Beverly Hills Chess Club won the Southern California Chess League, followed by
Los Angeles, Long Beach, Cal-Tech, Pasadena, Santa Barbara, and Highland Park.
On May 31, 1931,
the Annual Chess Tournament between Northern California and Southern
California, held in San Luis Obispo was won by the South, with the score of
14.5 - 10.5.
On July 16, 1931,
Elmer Gruer died. He was born in 1890. He was California State Chess Champion
in 1921, 1926, and 1927.
In August 1931,
Hollywood screenwriter Richard Schayer (1880-1956) donated the first prize
money of the 10th California State Chess Championship. It was won by Harry
Borochow (1898-1993). The tournament was held at the Beverly Hills Chess Club
at Wilshire Boulevard and North Beverly Drive in Beverly Hills. Henry Gross and
Johnny Tippin took 2nd-3rd place, followed by G.S.G. Patterson, A.J. Fink, W. Lamb,
L. Marks, A.H. Bierwirth, C.J. Gibbs, George Goehler, and C.H. Whipple.
In 1931, George
Patterson won the Los Angeles Chess Championship. H. Bierwirth took 2nd place.
On November 28,
1931, C.J. Gibbs and Richard Lyon tied for 1st in the Southern California chess
championship. Lyon later won a play-off.
In 1931, Clifford
Sherwood edited a chess column in the Los Angeles Times.
In 1932, the
Hayward High School won the Northern California High School Chess League.
In 1932, Dr.
Moses Scholtz won the Los Angeles chess championship.
In 1932, Adolph
Fink won the San Francisco chess championship.
On May 29, 1932,
the Annual Chess Tournament between Northern California and Southern
California, held in San Luis Obispo was won by the South, with the score of
10.5 - 9.5.
On August 14,
1932, Alexander Alekhine arrived on the eve of the Chess Congress Masters
Tournament (part of the Los Angeles Congress) at the Maryland Hotel in
Pasadena, following the 10th Modern Olympic Games at Los Angeles. Alekhine won
the event (and $250) with a score of 8.5-2.5. Isaac Kashdan took 2nd with a
score of 7.5-3.5. Next were Arthur Dake, Sammy Reshevsky, and Herman Steiner
with 6.5. Next came Harry Borochow, 11th California
State champion, with the score of 5.5-5.5. He was followed by Fred Reinfeld,
Jacob Bernstein, Reuben Fine, and Samuel Factor, all with 5-6. Jose Araiza came
next with a score of 3.5-7.5. Last place went to Adolph Fink, San Francisco's
strongest player, with a score of 3-8. It was agreed that the California player
having the highest score in this event would be declared champion of
California. Thus, Harry Borochow became 11th California champion for the third
straight year. This international tournament was promoted by Cecil B. DeMille.
The tournament organizers also wanted to invite Capablanca, but Alekhine
demanded an extra $2,000 appearance fee if Capablanca participated in the
event. The money could not be raised (the whole budget for the tournament was
$1,500), and Capablanca was not invited. The event ran from August 15 to August
29.
In August, 1932,
Alekhine, Kashdan, and Dake took a flight over Los Angeles and Pasadena on the
Goodyear airship Volunteer. Kashdan and Dake played a chess game on the
airship, which was broadcasted from the airship to a local radio station.
On September 1,
1932, Alekhine gave a 50-board simultaneous display at the Los Angeles Athletic
Club. He lost at least 2 games (to R.McBride and to Dr. M. Scholtz).
On September 15,
1932, Alekhine gave an 8-board simultaneous blindfold exhibition at the
Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, winning 5 and drawing 3.
On November 7,
1932, a new Hollywood Chess Club was opened at 5704 La Mirada Avenue,
Hollywood. California State Champion Harry Borochow gave an 18-board
simultaneous exhibition (winning 14, drawing 1, and losing 3). The president of
the Hollywood Chess Club was Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. (1909-2000). The executive
board included Lew Ayres (1908-1996), screenwriter Richard Schayer (1880-1956),
film director Ernest Laemmle (1900-1950), actor, director, and producer William
Wyler (1902-1981), and film director and ediitor Slavko Vorkapich (1894-1976).
On December 15,
1932, world champion Alexander Alekhine gave a 22-board simultaneous exhibition
at the Los Angeles Athletic Club (LAAC), winning 19 and drawing 3.
On December 17,
1932, Alekhine played against 26 boards at the new Hollywood Chess Club,
winning them all. The next day, he then gave a 7-board simultaneous blindfold
exhibition at the Hollywood Chess Club, winning 5 and drawing 2. The president
of the Hollywood Chess Club was Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Herman Steiner later
became the president of the Hollywood Chess Club. Members included Humphrey
Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Charles Boyer, and Jose Ferrer.
The 1932-33
Southern California championship was won by George Patterson. 2nd place went to
Dr. Robert B. Griffith.
In January 1933,
Herman Steiner formed the International Chess Club (later called the Hollywood
Chess Group), first headquartered at the Hollywood Athletic Club at 6521 Sunset
Boulevard, where he conducted a weekly chess lecture and chess class. He later
formed a chess clubhouse next to his own house, which was located at 108 North
Formosa Avenue in West Hollywood.
On January 7,
1933, Herman Steiner played 80 boards with four players at each table (320 players total) at the Los Angeles Athletic Club. He won 70,
lost 7, and drew 3.
In February 1933,
the Hollywood Chess Club sponsored a movie artists' concert to raise money for
a new house project. The master of ceremonies was Neil Hamilton (1899-1984),
best known for his role as Commissioner Gordon on the Batman TV series.
In March 1933, E.
Richard Schayer became the new president of the Hollywood Chess Club (renamed
the Hollywood Chess and Bridge Club), which moved to the 6735 Yucca Street in
Hollywood. Schayer was a screenwriter who wrote over 100 films between 1916 and
1956. He wrote some chess scenes into a few of his scripts, such as The Black
Cat, with Boris Karloff playing chess with Bela Lagosi.
In 1933, the
Beverly Hills Chess Club won the Southern California Chess League Championship.
In 1933, the
Castle Chess Club won the first Northern California Chess League, followed by
the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club, the University of California Chess Club,
the Russian Chess Club, the Black Knight's Chess Club, and the Oakland Chess
Club.
In 1933, a match
on 25 boards was won by the East Bay against San Francisco by the score of 13
to 12.
On April 8, 1933,
Jose Capablanca, age 44, played 32 boards at the Los Angeles Athletic Club. He
won 25, drew 6, and lost one game, to J. Allen and E. Carlson in consultation.
On April 11,
1933, Jose Capablanca, playing the white pieces, played a game of living chess
against Herman Steiner at the Los Angeles Athletic Club. The game was
pre-arranged by Capablanca, who checkmated Steiner in 25 moves. Cecil B.
DeMille presided as referee and announced the moves.
On May 21, 1933,
Jose Capablanca played 23 boards at the Hollywood Chess and Bridge Club,
winning 21 and drawing 2 games (drew with state champion Borochow and Mrs. May
Bain of the Hollywood Club). He later played 32 boards at the Los Angeles
Athletic Club. The event was coupled with Herman Steiner's wedding reception
where Capablanca was a guest of honor.
In July, 1933,
Herman Steiner became chess editor of the Los Angeles Times.
In 1933, the
Hayward High School won the Northern California High School Chess League.
There was no
official California State Chess Championship from 1933 through 1938.
In 1934, the
strongest chess clubs in Southern California included the Yiddish Chess Club,
the Los Angeles Chess and Checker Club, the Los Angeles Athletic Club, and the
Caltech Chess Club.
In the 1930s, Herman
Steiner gave weekly chess lessons to several Hollywood stars and promising
chess players. Jose Ferrer (1909-1992) took lessons from Steiner and remarked
what a genius chess teacher Steiner was. Other chess students who took lessons
from Steiner included Humphrey Bogart, Billy Wilder, Louis Hayward, Fritz Feld,
Rosemary Clooney, Jim Cross and Jacqueline Piatigorsky.
In 1934, the
Hayward Union High School won the Northern California High School Chess League
for the 3rd successive year. Los Angeles High School won the Southern
California High School Chess League. Hayward defeated Los Angeles High School
by the score of 5-2 to take the state title.
By 1934, the
Hollywood Chess Group had about 50 members from the movie industry. In May
1934, Herman Steiner decided to merge his chess classes with the Hollywood
Chess Club.
In 1934, the
Hollywood Chess Club moved to the former Mountain View hotel at 5956 Hollywood
Boulevard in Hollywood.
On May 27, 1934,
the Annual Chess Tournament between Northern California and Southern
California, held in San Luis Obispo was drawn, with the score of 12.5 - 12.5.
In 1934, Robert
Carmany won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
In 1935, R.W.
Wise won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
In September
1935, the Hollywood Chess Club moved to a new clubhouse in the Lawlor
Professionals' School Building at 6107 Franklin Avenue, Hollywood. The club
president was LeRoy Johnson, who later served as California Chess Federation
president for 10 years.
In 1936, Edward
P. Elliot (1873-1955) won the Los Angeles Chess Championship. He won the
Western Chess Association championship in 1908 and 1912.
In 1936, Charles
Cody won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
On July 19, 1936,
the Hollywood Chess Club drew a short-wave radio match, using Morse code, with
the Hawaii Army Chess Club. It may have been the first overseas radio chess
match. Two boards were played. Hollywood lost on board one game and won on
board two.
On May 30, 1937,
Herman Steiner was on his way back to Hollywood from the annual North-South
chess match when he hit a car head-on. Steiner's passenger was Dr. R.B.
Griffith, who played Board 2 for the South (Steiner played Board 1). Griffith
died in the car crash and the driver in the other car was critically injured.
Dr. Griffith was a medical doctor for the Hollywood film industry. He was the
physician for Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplin.
In June, 1937,
Arthur Dake (1910-2000) gave a 24-board simul at the Mechanics' Institute. He
won 18, lost 2, and drew 4 games.
In 1937, Northern
California defeated Southern California in their annual match by the score of
13 to 12. The event was held in San Luis Obispo.
In 1937, Robert
Carmany won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
In 1938, Northern
California defeated Southern California by the score of 14.5 - 10.5, held in
San Luis Obispo.
In 1938, A. R.
Chapman won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
In 1938, the
Hollywood Chess Group moved to the same Hollywood Boulevard building as the
Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the Writers Guild. The club was at the corner of
Hollywood Boulevard and Cherokee Avenue (1655 North Cherokee Ave).
In 1939, I.A.
Horowitz (1907-1973) gave simultaneous exhibitions in California. In Los
Angeles, he won 19, lost 4, and drew 1. In Carmel, he won 25 and drew 1. In San
Francisco, he won 18, lost 1, and drew 4.
In 1939, the
Hollywood Anti-Nazi League Chess Club was formed. It defeated Steiner's
Hollywood Chess Institute in match play, but lost to the stronger Los Angeles
Chess and Checker Club.
In March, 1939,
the Mechanics' Institute won the Northern California Chess League, followed by
the Castle Chess Club, the Russian Chess Club, the Oakland Chess Club, the
University of California Chess Club, the Alameda Chess Club, and the San Francisco
Chess Club.
On April 8, 1939,
San Francisco beat the East Bay in their annual match by the score of 14.5 to
10.5.
In April 1939,
Charles Bagby and A.J. Fink played a 10-game match in San Francisco. The score
was 5-5.
On May 21, 1939,
Northern California defeated Southern California by the score of 14 to 12. The
event was held in San Luis Obispo.
On November 23,
1939, Philip Wolliston, age 19, won the 12th California State Championship,
held at the Hollywood Chess Group, scoring 7-1. 2nd-3rd place went to Harry
Borochow and Herman Steiner. George Koltanowski took 4th place, followed by
Kovacs, Fink, Patterson, Bazard, and Gibbs.
In 1939, Milton
Meyer won the Sacramento City Chess Championship.
In 1940, famous
photographer, painter, and artist Man Ray (1890-1976) moved to Hollywood and
had his art studio there. He designed several chess sets and hoped one of his
designs would become the standard for the World Chess Federation (FIDE), but
this never happened.
In 1940, Harold
Simon won the Mechanics Institute Championship. Vladimir Pafnutieff (1912-1999)
took 2nd. Peter Lapiken (1905-1983) took 3rd.
In 1940, the
California School for the Blind defeated the California School for the Deaf.
In 1940, Northern
California defeated Southern California by the score of 18.5 to 6.5. The event
was held at San Luis Obispo.
In 1940, Herman
Steiner of Los Angeles took 2nd place, behind Samuel Reshevsky, in the American
Chess Federation Championship.
In 1940, Reuben
Fine (1914-1993) gave several simultaneous exhibitions in California. In
Sacramento, he won 13 and drew 1. In San Francisco, he won 18 and drew 3. In
Carmel, he won 23 and drew 1. In Los Angeles, he won 29 and drew 3. In
Hollywood, he won 14 and drew 4. In Santa Barbara, he won 15, drew 1, and lost
1.
There was no
California State Chess Championship in 1940 through 1944.
In 1941, the
Russian Chess Club (founded by Peter Prokoodin in 1931) of San Francisco won
the Championship of the Northern California Chess League.
In 1941, Herman
Steiner played against 400 players on 100 boards in Hollywood. He won 83, drew
11, and lots 6 in 9 hours and 20 minutes. The event helped raise money for the
British War Relief.
On September 6,
1941, Larry Remlinger was born in Pasadena.
In 1942, Humphrey
Bogart (1899-1957) was active in chess in Hollywood and he played chess with
patients in Veterans hospitals. He was also playing correspondence chess with
several GIs overseas until he was visited by the FBI in 1943 and was told not
to play any more correspondence chess with military members for the duration of
the war. The FBI was reading his mail and thought that the chess notation he
was sending to Europe were secret codes.
In August, 1942,
Herman Steiner of Los Angeles tied for 1st with Abe Yanofsky at the 43rd US
Open in Dallas.
In 1943, George
Croy won the Los Angeles City Championship.
In 1943, Herman
Steiner won the California Open State Championship with the score of 17-0. Dr.
Salo Finkelstein took 2nd place.
In 1943, the
Hollywood Open was held at the Hollywood Chess Club. The tournament was won by
Harry Borochow.
In 1943, Milton
O. Meyer won the Sacramento Championship. J.B. Gee took 2nd place.
In 1943, Robert
Trenberth won the Alameda County Championship.
In 1943, Army
Private Arthur Dake, member of the military police, won the championship of
Camp Roberts in San Luis Obispo and Monterey counties.
On October 17,
1943, Walter Cunningham was born on Los Angeles.
On April 6, 1944,
Jude Acers was born in Long Beach.
From April 15 to
May 7, 1944, the 5th U.S. Championship was held in New York. Sven Algren of
California participated and tied for 8th-9th place.
In November,
1944, Herman Steiner gave a large simultaneous exhibition in Los Angeles for
the Russian War Relief.
In January,1945, A.J. Fink and Herman Steiner tied for 1st in the 13th
California State Championship, held at the Mechanics' Institute in San
Francisco, each scoring 8-1. There was no play-off. Charles Howland took 3rd
place and James Hurt took 4th place, followed by H, Donnelly, Charles Svalberg,
I. Goldberg, M. Forti, C. Jarrell, and H. Tower (who went 0 for 9).
In 1945, Humphrey
Bogart was a director in the U.S. Chess Federation.
The June-July
1945 cover of CHESS REVIEW had Charles Boyer playing Humphrey Bogart, while
Herman Steiner and Lauren Bacall looked on.
From July 28 to
August 12, 1945, the Hollywood Chess Group and the Los Angeles Times organized
the Pan-American International Tournament. Singer and actress Carmen Miranda
(1909-1955) was there to open the event and draw the players' numbers for the
pairings. Humphrey Bogart, a tournament director of the U.S. Chess Federation,
was selected as the Master of Ceremonies. One of the spectators of the
tournament was actress Marlene Dietrich (1904-1992. The event was won by Sammy
Reshevsky who won $1,000. Reuben Fine took 2nd place. Herman Pilnik took 3rd.
I.A. Horowitz took 4th. Isaac Kashdan took 5th. Eugene Levin won the Interscholastic
Tournament.
In 1945, Humphrey
Bogart and his new wife (they were just married and both were chess players),
Lauren Bacall (1924- ), along with Charles Boyer (1899-1978) and Herman
Steiner, appeared on the cover of the June-July Chess Review magazine. The shot
was taken during the filming of The Confidential Agent.
In September,
1945, only Herman Steiner of Hollywood managed a plus score against the USSR
team in a radio match. He won one game and drew the other with Isaac
Boleslavsky.
In September,
1945, Nancy Krotoschin Roos (1905-1957) won the speed championship of
Hollywood. She won the Belgium Women's Championship in the 1930s and, in 1942,
participated in the U.S. Women's Chess Championship, tying for 2nd place. She
tied for 1st place in the 1955 U.S. Women's Chess Championship.
In 1945, Pete
Velliotes won the championship of the Santa Barbara Chess Club.
By the 1940s, the
Hollywood Chess Group had over 100 members.
In 1945, the
Modesto Chess Club was formed. It was soon having simultaneous exhibitions by
George Koltanowski, Herman Steiner, Al Horowitz, and Weaver Adams.
On December 21,
1945, Duncan Suttles was born in San Francisco.
In 1946, the
Beverly Hills Chess Club was organized by Ellis Levy, with about 30 members.
Meetings were held at a clubhouse at Roxbury Park on Olympic Boulevard in
Beverly Hills.
In 1946, Herman
Steiner won the International Masters' Tournament in London.
In 1946, the
Santa Rosa Chess Club was formed.
In 1946, Arnold
Denker successfully defended his U.S. Championship title by defeating Herman
Steiner by the score of 6-4. The match was played in Los Angeles.
In 1946, Isaac
Kashdan settled in Los Angeles.
In 1946, Eugene
Levin (1930- ) won the California Junior Championship.
In May, 1946,
Northern California defeated Southern California by the score of 15-12 at San
Luis Obispo.
In July, 1946,
Herman Steiner of Los Angeles won the US Open in Pittsburgh.
In 1946, Carroll
Capps (1917-1971) won the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club Championship in San
Francisco, scoring 10-2. Vladimir Pafnutieff took 2nd and Adolf Fink took 3rd.
Capps became president of the San Francisco Bay Area Chess League and was a
science fiction author (C.C. MacApp).
In 1946, Morris
Gordon won the Los Angeles City Championship. George Croy took 2nd.
In 1946, A.J.
Fink won the 14th California State Championship. Vladimir Pafnutieff took 2nd.
Neil Falconer took 3rd.
In 1946, G.
Steven won the Santa Monica Championship. Carl Budd took 2nd.
In 1946, John
Sperley won the Long Beach city championship.
In 1947, George
Koltanowski established his residence in California and moved to San Francisco
with his wife, Leah.
In 1947, the
Hollywood Lasker team won the Los Angeles Metropolitan League championship.
In 1947, Herman
Steiner was the chess advisor for the movie Cass Timberlane, starring Spencer
Tracy and Lana Turner. Steiner told Lana Turner, "Don't play chess.
Sitting at a chess board for hours might make you fat and spoil your perfect
figure." There were several chess scenes in the movie.
In 1947, M. Meyer
won the Sacramento city championship.
In 1947, R.
Banner won the Los Angeles Rapid Transit championship.
In 1947, Eugene
Levin won the California State Junior championship.
In 1947, Salo
Finkelstein won the Los Feliz Chess Club championship in Los Angeles.
Finkelstein was once ranked 8th in the "100 Greatest Mental
Calculators."
In May, 1947,
Northern California defeated Southern California by the score of 17-5.
In 1947, Jim
Cross of Glendale took 2nd-3rd in the U.S. Junior Championship, held in
Cleveland.
In 1947, Emil
Bersbach won the championship of the Los Angeles Bay Area, held in Santa
Monica.
In 1947, Hyman
Gordon won the Los Angeles City championship. His twin brother, Maurice, won
the 1946 Los Angeles City championship.
In 1947, Dr.
Sidney Weinbaum won the San Gabriel Valley tournament in Pasadena. He had a PhD
in Physics from Caltech and worked with Linus Pauling. Weinbaum was Los Angeles
chess champion twice in the 1920s. He was later arrested, went to prison for 3
years, and lost his security clearance at JPL for being active in leftist
causes during the "Red scare" in the late 1940s.
In 1947, Reuben
Fine defeated Herman Steiner 5-1 in a match held in Los Angeles.
In 1947, the
Coronado Chess Club was organized in San Diego.
In May, 1947,
Weaver Adams, New England Champion, gave a 16-board simul in San Jose, winning
all his games.
In November,
1947, George Koltanowski began editing the California Chess News (later to
become Chess Digest). He was also a chess columnist for The Press Democrat.
In 1948, chess
and checker Newell Banks gave a 25 board simul in San Francisco. In chess, he
won 13, drew 2, and lost 1. In checkers, he won 7 and drew 2. Baseball great Ty
Cobb played one of the checker games and got a draw.
In 1948, Carl
Budd won the Santa Monica Beaches tournament. Robert Greene took 2nd.
In 1948, Sidney
Sirelson won the Las Feliz Chess Club Championship in Los Angeles.
In 1948, James
Cross of Glendale took 3rd in the U.S. Junior Championship at Oak Ridge,
Tennessee.
In 1948, J. B.
Gee won the Sacramento City Championship. M. Meyer took 2nd,
In 1948, Robert
Wyller of Hillsboro played 1,001 postal chess games at once.
In April, 1948,
Sven Almgren (1900-1973) won the U.S. Championship Preliminary tournament, held
in Los Angeles. Herman Steiner took 2nd.
In April, 1948,
Olaf Ulvestad gave an 18-board simul at the Mechanics' Institute. He won 14,
lost 2 (to Earl Pruner and John Pesak), and drew 2. He then gave a 20-board
simul in Palo Alto. He won 16, lost 2 (to Gordon Mills and John O'Boyle), and
drew 2. He then played a 16-board simul in San Jose, winning 15 and losing 1,
to Bert Mueller.
In May, 1948,
Northern California tied with Southern California by the score of 28.5 to 28.5.
In 1948, Herman
Steiner won the California State Speed Championship.
In 1948, Herman
Steiner won the U.S. Chess Championship, held in South Fallsburg, New York,
ahead of Isaac Kashdan.
On August 11,
1948, George Kane was born in Palo Alto.
In September,
1948, James Cross of Glendale, age 18, won the 15th California State
Championship, held at Atascadero. A.J. Fink of San Francisco took 2nd. Neil
Falconer of Berkeley took 3rd, followed by Ray Martin and Wad Hendricks. The event
was a 36-man Swiss tournament, open to all players. The tournament was also
considered the first California Open Championship.
In 1948, S.
Kendrashoff won the Russian Chess Club Championship in San Francisco. O.
Schirovsky took 2nd.
In 1948, Ray Martin
won the Santa Monica Open Chess Tournament. Paul Quillen took 2nd. Emil
Bersbach took 3rd.
In 1948, Herman
Steiner won the Los Angeles County speed championship. Harry Borochow took 2nd.
In 1948, Paul
Quillen won the Los Angeles County Championship. Adolph Weiss took 2nd.
In 1948, Herman
Steiner and Jim Cross tied for 1st in the Hollywood Open.
In 1948, Ray
Martin won the Los Angeles Chess Club championship.
In 1948, J.E.
Garnet won the San Diego City-County Open Chess Championship.
In 1948, Herb
Paul won the Modesto Chess Club Championship.
On December 16,
1948, Ernest J. Clarke, of San Francisco died. He was 71. He was considered the
Dean of Pacific Coast Chess. He was born in 1877 and started a chess column in
the San Francisco Chronicle in the 1920s.
In 1949, Max Euwe
played a 52-board simul in Los Angeles, winning 28, losing 6, and drawing 18. A
few days later, he played a 22-board simul at the Mechanics' Institute, winning
16, losing 3, and drawing 3.
In 1949, Phillips
Wyman won the Salinas City Championship. George Oakes took 2nd.
In 1949, the
Castle Chess Club (formed in 1929) in Berkeley won the San Francisco Bay Area
Chess League.
In 1949, Wallace
Smith of San Francisco died. He had been a member of the Mechanics' Institute
since 1910. He was 62.
In 1949, J. B.
Gee won the Sacramento City Championship.
In 1949, Klasse
won the Long Beach Chess Club Championship.
In 1949, George
Croy won the Las Feliz Chess Club Championship in Los Angeles.
In 1949, Charles
Bagby won the Northern California Championship.
In 1949, the
Santa Monica Bay Chess Club won the annual Los Angeles County team
championship.
In May, 1949,
Southern California defeated Northern California by the score of 26.5 to 24.5.
The event was held in Atascadero.
In 1949, the
Santa Monica Bay Chess Club won the California Interclub Championship after
defeating the Castle Chess Club.
In 1949, Herman
Steiner won the California State Speed Championship. Jim Cross took 2nd.
Randolph Banner took 3rd.
In 1949, Ray Martin
won the Los Angeles Open Chess Championship. R. P. Smith took 2nd. George Croy
took 3rd.
In 1949, Jim
Cross of Glendale tied with Arthur Bisguier and Larry Evans in the 4th annual
U.S. Junior Championship, held in Fort Worth, Texas. Earl Pruner of San
Francisco took 4th place.
In 1949, MSgt
Russell Donnelly won the Fort Ord Chess Club Championship. PFC Wilfred Ingalls
took 2nd.
On September 3,
1949, the California Chess Federation was officially formed.
In September,
1949, George E. Croy won the 16th California State Championship. Irving Rivise
took 2nd, followed by Leslie Boyette, Jim Cross, Earl Pruner, Robert P. Smith,
and Clark Jones. The Open Minor Tournament was won by Phil Smith of
Bakersfield. The event has held in Atascadero.
In 1949, Arthur
Stamer won the Oakland Chess Club Championship.
In 1949, Phillip
Waterman won the Beverly Hills Chess Club Championship.
In 1949, Robert
Konkel won the Northern California Championship. Earl Pruner took 2nd.
In 1949, Nancy
Roos won the Los Angeles County Women's Championship with a score of 14-0.
In 1949, Alan
Bourke won the Palo Alto Chess Club Championship.
In December,
1949, George Koltanowski played 271 games in 12 hours, winning 251, losing 3
(to Les Talcott, Andy Buschine, and Robert Willson), and drawing 17. He faced
37 players at a time. The event was sponsored by the San Francisco Chronicle
(The Chronicle Chess Festival). There were over 2,000 spectators.
In 1949, Larry
Ledgerwood won the Oakland Chess Championship.
In 1949, Ray
Martin won the Los Angeles County Championship. Irving Rivise took 2nd. Morris
Gordon took 3rd.
In 1949, Carroll
Capps won the Mechanics' Institute Championship.
In 1949, Charles
Bagby and Leslie Boyette tied for 1st in the Northern California Championship.
In 1950, Ray
Martin won the Hollywood Invitational, ahead of Herman Steiner and Jim Cross.
In 1950, George
Koltanowski and Herman Steiner were awarded the International Master title.
In September,
1950, Ray Martin of Santa Monica won the 17th California State Championship,
held in San Francisco. George Croy and Vladimir Patnutieff tied for 2nd-3rd,
followed by Phil D. Smith, Charles Bagby, Sven Almgren, W.H. Steckel, and
Leslie Boyette.
In September
1950, Arthur Spiller of Culver City won the California Open, held in Santa
Barbara. There were 23 players.
In 1950, the
Santa Monica Chess Club won the Los Angeles County Championship.
In 1950, Charles
Bagby won the Northern California Championship.
In November,
1950, the USCF published its first rating list as of July 31, 1950. The top
California player was Isaac Kashdan (2574), followed by Herman Steiner (2394),
Harry Borochow (2374), and Jim Cross (2321). Others included Almgren (2137),
Boyette (2216), Capps (2160), Croy (2284), Falconer (2108), Fink (2211), H
Gordon (2106), Hendricks (2179), Ray Martin (2170), Pruner (2253), Rivise
(2286), Sable (2102), R.P. smith (2197), Solona (2184), and J.H. Watson (2193),
In December 1950,
the Valley Chess Club was formed, which met at the Recreation Building at
Vancwen Park in North Hollywood. It later moved to North Hollywood Park.
Charles Boyer was an active member in this club.
In 1951, members
of the Capablanca Chess Club in Havana, Cuba arrived in Hollywood to play the
Hollywood Chess Club. The Hollywood team won, scoring 11.5-7.5
In 1951, Arthur
Stamer became director of the Mechanics' Institute Chess Club in San Francisco.
He remained director until his death in 1964.
In 1951, Guthrie
McClain was co-founder and Associate Editor of the California Chess Reporter.
In September,
1951, Arthur R. Spiller won the 18th California State Championship, played in
Santa Monica. Irving Rivise took 2nd, followed by Sven Almgren, Earl Pruner,
Adolph Weiss, Ray Martin, and Charles Svalberg.
In September 1951,
Neil Falconer won the California Open, held in Santa Cruz. Vladimir Pafnutieff
and William T. Adams took 2nd-3rd. There were 43 players.
In December,
1951, George Koltanowski played 50 games blindfolded at 10-seconds-per move,
winning 43, drawing 5, and losing 2 in 9 hours of play in San Francisco.
In 1951, George
W. Chase won the championship of the Cosmo Chess Club in Los Angeles.
In 1951, J.B. Gee
won on tiebreak over M.O. Meyer in the Sacramento City championship.
In 1951, Richard
Mathews won the championship of the Palo Alto Chess Club.
In 1952, Lionel
Joyner won the Los Angeles County Championship after a play-off with Morris
Gordon. 3rd place went to Ray Martin, followed by Steve Mazner, Sven Almgren,
Arthur Spiller, and Sam Geller.
In 1952, the San
Jose Chess Club won the Central California Chess League title, scoring 6-0. 2nd
place went to the Sacramento Chess Club, followed by the Fresno Chess Club,
Stockton CC, Pittsburg CC, Modesto CC, and Oakdale CC.
In 1952, George
Koltanowski, playing blindfolded, defeated Humphrey Bogart in 41 moves in San
Francisco.
On February 12,
1952, James Tarjan was born in Pomona. He became a grandmaster in 1976.
In May 1952,
Svetozar Gligoric took 1st place on tiebreak over Oscar Pomar in the Hollywood
International tournament. The event was played at Mama Weiss' Czardas
Restaurant in Beverly Hills. Herman Steiner took 3rd place, followed by Arthur
Dake, Lionel Joyner, Jim Cross, Isaac Kashdna, W. Pafnutieff, Ray Martin, and
Mrs. Graf-Stevenson. George Koltanowski was invited to play in the event, but a
feud between him and Steiner prevented that from happening.
In 1952, M.O.
Meyer and R.I. Richards tied for 1st place in the Sacramento City Championship.
In 1952, Winston
Strong won the Fresno Chess Club Championship.
In 1952, F.
Byron, C. Capps and J. Schmitt tied for 1st in the Mechanics' Institute Chess
Club Championship.
In 1952, the
California State Chess Federation (CSCF) was formed.
In 1952, the 19th
annual North-South match, held in San Luis Obispo, was won by the North, 32 to
27. The North has now won 11 times, the South has won 5 times, and there has
been a tie 3 times.
In 1952, Ray
Martin won the California Rapid Transit Championship, held in San Luis Obispo,
with the score of 22-3. 2nd place went to Sven Almgren. 3rd place went to
Irving Rivise.
In 1952, L.
Woolfe won the Stockton Chess Club Championship.
In 1952, Hans
Zander won the Inglewood Chess Club Championship. 2nd place went to Abe
Freeman.
In 1952, Robert
Burger won the Central California Chess League Tournament, held in Modesto. 2nd
place went to M.O. Meyer.
In 1952, Irving
Rivise took 1st place on tiebreak over Ray Martin at the Southern California
Championship, held in Los Angeles. Eugene Levin took 3rd place.
In 1952, Dimitry
Polikoff took 1st place in the Northern California Championship, held in San
Francisco. 2nd place went to Henry Gross, followed by C.M. Capps.
In September
1952, Irving Rivise and Henry Gross tied for the 19th California State
Championship, held at the Mechanics' Institute in San Francisco. Eugene Levin
took 3rd place, followed by Neil Falconer, Ray Martin, Dimitry Poliakoff,
Robert Burger, and Arthur Spiller.
In September
1952, Sven Almgren won the California Open Championship, held in Santa Barbara.
2nd-6th were Pete Veliotes, P.D. Smith, Steve Smale,
March Eucher, and M. Gordon.
In 1952, Larry
Evans defeated Herman Steiner 10-4 in a U.S. Championship match held in Los
Angeles.
In 1952, Alva
Larsen won the San Gabriel Open, played in Pasadena, with a perfect 9-0 score.
Edward B. Adams and Syvertsen tied for 2nd-3rd.
In 1952, the
first tournament of the Chess Friends of Northern California was held in San
Francisco. Val Zemitis won in the top division, followed by Jim Meyers and
Henry Gross.
In 1952, J. Wolfe
of UCLA won the first California Intercollegiate Championship,held
in Los Angeles. 2nd place went to C. Marko of LA State.
In 1952, Eugene
Rubin won the Cosmo Chess Club Championship in Los Angeles with a perfect 9-0.
In 1952-53,
Arthur Spiller and Louis Spinner tied for 1st in the Los Angeles County
Championship, held in Los Angeles. Irving Rivise took 3rd place, followed by
Sven Almgren.
In 1953, Isaac
Kashdan won the 20-player Hollywood Invitational with the score of 18.5-0.5.
2nd place went to Eugen Levin, followed by Herman Steiner.
In 1953, the USCF
awarded the 1954 U.S. Open to Hollywood. A month later, the USCF Tournament
Committee rescinded that award. The reason for the change was a fundamental
disagreement between the Committee and the Hollywood sponsors. The Hollywood
plan was to have the Open in a number of sections. The sponsors were to raise a
large prize fund so as to guarantee cash prizes and extra money for the Master
Section to attract master chess players. Prizes for the other sections were to
be trophies only. The plan was rejected by the USCF, and they awarded the site
to New Orleans (won by Larry Evans).
In 1953, Henry
Gross won the Northern California Open in San Francisco. 2nd place went to Bill
Addison, followed by Dimitry Poliakoff and R. Currie.
In August 1953,
Herman Steiner won the Southern California Qualifying Tournament with a perfect
10-0 score. 2nd-3rd went to H. Gordon and J. Wolfe, followed by L. Remlinger,
R. Gross, and S. Mazner. The tournament was held in Hollywood.
In September
1953, Herman Steiner won the 20th California State Championship, held at the
Hollywood Chess Group headquarters in Los Angeles. Henry Gross took 2nd place,
followed by William Addison, Sven Almgren, Robert Currie, Hyman Gordon, Irving
Rivise, Dmitry Poliakoff, Robert Burger, and J. Wolfe.
In September
1953, Eugene Levin won the California Open Championship, held in San Jose. He
won on tiebreak over P. Lapiken. Both had a 6-1 score. 3rd through 5th went to
V. Pafnutieff, M. Gordon, and J. Alexander,
In 1953, Henry
Gross won the Chess Friends of Northern California championship.
In April, 1954,
the Hollywood Chess Group held the 1st official California Women's Championship,
organized by Herman Steiner. The winner was Mrs. Sonja Graf-Stevenson, scoring
8-0. 2nd-3rd place went to Mrs. Gregor Piatigorsky and Lena Grumette.
In 1954, Ojars A.
Celle won the Sacramento City Championship.
In 1954, Herman
Steiner won the California Open, held in Santa Barbara. Jim Schmitt took 2nd.
There were 81 players.
In 1954, Sven
Almgren won the Los Angeles County Championship on tiebreak over Harry
Borochow. 3rd-4th place went to Louis Spinner and R.W. Banner.
In 1954, the San
Jose Chess Club won the Central California Chess League on tiebreak over the
Sacramento Chess Club. Robert Burger won the individual championship
tournament.
In 1954, the
Hollywood Chess Group organized the Second Pan-American Chess Congress. It was
won by Arthur Bisguier. 2nd place went to Larry Evans. 3rd-4th place went to
Nicolas Rossolimo and Herman Steiner.
In June-July
1954, the U.S. Junior Championship was held in Long Beach. Ross Siemms of
Toronto, Canada took 1st place. 2nd place went to Larry Remlinger. 3rd-4th went
to Saul Yarmak and Charles Kalme. There were 44 players from 10 states and
Canada.
In 1954, William
Addison won the Northern California Open. 2nd place went to Dmitry Poliakoff,
followed by James Schmitt.
In 1954, the
annual North-South match was won by the North by the score of 38-20.
In 1954, Robert
Currie won the Golden Gate Chess Club Championship in San Francisco. William
Addison, Henry Gross, and Robert Konkel tied for 2nd-4th.
In 1954, Irving
Rivise (1918-1976) won the Southern California Championship. 2nd-3rd place went
to Ray Martin and Robert Cross.
In 1954, Roy
Russell won the Atascadero Chess Club Championship.
In 1954, Herman
Steiner won the California Open, held in Santa Barbara. 2nd place went to Jim
Schmitt, followed by Val Zemitis, Isaac Kashdan, Sven Almgren, and Vladimir
Pafnutieff.
In November 1954,
Herman Steiner won the 21th California State Championship, scoring 7.5 out of
9. 2nd-3rd went to Dmitry Poliakoff and Eugene Levin, followed by Irving
Rivise, Ray Martin, James Schmitt, William Addison, Milton Meyer, and Robert
Cross. The event was held in San Francisco.
On November 25,
1954, Diane Savereide was born.
On December 6,
1954, Peter Prokoodin died in San Francisco at the age of 66. He founded the
Russian Chess Club in 1931 and served as its president for 20 years.
On December 10,
1954, J.C. McReady died at the age of 80. He was a member of the Mechanics'
Institute for 45 years.
In 1954, Lou
Domanski won the championship of the Cosmo Chess Club in Los Angeles.
In January 1955,
the Southern California Chess League was formed. The club members were
Hollywood, Beverly Hills, City Terrace, Cosmopolitan, Inglewood, Long Beach,
Pasadena, Santa Monica, Van Nuys, Valley, North American Aviation, and Water
& Power. Most of the meetings were at the Hollywood Chess Club, which was
the strongest club, which included Grandmaster Isaac Kashdan.
On January 17,
1955, Terry Crandall was born in Pasadena.
In the summer of
1955, the Mechanics' Institute CC defeated the Log Cabin CC with the score of
6-1.
In May, 1955,
George Koltanowski set a new U.S. record by playing 110 boards at the Biltmore
Hotel in Los Angeles. He won 89, drew 17, and lost 4 in 12 hours and 10 minutes
of continuous play. The event was sponsored by the Chess Friends of Southern
California.
In 1955, James
Schmitt won the first official San Francisco Championship after a playoff with
Henry Gross. 3rd place went to William Addison.
From August 8-20,
1955, the 56th U.S. Open was held in Long Beach. 1st place prize was a 1955
Buick (a Ford-Mercury was advertised before the tournament) worth $3,000. It
was won by Nicholas Rossolimo on tiebreak over Samuel Reshevsky. Reshevsky won
$1,000 for 2nd place. Donald Byrne took 3rd place, followed by Larry Evans and
Abe Turner. Sonja Graf won the women's title. There were 156 players in this
12-round event.
In September
1955, William Lombardy, James Sherwin, and Abe Turner tied for 1st place in the
San Diego Open.
In 1955, J.O.
Thomas was the Inglewood Chess Club Championship.
In 1955, William
Addison won the Golden Gate Chess Club Championship in San Francisco. 2nd-3rd
place went to Gilbert Ramirez and Carroll Capps.
In 1955, Eugene
Levin won the Southern California Championship.
In 1955, Herman
Steiner won the California Open, held in Fresno. 2nd-3rd went to Roger Smook
and Ray Martin.
In 1955, Henry
Gross won the North California Championship, held in San Francisco. 2nd place
went to Walter Pafnutieff. 3d place went to William Addison.
On November 25,
1955, International Master Herman Steiner, who was born in 1905, died at the
age of 50. He came home from the 5th round (his score was 4 wins and one loss)
of the 22nd California State Championship in Los Angeles and postponed his 6th
round game, scheduled for that evening, because he felt unwell. At 9:30 PM,
while being examined by his doctor, he was stricken by a massive coronary
occlusion and died. Out of respect to Steiner's memory, the State Championship
was cancelled. Steiner's final game was a draw against William Addison.
When Herman
Steiner died in November 1955, the Hollywood Chess Group was headed and managed
by Jacqueline de Rothschild Piatigorsky (1911- ), wife of world-renowned
cellist Gregor Piatigorsky (1903-1976). The club was renamed the "Herman
Steiner Chess Club," in memoriam to Herman Steiner.
In 1955, Isaac
Kashdan became chess editor of the Los Angeles Times.
In 1956, Gilbert
Ramirez won the California Open.
On June 27, 1956,
Larry Christiansen was born in Riverside. He became a grandmaster in 1977.
In 1956, Samuel
Reshevsky gave a simultaneous display in Los Angeles. One of the players that
got a draw from him was Humphrey Bogart.
In 1956, Sonja
Graf-Stevenson (1908-1965) won the California Women's Championship, held at the
Herman Steiner Chess Club in Los Angeles. Lina Grumette (1908-1988) was 2nd and
Jacqueline Piatigorsky was 3rd.
In 1956, Nancy
Roos of Los Angeles tied for 1st in the U.S. Women's Championship with Gisel
Gresser.
On July 18, 1956,
Dr. Walter Romaine Lovegrove died in San Francisco at the age of 86. He won the
first California championship in 1891. He was born in 1869.
In November 1956,
Gilbert Ramirez won the 23rd California State Championship, held in San
Francisco.
On December 15,
1956, Adolf (Adolph) Fink died in San Francisco at the age of 66. He was a life
member of the Mechanics' Institute. He was California State Champion three
times (1922, 1928, and 1929) and co-champion, with Herman Steiner, in 1945. He
was born in 1890.
On January 14,
1957, Humphrey Bogart died. He was an enthusiastic chess player, subscribed to
CHESS REVIEW and CHESS LIFE, and was a chess director for the USCF and for
California.
In 1957, Gilbert
Ramirez won the California Open Championship.
In February,
1957, Samuel Reshevsky played 77 opponents simultaneously in Los Angeles,
winning 54, drawing 21, and losing 2 (to John McMilland and Dr. Sam Naiditch).
On April 6, 1957,
Nancy Roos died in Los Angeles.
In 1957, Southern
California beat Northern California 37-36.
In July, 1957,
Robert Fischer (2298), age 14, won the U.S. Junior Championship, held at the
Spreckels-Russell Dairy auditorium in San Francisco. He won 8 games and drew
one (to Gilbert Ramirez). Gilbert Ramirez of San Francisco was 2nd. Stephen
Sholomson of Los Angeles was 3rd. There were 33 players, directed by George
Koltanowski. Fischer also won the speed championship. Fischer won a typewriter
for his efforts. Ramirez won a radio.
On July 23, 1957,
Kim Commons was born in Lancaster. He became an International Master in 1976.
On July 26, 1957,
Nicholas deFirmian was born in Fresno. He became a grandmaster in 1985.
On September 24,
1957, William B. (Pat) Patterson died at the age of 51. He helped establish the
Palmdale Chess Club.
In 1957, Jim
Schmitt won the California Open.
In November 1957,
Jim Cross won the 24th California State Championship, held in Los Angeles.
Sonja Graf-Stevenson (1914-1968) won the Women's Championship.
On September 25,
1958, (William) John Donaldson was born in Los Angeles. He became an
International Master in 1983.
In 1958, Fritz
Leiber won the Santa Monica Open. Gordon Palmer took 2nd.
In November 1958,
Charles Bagby won the 25th California State Championship, held in San
Francisco. 2nd place went to Bill Addison. 3rd place went to Irving Rivise,
followed by Joe Mego, Phil Smith, Saul Yarmak, Gordon Palmer, and Arthur Wang.
In 1959, the
Herman Steiner Chess Club moved to its third location, 8371 Beverly Blvd, West
Hollywood. It was located in a converted upstairs three-bedroom apartment, or
"duplex."
In 1959, Richard
Shorman was editor of the Oakland YMCA Chess Bulletin.
In 1959, Dudley
Hosea of San Diego died. He was a noted supporter and promoter of the game in
the area.
In September
1959, Tibor Weinberger of Glendale won the California Open chess championship
in Fresno. He tied with Robion Kirby with a 6-1 score, but won on tiebreaks.
There were 123 players.
In November 1959,
Tibor Weinberger won the Southern California chess championship, held in Los
Angeles.
In December 1959,
Tibor Weinberger won the 26th California State Chess Championship, held in Los
Angeles. Zoltan Kovacs and James Cross tied for 2nd-3rd.
In 1960, Arthur
Wang of Berkeley won the California Junior Chess Championship.
In 1960, Harry
Borochow was California State Membership chairman.
In September
1960, the California Open was won by Zoltan Kovacs, scoring 6.5 out of 7. 2nd
place went to L. Simon, followed by Walter Cunningham, Tom Fries, Irving
Rivise, William Carr, Imre Barlai, and A. Keyes.
In
November-December 1960, Zoltan Kovacs won the 27th California State Chess
Championship, held in San Francisco. Sven Almgren took 2nd place. 3rd-4th went
to Bill Addison and Irving Rivise, followed by Julius Loftsson, Tibor
Weinberger, John Blackstone, Frank Hufnagel, Carl Diecesn, and Herb Dastell.
On December 13,
1960, George Koltanowski played 56 games blindfolded in San Francisco. He won
50 and drew 6.
In the 1960s, the
Herman Steiner Chess Club was consistent first prize winners in team chess
matches for the annual Los Angeles Team Matches. Members of the Steiner Chess
Club included club regulars such as Jack Moskowitz, Carl Pilnick (1923- ), Irving
Rivise (1918-1976), Morris Gordon, William Addison (1933-2008), Tibor
Weinberger (1932- ), and Jim Lazos.
In 1961, the
Piatigorskys purchased a property at 8801 Cashio Street. on
the Westside of Hollywood, just south of Beverly Hills. They commissioned Frank
Loyd Wright, Jr. (1890-1978) to design a chess venue to accommodate chess
tournaments of 150 players or more. The place was used for the 1961
Fischer-Reshevsky match (Jose Ferrer was the master of ceremonies) and the 1962
California Junior Championship. The place also put on large simuls by Samuel
Reshevsky, Svetozar Gligoric, Larry Evans, and others.
In 1961, Stephen
Matzner won the California Collegiate Championship.
In February 1961,
Tibor Weinberger won the first annual open chess tournament of the Westchester
Chess Fiesta, held at Loyola University in Los Angeles. He tied with Leslie
Simon with a 5-1 score, but won on tiebreaks.
In 1961, Isaac
Kashdan was elected president of the California State Chess Federation.
In 1961, Walt
Cunningham won the California Junior Championship.
In June 1961,
Leslie Simon won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Santa
Monica. 2nd-6th place went to Tibor Weinberger, Jerry Hanken, Ronald Gross,
Zoltan Kovacs, and Irving Rivise.
In 1961, Dr. Max
Schlosser won the 1st San Bernardino Chess Club Championship.
In 1961, Erik
Osbun won the Northern California Open.
In 1961, Samuel
Reshevsky and Bobby Fischer played a match in Los Angeles, under the
sponsorship of Jacqueline Piatigorsky. Jose Ferrer served as master of
ceremonies at the opening game.
In 1961, Gordon
Barrett (1921-2010) began editing the Terrachess bulletin in Southern
California.
In August 1961,
the 62nd U.S. Open was held in San Francisco, due to the work of Guthrie
McClain. The winner was Pal Benko, scoring 11-1. Zoltan Kovacs of Los Angeles
took 2nd place.
In September
1961, Stephen Sholomson won the California Open, held in Fresno. Tibor
Weinberger and John Jaffray tied for 2nd-3rd.
In November 1961,
Ray Martin won the Southern California championship, held in Los Angeles. He
won on tiebreaks over Jerry Hanken.
In December 1961,
Tibor Weinberger and Irving Rivise tied for 1st in the 28th California State
Championship, held in Los Angeles. Walt Cunningham took 3rd place.
In December 1961,
Tibor Weinberger won the Santa Monica Open, scoring 7-1. Robert Jacobs took 2nd
place.
In February 1962,
Tibor Weinberger won the 2nd annual Westchester Open, held at Loyola University
in Los Angeles.
In 1962, Irving
Rivise and Tibor Weinberger tied for 1st in the 29th California State
Championship, held at the Herman Steiner Chess Club in Los Angeles.
In 1962, Emil
Bersbach won the San Bernardino Open.
In 1962, Roy
Hoppe won the Mechanics' Institute Open.
In 1962, the
Mechanics' Institute won the Bay Area Chess League.
In 1962, William
Addison won the Southern California Open. 2nd place went to Saul Yarmak.
In 1962, Walter
Cunningham won the California Open. 2nd place went to William Addison.
In June 1962, the
annual North-South match was held in Fresno. The North team won for the fifth
year in succession, scoring 29-14.
In 1962, Wilson
Alza won the South California Amateur Open.
In 1962, Anthony
Saidy won the Los Angeles Metropolitan Open.
In 1962, D.
Conwit won the Monterey Park Chess Club Championship.
In 1962, Boris
Bylinkin won the Downey Chess Club Championship.
In 1962, Charles
Henin won the Riverside Open.
In 1962, William
Addison won the Santa Monica Open.
In 1962, N.
Robinson won the Herman Steiner Invitational.
In 1962, Thomas
Heimberg (1937-2006) won the Mechanics' Institute Open. He was a violist with
the Oakland and San Francisco Symphony.
In December 1962,
William Addison won the 29th California StateChampionship, held at the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club in San Francisco. 2nd place went to Irving
Rivise. 3rd place went to Peter Cleghorn.
In February 1963,
Larry M. Evans won the 3rd annual Westchester Fiesta in Los Angeles.
In February 1963,
William Addison won the Los Angeles County Speed Championship, held in Santa
Monica. He scored 16-1. Leslie Simon took 2nd place.
On February 12,
1963, Doug Root was born in Long Beach.
In 1963, Anthony
Saidy won the Herman Steiner Chess Club Championship. 2nd place went to William
Addison.
In 1963, the
Steiner Chess Club won the Los Angeles Chess League Championship.
In 1963, Northern
California beat Southern California by the score of 21-18.
In 1963, Stephen
Matzner won the California Collegiate Championship.
In 1963, Robert Jacobs
won the San Bernardino Open.
In 1963, D.
Ragozin won the Los Angeles Individual High School Championship.
In 1963, J.
Blackstone won the California Junior Championship.
In May 1963,
Zoltan Kovacs won the San Fernando Valley Open in Encino on tiebreak over Ray
Martin. Tibor Weinberger took 3rd place.
In June 1963,
Anthony Saidy won the Los Angeles Open, played at the City Terrace Chess Club.
2nd place went to Jerry Hanken, followed by Sven Almgren.
In 1963, J.
Murphy won the Whittier Chess Club Championship.
From July 2-28,
1963, World Champion Tigran Petrosian and Paul Keres tied for 1st at the
Piatigorsky Cup Tournament. It was held at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.
3rd-4th went to Najdorf and Olafsson. 5th went to Reshevsky. 6th went to Gligoric.
7th-8th went to Benko and Panno. Bobby Fischer was invited, but he requested a
$2,000 appearance fee. His invitation went to Pal Benko. Isaac Kashden directed
the event. One of the spectators at the first Piatigorsky Cup was Frank Sinatra
(1915-1998), who took some chess literature home with him.
In September
1963, Irving Rivise won the California Open, held in Fresno. He won on
tiebreaks over Tibor Weinberger (2nd place on tiebreak) and Julius Loftsson
(3rd place on tiebreak). All scored 6-1.
In 1963, the
California masters included William Addison, Peter Cleghorn, Robert Cross,
Walter Cunningham, Morris Gordon, Charles Henin, Robert Jacobs, Zoltan Kovacs,
Julius Loftsson, IStephen Matzner, rving Rivise,
Anthony Saidy, and Tibor Weinberger.
On February 17,
1964, Arthur Stamer died in San Francisco. He won the Mechanics' Institute
Chess Championship in 1905 and 1923.
In March 1964,
Roy Hoppe won the 12th Northern California Championship, played in Oakland.
In March, 1964,
Walter Cunningham won the California Collegiate Championship. John Blackstone
took 2nd place.
In April, 1964,
Walter Harris won the Sacramento City Championship.
In April, 1964,
Janis Salna won the first Walnut Creek Open championship.
By 1964, the
Herman Steiner Chess Club on Beverly Blvd ended and players migrated to the
site on Cashio St.
In 1964, William
Addison won the Herman Steiner Chess Club Championship. Julius Loftsson took
2nd place.
In 1964, Northern
California beat Southern California by the score of 29-19.
In 1964, Duncan
Suttles won the Southern California Open.
In 1964,
Professor E. B. Adams, age 85, won the San Gabriel Valley Open.
In 1964, Hans
Poschman and Robert Pellerin founded the Fremont Chess Club.
In 1964, Norman
Wood won the San Francisco Championship.
In 1964, Martin
Morrison and Elwin Meyers became the editors of En Passant, the newsletter of
the Oakland Chess Club.
In 1964, Martin
Morrison resurrected the Berkeley YMCA Chess Club.
In 1964, Bobby
Fischer gave simultaneous exhibitions in Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Sacramento, Davis, Santa Barbara, Santa Monica, and Ventura.
In 1964, the
Herman Steiner Chess Club sponsored part of Bobby Fischer's great simul tour of
the USA. Fischer played 50 opponents at the Knickerbocker Hotel in Hollywood.
The board fee was $3.50 and $1 for spectators. Fischer won 47, drew 2 (Andy
Sacks and Nicholas Enequst), and lost one game (Donn Rogozin). These three
players were all junior members of the Herman Steiner Chess Club.
In 1964, Allan
Troy won the Bernard Oak Memorial Open in Los Angeles.
In August 1964,
Tibor Weinberger won the Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica. Larry
Evans, John Blackstone, Irving Riviese, and Nathan Robinson tied for 2nd-5th
place.
In 1964, Robert
Jacobs won the Riverside Open.
In April 1965,
the Santa Monica Chess Club defeated the Herman Steiner Chess Club, scoring
9.5-6.5.
In January 1965,
Arthur Wang won on tiebreak over Michale Bedord for the Northern California
Championship of the Chess Friends of Northern California. The event was played
in Berkeley.
In 1965, Earl
Pruner won the B. Stamer Memorial Tournament at the Mechanics' Institute Chess
Room in San Francisco,
In 1965, William
E. Maillard won the South California Tournament of Champions.
In March, 1965,
Tim Delaney won the San Bernardino Chess Club Championship.
In March 1965, Ed
Kennedy and Norman Lessing tied for 1st in the Santa Monica Bay Chess Club
Masters & Experts Invitational.
In July 1965,
Robert Trenberth won the San Francisco Amateur Championship. Ira Pohl took 2nd
place.
In July 1965, Don
Sutherland won the Northern California Championship, played at the Mechanics'
Institute. Carroll Capps took 2nd place.
In July 1965,
Arthur Bisguier won the 4th annual Pacific Southwest Open, played in Santa
Monica. 2nd place went to Carl Pilnick.
In August, 1965,
Pal Benko win the 5th annual Southern California Open, played in Santa Monica.
Larry Evans took 2nd place.
In September
1965, Captain John A. Hudson, of Mather AFB, won the California State Open,
played in Fresno. He won on tiebreak over John Blackstone. Both scored 6-1.
In September,
1965, Ira Pohl won the Bay Area Championship.
In 1965, David
Blohm won the California Junior Championship.
In October 1965,
the 4th annual Central California Open and Qualifying Tournament was won by David Blohm on tiebreak over Frank Thornally,
William Haines, and Arthur Wang. The event was played in Sacramento.
In 1965, Don Young
won the San Gabriel Open in Pasadena.
In November 1965,
Tibor Weinberger won the Riverside Open, scoring 6-0. 2nd place went to Robert
Jacobs, followed by Enos Wicher.
On November 21,
1965, Pal Benko won the Mission Bay Open in San Diego with a 5-0 score. Larry
Evans took 2nd place.
On November 28,
1965, Pal Benko won the 1st American Open, held at the Club del Mar in Santa
Monica. 2nd-6th wnet to Larry Evans, Anthony Saidy, Robion
Kirby, Irving Rivise, and James Schmitt. There were 124 players. Benko's
prize was $600 and a trophy.
In 1965, Andy
Sacks won the first annual Student Chess Club in Los Angeles. 2nd place went to
Steve Gruen.
In December 1965,
Donald Sutherland won the 32nd California State Championship, held in Los
Angeles. 2nd place went to Zoltan Kovacs, followed by David Blohm, Ronald
Gross, Ira Pohl, and Arthur Spiller.
In 1966, Isaac
Kashdan was the President of the California State Chess Federation.
In 1966, Jim Hurt
(1917-1999) founded and directed the LERA (Lockheed Employees Recreation
Association) Chess Club in Sunnyvale.
In 1966, Harry
Borochow became the first chess player of being elected to the Hall of Fame of
the Southern California Chess League.
In 1966, Jim
Tarjan won the California Junior Chess Championship.
In 1966, Ted and
Ruby Yudacufski founded the Monterey Chess Club.
In March, 1966,
Tim Delaney won the San Bernardino Chess Club Championship.
In April, 1966,
William Maillard won the El Segundo Open.
In April 1966,
Richard Schultz and Phil Smith tied for 1st in the 2nd Visalia Amateur Open.
In 1966, Rex
Wilcox won the Mechanics' Institute Invitational. Alan Bourke took 2nd place.
In 1966, Raymond
Ng won the Oakland Chess Club Championship.
In 1966, Borel
Menas won the Northern California championship.
In May, 1966,
Serge Von Oettingen and Anthony DiMilo tied for 1st in the Sacramento City
Championship.
In May, 1966,
Carl Pilnick won the Herman Steiner Chess Club Championship in Los Angeles.
In May, 1966,
Robert Jacobs won the San Bernardino Open.
In May, 1966, the
33rd annual Northern California vs. Southern California team match, held in
Fresno, was won by the North by the score of 24.5 to 15.5.
In May, 1966,
Mohamed El Sayed won the Davis, California Championship.
In June, 1966,
James Tarjan, age 14, won the California Junior Championship, played at the
Herman Steiner Chess Club in Los Angeles.
In June, 1966,
David Blohm of San Francisco, took 2nd-3rd place in
the first annual U.S. Junior Championship, held in New York City. The event was
won by Walter Browne. Blohm tied with Robert Wachtel.
In July, 1966,
Duncan Suttles won the 3rd annual Arthur B. Stamer Memorial Tournament in San
Francisco. Anthony Saidy and Earl Pruner took 2nd-3rd place.
In July, 1966,
Tibor Weinberger won the Pacific Southwest Open in Santa Monica. Irving Rivise
and Mike Leidner took 2nd-3rd.
In August, 1966,
John Blackstone won the 16th Annual Valley of the Moon Outdoor Chess Festival
at Sonoma.
In August, 1966,
Charles Whitman won the Barstow, California Open.
On August 14,
1966, over 900 spectators watched the Fischer-Spassky game at the 2nd
Piatigorsky Cup. It was the largest audience ever to witness a chess tournament
in the United States.
On August 15,
1966, Boris Spassky won the 2nd Piatigorsky Cup Tournament, held at the Miramar
Hotel in Santa Monica. 2nd place went to Bobby Fischer. Bent Larsen took 3rd
place. Portisch and Unzicker took 4th-5th. Petrosian and Reshevsky took
6th-7th. Najdorf took 8th. Ivkov took 9th. Donner took 10th. Spassky won $5,000
and Fischer won $3,000. The event had over 900 spectators, the largest audience
ever to witness a chess tournament in the United States. Some of the spectators
included Edward G. Robinson, Henry Fonda, Richard Boone, Joan Blondell, Rhonda
Fleming, Van Cliburn, Victor Borge, and Leopold Stokowski.
On August 19,
1966, Bent Larsen played a clocked simul against seven experts at the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club, winning all 7 games. He then played 43
opponents, scoring 32 wins, 6 losses, and 5 draws.
In 1966, Phil
Smith and Richard Schultz tied for 1st in the second annual Visalia Amateur
Open.
In September,
1966, Irving Rivise won the California Open, held in Fresno. John Blackstone
took 2nd place. There were 109 players.
In 1966, Harry
Borochow (master emeritus) became the first player in the Southern California
Chess Hall of Fame.
In 1966, Charles
Henin won the Southern California Open.
In 1966, Norris
Weaver won the Northern California Championship, held in Berkeley.
In October 1966,
the 5th annual Central California Open and Qualifying Tournament was held in Sunnyvale. Raymond Schutt won the event.
In November,
1966, Allan Troy won the San Gabriel Valley Open, held in Pasadena. Ben Kakimi
took 2nd place.
In 1966, Rex
Wilcox won the Golden Gate Chess Club Championship.
In November 1966,
Larry Kaufman won the 2nd American Open at Santa Monica on tiebreak over Robion
Kirby.
In November 1966,
Frank Thornally won the San Francisco Bay Area Championship. 2nd-4th were Erik Osbun, Ziad Baroudi, and Jairo Gutierrez.
In December,
1966, the first annual Bay Area Amateur Open Championship, held in Oakland, was
won by Dennis Fritzinger. John Ulrich took 2nd place.
In December,
1966, the University of California (Berkeley) took 2nd place in the 1966 U.S.
Intercollegiate Championship. The event was won by M.I.T.
In January, 1967,
Charles Henin won the California State Championship, held in San Francisco.
Erik Osbun took 2nd place.
In April, 1967,
Anthony Saidy won the El Segundo Open.
In 1967, D.
Litowsky won the Capital Coty Chess Club Championship in Sacramento.
In 1967, Richard
Shorman became a chess columnist for the Hayward Daily Review.
In May, 1967,
Tibor Weinberger won the San Bernardino Open. 2nd-4th place went to Anthony
Saidy, Jim Tarjan, Robert Jacobs, and Sid Rubin.
In 1967, Koit
Tullus won the San Jose Chess Club Championship.
In 1967, Walter
Harris won the Sacramento City Championship.
In 1967, the
Ernest Shields Open in Bakersfield, was won by Walter
Browne (2367).
In 1967, Carl
Pilnick won the Herman Steiner Chess Club Championship. Jim Tarjan took 2nd
place. David Lither took 3rd place.
In 1967, Bobby
Fischer stayed at Lina (Lena) Grumette's home in West Hollywood. He stayed for
several months.
In May, 1967,
Jugoslav Stankovic won the Golden Bear Open, held at Berkeley. 2nd place went
to Frank Thornally. 3rd place went to Anthony Lee.
In May, 1967,
Northern California beat Southern California by the score of 17-15. The event
was held in Fresno.
In May, 1967,
John Blackstone and Phil Smith won the California Rapid Transit Championship.
In June, 1967,
Dave Anderson won the San Diego Open. Daniel Molnar took 2nd place.
In July, 1967,
James Tarjan took 7th in the 2nd annual U.S. Junior Championship, held in New
York City.
In July, 1967,
Tibor Weinberger and Robion Kirby, professor of mathematics at UCLA, tied for
1st at the Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica. 3rd-5th place went to
Anthony Saidy, David Andersen, and Jerry Hanken.
In 1967, Paul
Heinrich won the Los Angeles High School Championship.
In 1967, Laszlo
T. Binet won the Southern California Open. Carl Pilnick took 2nd.
In 1967, Norman
Lessing won the Santa Monica Chess Club Championship. 2nd place went to Paul
Quillen. 3rd place went to Arthur Spiller.
In 1967, Charles
Henin, Jim Tarjan, and Viktors Pupols tied for 1st in the California Open.
In 1967, Walter
Browne won the South California Championship. 2nd place went to Ronald Gross.
In 1967, Robert
Gish won the Whittier Amateur Open.
In 1967, Norman
Lessing won the U.S. Senior Championship.
In 1967, Harold
Milner won the Northridge Chess Club Championship.
In 1967, Dennis
Waterman won the 2nd annual San Francisco Bay Area Amateur Championship.
On August 28,
1967, Julio Kaplan won the World Junior Championship in Jerusalem.
In October, 1967,
William Addison and Anthony Saidy tied for 1st in the Santa Monica International.
Walter Browne took 3rd place.
In November,
1967, John Blackstone won the Northern California Championship, held in San
Francisco. Ziad Baroudi took 2nd place.
In 1967, Frank
Thornally and Gilbert Ramire tied for 1st in the Golden Gate Chess Club
Championship in San Francisco.
In November,
1967, Jack Tanner won the Thanksgiving Open, held in Ventura.
In the 1960s,
Lina Grumette ran a chess club in her West Hollywood home called The Chess Set.
In November,
1967, Dr. Anthony Saidy won the 3rd American Open in Santa Monica. 2nd-3rd went
to Pal Benko and John Blackstone. Walter Browne took 4th place. There were 131
players.
In December,
1967, the highest USCF-rated California chess players were Larry Evans (2593),
William Addison (2503), Anthony Saidy (2488), Charles Kalme (2455), Walter
Browne (2367), Tibor Weinberger (2347), Jack Moskowitz (2342), Koit Tullus
(2335), James Lazos (2316), Earl Pruner (2304), John Hudson (2303), and Zoltan
Kovacs (2293). Top juniors were Walter Browne (2367), Alan Benson (2133), James
Tarjan (2132), and David Blohm (2101). Top Women were Jacqueline Piatigorsky
(1902), Lina Grumette (1777), and Greta Olsson (1718).
In December,
1967, the University of California (Berkeley) won the 1967 U.S. Intercollegiate
Championship. Team members were Frank Thornally, Richard Laver, Steve Spencer,
Mike Morris, and Sam Sloan.
In January 1968,
John Blackstone won the Los Angeles County Open, held in Santa Monica. 2nd-5th
place went to Tibor Weinberger, Sven Almgren, Laszlo Binet, and William
Maillard.
In February 1968,
Tibor Weinberger won Masters tournament in Santa
Monica, scoring 6-0.
On March 3, 1968,
Sammy Reshevsky won the Interzonal play-off, held at the Herman Steiner Chess
Club in Los Angeles. Reshevsky beat out Leonid Stein and Vlastimil Hort.
In March 1968,
Tibor Weinberger won the West Coast Open, held in Santa Monica, scoring 6-0.
Paul Quillen took 2nf place.
In 1968, John
Dedinsky won the Palo Alto Championship. Ira Pohl took 2nd place.
In 1968, Ted
Yudacufski won the St. Patrick's Day Tournament in Monterey.
In July, 1968,
James Tarjan tied for 3rd-4th in the U.S. Junior Championship, held in New York
City.
In 1968, the 14th
Davis Tournament was won by Serge Von Oettingen.
In 1968, K.
Michael Goodall won the Central California Chess Association Regional, held in
Berkeley.
In April 1968,
Tibor Weinberger won the San Bernardino Open on tiebreaks. Peter Rhee took 2nd
place. Bothe score 5.5-0.5.
In May 1968,
Tibor Weinberger won the John Gilbreth Memorial Open Tournament in Long Beach
on tiebreaks over Charles Henin. Both score 5.5-0.5 points. 3rd-5th place went
to Jim Tarjan, David Andersen, and Ronald Gross.
In June 1968, the
35th annual North-South match was held in Fresno. The North won with the score
of 21-9.
In June 1968, Jim
Tarjan won the California Junior Championship.
In 1968, Bruce
Antman won the Ventura Marina Chess Festival. Bob Reynolds took 2nd place.
In 1968, Kon
Grivainis won the Contra Costa County Open, held in Concord.
In 1968, Peter
Rhee won the O.H. Wentcher Memorial, formerly the Santa Monica Bay Chess Club
Championship.
In July 1968,
James Tarjan won the Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica, scoring 7-0.
There were 197 players. 2nd-4th place went to Felipe Galvez, Larry Remlinger,
and Tibor Weinberger.
In August 1968,
Tibor Weinberger of Santa Monica played in the U.S. Championship in New York.
The event was won by Larry Evans. Weinberger took 11th place. He defeated
Herbert Seidman and drew against Nicholas Rossolimo and Bernard Zuckerman.
In August 1968,
Charles Henin won the Bakersfield Open.
In September
1968, Tibor Weinberger, John Blackstone, and Gil Ramirez tied for 1st in the
California Open, held in Fresno.
In 1968, John
Blackstone won the Peninsula Open in Sunnyvale.
In 1968, James
Tarjan won the El Segundo Open.
In 1968, Ted
Yudacufski won the Monterey Amateur Open.
In 1968, Charles
Henin won the Southern California Championship. Walter Browne took 2nd place.
In 1968, Walter
Browne won the Long Beach Classic. Frank Thornally took 2nd place. There were
118 players.
In 1968, Allan
Troy was nominated to the South California Chess League's Hall of Fame.
In 1968, John
Blackstone won the Arthur B. Stamer Memorial in San Francisco. Jude Acers took
2nd place.
In 1968, Jose
Salas Tossas won the San Diego Open.
In 1968, Ken
Grivainis won the Monterey International Open.
In 1968, Martin
Morrison created Scacchic Voice (later renamed Chess Voice).
In 1968, Charles
Henin won the Ernest Shields Open, held in Bakersfield.
In November,
1968, Gary Anderson won the Thanksgiving Open in Ventura.
In 1968, Alex
Sohobeck won the Monterey County Championship. In November, 1968, James Lazos
won the 4th American Open, held in Santa Monica. Walter Browne and Larry
Remlinger tied for 2nd-3rd. There were 160 players.
In December,
1968, 455 players entered the 2nd annual School Chess Festival in Van Nuys.
Over 100 schools were represented.
In December,
1968, the highest USCF-rated players were William Addison (2456), Charles Kalme
(2455), Dr. Anthony Saidy (2454), Walter Browne (2453), Tibor Weinberger (2379),
Lazlos Binet (2356), Jack Moskowitz (2342), James Tarjan (2337), and John
Hudson (2315). Top juniors included Browne, Tarjan, Steven Hohensee (2176),
George Kane (2160), Peter Rhee (2150), and Robert Reynolds (2079).
In 1968, I. Lyon
won the El Segundo Chess Club Championship. Peter Rhee took 2nd place.
In 1968, Walter
Browne won the Riverside Open. John Blackstone took 2nd place.
In 1968, Donald
Bicknell won the Whittier Amateur Open.
In 1968, David
Forthoffer won the 3rd annual San Francisco Bay Area Amateur Open.
In 1968, Keyhecco
Kahyai won the Los Angeles County Open.
In 1968 Hans
Poschmann and Robert Pellerein founded the Fremont Chess Club.
In 1969, Frank
Thornally won the Mechanics' Institute Invitational. David Blohm and Rex Wilcox
tied for 2nd-3rd.
In 1969, David
Blohm won the California State Championship, held at the Mechanics' Institute
in San Francisco. George Kane and Raymond Schutt tied for 2nd-3rd.
In 1969, Robbie
Newbold won the Redlands Open.
In 1969, Albyn
Jones won the 5th Visalia Amateur.
In 1969, Steve
Spencer won the New Year Open in Walnut Creek.
In 1969, Jose
Salas Tossas won the San Diego Open.
In 1969, Sandor
Racz won the Ventura County Chess Club Championship.
In March 1969,
Aki Kanemori won the West Coast Open, held in Los Angeles. He scored 6-0.
In April 1969,
Aki Kanemori won the 5th annual El Segundo Open. 2nd-4th place went to Tibor
Weinberger, Kim Commons, and Charles Henin.
In June, 1969,
James Tarjan took 2nd-3rd in the U.S. Junior Championship, held in New York
City.
In 1969, Don
Bicknell won the Downey Chess Club Championship.
In 1969, Philip
D. Smith won the Cherry Tree Open in Monterey.
In 1969, Jude
Acers (2205) won the Capital City Open in Sacramento. H. Noland took 2nd place.
In 1969, Alex
Suhobeck won the Walnut Creek Open.
In 1969, Edward
Kennedy won on tiebreaks at the Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica.
In 1969, Tom Lux,
former U.S. Amateur Champion, won the 5th annual Monterey Open. Alex Suhobeck
and Richard Fauber tied for 2nd-3rd.
In 1969, Bruce
Antman won the California Junior Championship. Albyn Jones took 2nd place.
In 1969, David
Amkraut won the Central California Chess Association Championship.
In June 1969,
Bill Addison and Tibor Weinberger tied for 1st in the annual Bakersfield Open.
In July 1969,
Earl Pruner won the 2nd Long Beach Classic. Tibor Weinberger and Jude Acers
took 2nd-3rd place.
In July 1969, the
Pacific Southwest Championship was held in Santa Monica. Ivars Dalberg, Ed
Kennedy, Keykhosro Kahyai, and Tibor Weinberger all tied for 1st place with a
6-1 score. Ed Kennedy was declared the winner on tiebreak points.
In 1969, Fred
Fornoff won the San Diego Bi-Centennial Open.
In 1969, Earl
Pruner won the 6th annual Arthur B. Stamer Memorial, held in San Francisco.
John Grefe and Jim Schmitt took 2nd-3rd.
In 1969, Ken
Morrisey won the Otto Wentcher Memorial (Santa Monica Bay Chess Club
championship). Art Spiller took 2nd place.
In 1969,
Livermore won the Central California Chess Association's Summer League. Oakland
took 2nd place.
In 1969, Roger
Myers won the El Segundo Amateur Championship.
In September,
1969, Larry Evans played a 29-board simul at the Mechanics' Institute, winning 28
and drawing one (to Alfred Raymond).
In 1969, Ray
Martin won the Ventura Marina Chess Festival.
In 1969, Anthony
Hanak won the Mechanics' Institute Amateur tournament.
In 1969, Mike
Ewell won the 4th Monterey County Championship. Bernard Lainson took 2nd place.
In 1969, Marlie
Thomason won the 22nd annual San Gabriel Valley Open, held in Pasadena. The
event is the oldest annual tournament in Southern California.
In November,
1969, William Addison won the Northern California Championship.
In November,
1969, Ray Martin won the 5th American Open, held in Santa Monica. There were
202 entries. Walter Browne, Kim Commons, and Ronald Gross tied for 2nd-4th.
In 1969, Charles
Maddigan won the 4th annual San Francisco Bay Area Amateur Open.
In 1969, Don Bicknell
won the Whittier Chess Club Championship.
In December,
1969, 636 students played in the 3rd annual Los Angeles Scholastic Open.
In December,
1969, the highest USCF-rated players in California were Charles Kalme (2455),
Dr. Anthony Saidy (2447), William Addison (2439), Lazlos Binet (2356), Jack
Moskowitz (2355), John Hudson (2346), James Tarjan (2316), and Earl Pruner
(2300). Top juniors included James Tartan, Steven Hothouse (2176), Ross Stouten
borough (2118), and Gary Pickle (2089).
William Addison
(2492) of San Francisco took 2nd place in the 1969 U.S. Championship and won
the 1969/1970 Northern California Championship.
At the end of
1969, Walter Browne, youngest and newest grandmaster, gave a 15-board
simultaneous exhibition in Hayward, California. He won 14 games and lost one
game, to Eric Salo.
The U.C. Berkeley
team took 10th place in the 1969-70 North American
Intercollegiate Championship, held in Montreal. McGill University won
the event.
In the late
1960s, the major chess publication in Central California was the bimonthly
SCACCHIS VOICE, edited by Martin Morrison. It was later renamed CHESS VOICE in
1970. The main chess publication in Southern California was TERRACHESS, edited
by Gordon Barrett. The official publication of the California State Chess
Federation was THE CALIFORNIA CHESS REPORTER, edited by Guthrie McClain.
The 1969/1970
California Chess Championship was won by Charles Henin of Sherman Oaks. David
Blohm, winner of the 1968/69 California Chess Championship, took 2nd.
In 1970, the 4th
annual San Francisco Bay Amateur Chess Championship was won by Charles Maddigan
of Oakland.
In the early
1970s, Agustin Eastwood De Mello hosted a chess club (The Hollywood Chess Club)
at his own residence in Hollywood. Hollywood also had its coffeehouses, parks,
and donut shops where chess players could always find a game.
In 1970, the 22nd
annual San Gabriel Valley Open, in Pasadena, was won by Marlie Thomason. The
event is the oldest annual tournament in Southern California.
In 1970, the 2nd
annual Cherry Tree Open, held at the Casa Alvarado Chess Center, was won by
Bernard Lainson.
In 1970, The
Central California Chess Association (CCCA) Class Tournament at Berkeley (The
Washingtonian) was won by International Master William Addison.
In February 1970,
the 3rd annual John Gilbreth Memorial Tournament in Long Beach was won by Dr.
Anthony Saidy on tiebreaks over Tibor Weinberger.
In February,
1970, Grandmaster Larry Evans gave a 16-board simul in Oakland. He won 15 games
and lost one game, to David Forthoffer.
On March 19,
1970, Herbert Abel, former President of the Santa Monica Chess Club, died in
Santa Monica. He was 72. He founded the American Open Tournament in 1965 and
organized chess tournaments in Southern California since 1945.
By the end of
March, 1970, the number of California members of the U.S. Chess Federation
(USCF) was 2,356. A year earlier, there were a little over 1,000 USCF members
in California.
In April, 1970,
Robert Newbold of Riverside, won the 1970 National High School Championship,
held in New York.
On April 15,
1970, Marion Arthur Sanders died. He was born in 1902 and was one of the
organizers of the Stockton Chess Club and the Central California Chess League.
In April 1970,
the West Coast Open was held in Los Angeles. Jim Tarjan and Tibor Weinberger
tied for 1st in the event. Tarjan won on tiebreaks.
In June 1970,
Bill Addison score 6-0 to win the Café Figaro Open in Hollywood. James Tarjan
took 2nd place. The tournament was sponsored by Bill Cosby.
In June 1970,
Ross Stoutenborough took 1st place in tiebreaks at the annual Ernest Shileds
Open Tournament in Bakersfield. He tied with Alex Suhobeck and Tibor Weinberger
with a 6-1 score.
In 1970, the 6th
annual El Segundo Open was won by Julio Kaplan, who scored 6-0. John Grefe took
2nd place. Kaplan was World Junior Champion from 1967 to 1969.
The 1970
Sacramento Championship was won by Jude Acers.
In 1970, the
Richard Reti Memorial, held in Monterey, was won by Mike Ewell and Steve
Sawyer.
The 1970
California Gold Rush Tournament, held in Orange, was won by Robert Snyder. 2nd
place went to William Potts.
In May, 1970,
players from the Southern California area defeated players from the Northern
California area with 15 wins, 11 losses, and two draws in the annual
North-South match. The event was held in Santa Maria.
In May, 1970,
Kenneth Morrisey won the California Junior Championship, held in Los Angeles.
In June, 1970,
the 6th Annual Monterey International Open was won by Julio Kaplan (1967 World
Junior Champion) on tiebreak over Grandmaster Larry Evans, and Frank Thornally,
each with 5-0. Larry Christiansen was top junior.
In 1970, the 22nd
Davis Championship was won by Serge von Oettingen.
In August, 1970,
Julio Kaplan won the 2nd annual Central California Championship, held in
Hayward. The Junior Championship was won by Craig Barnes.
The 1970 Whittier
Chess Club Championship was won by John Barnard.
The 1970 CCCA
Summer USCF Class Chess tournament, held in Concord, was won by Borel Menas.
The 1970 California
Open, held at Ventura, was won by Tibor Weinberger. There were 165 players.
The 1970 Monterey
Peninsula Chess Club Championship was won by Bernie Lainson.
In October, 1970,
Robert Byrne and Larry Evans tied for 1st in the Continental Open in Los Angeles.
In 1970, the 4th
annual Fight of the Bumbler Bee, held in Monterey, was won by Charles Pardini.
The 1970 San
Diego Open was won by Jesus Mondragon.
In 1970, the
Central California Championship, held in Sacramento, was won by Frank
Thornally.
In November,
1970, Robert Byrne won the 6th American Open, held in Santa Monica.
The 1970 Monterey
County Championship was won by Alex Suhobeck.
In December,
1970, California School Festival, held in Van Nuys, drew a record 873 players.
The mayor of Los Angles, Sam Yorty, declared the period from December 19, 1970
as Chess Week.
The most active
player in 1970 may have been Jude Acers. He played hundreds of simultaneous
exhibitions and won numerous tournaments in California.
The 1970/71
California State Championship, held at Mechanics' Institute Chess Club in San
Francisco, was won by Charles Henin of Sherman Oaks and Dennis Fritzinger of
San Francisco.
On January 15,
1971, Carroll Mather Capps, long-time benefactor of San Francisco chess, died.
He was also a science fiction writer who wrote under the pseudonym of C.C.
MaCapp. He was born in 1913. He was a former president of the San Francisco Bay
Area Chess League. He won the Northern California and San Francisco
championship several times.
The 1971 San
Bernadino Chess Club Championship was won by Stephan Skrypzak.
In February,
1971, Grandmaster Svetozar Gligoric gave a 31-board simul in Oakland, winning
26, losing 4, and drawing 1 game. He then gave a 32-board simul in Monterey,
winning 27, losing 4, and drawing 1 game. He then played 52 players at the West
Covina and Downey Chess Clubs, winning 43 and drawing 9. He then gave a
36-board simul in North Hollywood, winning 22, losing 7, and drawing 7 games.
In February,
1971, Larry Christiansen won the Western High School Championship.
In February,
1971, Al Larsen won the Pasadena Club Championship, held at Cal Tech.
In February,
1971, Russ Stoutenborough won the Downey Open.
In March, 1971,
Bill Wall won the Beale AFB Open, near Yuba City.
From March 14-20,
1971, the first Louis Statham Masters and Experts Tournament was
held in Lone Pine. It was won by Larry Evans.
In April, 1971,
Edward McCaskey won the 7th Visalia Amateur Open.
In April, 1971,
Larry Christiansen won the 3rd Annual High School Championship, held in New
York.
In 1971, Thomas
Lajcik won the Simi Valley Open.
In May, 1971, the
annual North-South match, held in Fresno, was won by the North, 57 to 38.
In May, 1971, the
California Class Championship, held in Fresno, was won by James Tarjan.
In May, 1971, Lt
Col Henry Giertych won the Beale AFB Championship. 2nd place went to Bill Wall
In May, 1971,
Steven D. Cross won the Berkeley Chess Club Open Championship.
In May 1971, Ross
Stoutenborough and Tibor Weinberger tied for 1st in the El Segundo Open.
In June, 1971,
James McCormick won the 7th Monterey International Open Chess Tournament.
2nd-3rd went to Dennis Fritzinger and David Blohm.
In June 1971,
James Tarjan won the California Class Championship, held in Fresno. The annual
North-South match was also held, using games played in all the sections of the
Class event. The North won 57 to 38. Another event held during the Class
Championship was the annual California State Rapid Transit Championship. This
was won by Tibor Weinberger.
In July, 1971,
Dr. Anthony Saidy won the Pacific Southwest Open in Santa Monica on tiebreak.
He scored 6-1, along with Larry Evans, Carl Pilnick, Julius Loftsson, and Tibor
Weinberger
In July, 1971,
Don Eilmes won the Simi Valley Chess Club Championship.
In August, 1971,
Lawrence Hughes won the Central California Chess Championship, held in Hayward.
In August, 1971,
the 72nd Annual US Open was held in Ventura and won by Walter Browne and Larry
Evans. There were 402 players in the event.
In August, 1971,
Grandmaster Florin Gheorghiu gave a 24-board simul in San Francisco, winning 20
and drawing 4 games.
In September,
1971, the 22nd Annual California Open, held in Fresno, was won by International
Master Julio Kaplan. 2nd place went to Julius Loftsson. There were 118 players.
In September,
1971, Max Wilkerson won the 1st Annual San Francisco Class Tournament. There
were 116 players.
The 1971 San
Diego Open was won by Jesus Mondragon. Jeremy Silman took 2nd place.
In October, 1971,
Julio Kaplan won the Carrol M. Capps Memorial, held at the Mechanics' Institute
Chess Club. There were 81 players.
In October, 1971,
Kim Commons won the Los Angeles Open. Tibor Weinberger took 2nd place.
In October, 1971,
Marina High School of Huntington Beach won the first California Stated High
School Team Championship.
In October, 1971,
Robert Newbold won the Central Valley Open, held in Sacramento.
In November,
1971, International Master George Koltanowski gave a 30-board simul in Santa
Rosa, winning 25, drawing 4, and losing 1 game (lost to Tom Henry).
In November,
1971, Carl Pilnick won the 7th Annual American Open on tiebreaks over Larry
Evans, Walter Browne, Ross Stoutenborough, and David Strauss. The event, held
in Santa Monica, drew 306 players.
In November,
1971, John Dedinksy won the 2nd Annual Redwood City Open.
The 1971
California State Championship, held in Sun Valley, was won by Kim S. Commons.
2nd place went to James Tarjan, followed by Dennis Fritzinger.
In December,
1971, the 6th Annual San Francisco Bay Area Amateur Open, held in Oakland, was
won by Roger Gabrielson and Lester Schonbrun.
In 1971, Andy
Sacks won the San Fernando Valley Open.
In 1971, the 24th
San Gabriel Valley Open in Pasadena was won by Ahmad Koopal.
In 1971, David
Argall won the West Covina club championship.
In 1971, Gene
Olsen won the Orange Chess Club Championship.
At the end of
1971, Jude Acers gave 124 simultaneous exhibitions in 82 different cities and
towns. He visited 30 states in 6 months.
In 1972, Martin
Morrison received the title of FIDE International Arbiter. He was the National
Secretary of the USCF.
In 1972, Craig
Barnes of Berkeley won the 4th Annual U.S. High School Championship, held in
New York.
In 1972, Larry
Christiansen won the Western High School Championship with a 6-0 score. Craig
Barnes took 2nd.
In February,
1972, Greg Francis won the Pasadena Chess Club Championship.
In 1972, Jeff
Kent won the Simi Valley Open.
In 1972, Don
Steers won the Los Angeles County Championship.
In March, 1972,
John Barnard won the 8th Visalia Amateur Open.
In March, 1972,
James Tarjan won the Berkeley Grand Prix.
In March, 1972,
Grandmaster Svetozar Gligoric gave a 13-board simul at U.C. Davis. He won 11
and drew 2 games (drew with Tom Dorsch and Sergius von Oettingen).
In March, 1972,
Svetozar Gligoric won the Louis D. Statham Masters and Experts Chess Tournament
at Lone Pine.
In April, 1972,
Vitaley Radaikin won the Marin Chess Club Championship, held in Mill Valley.
In May, 1972,
Jose Mondragon won the Aztec Open in San Diego.
In May, 1972, the
annual North-South match, held in Fresno, was won by the South by a score of
124-118.
In May 1972,
Robert Snyder won the high school division of the 8th annual Tournament of
Champions, held at Los Angeles High School.
In May 1972, Roy
Ervin won the Herbert Abel Memorial Tournament in Santa Monica on tiebreak over
Tibor Weinberger.
In June, 1972, R.
Carl Shiflett won the Berkeley Chess Club Open.
In June, 1972,
Rex Wilcox won the 8th Monterey International Open.
In July, 1972,
John Grefe won the Championship of Central California.
In July, 1972,
Ross Stoutenborough won the California Chess Classic, held in Los Angeles.
There were 155 players.
In July, 1972, Captain
John Manson won the Beale AFB Open near Yuba City. 2nd place went to Sergeant Bill
Wall. 3rd place went to Lt.
Col Henry Giertych.
In August, 1972,
Robert Zuk won the San Diego Open.
The 1972
California Junior Championship was won by Mark Saylor.
In September,
1972, John Grefe and Ziad Baroudi tied for 1st at the Pacific Open, held in San
Francisco.
In October, 1972,
David Reynolds won the Los Angeles Open.
In 1972, Robert
Hurdle won the California High School Championship, followed by Chris Strong.
In 1972, the 25th
San Gabriel Valley Open in Pasadena was won by Gabor Istanyi.
In November,
1972, John Grefe won the West Coast Open, held in Berkeley. There were 206
players. 2nd-3rd place went to Dennis Fritzinger and Borel Menas.
In November,
1972, Larry Remlinger of Long Beach won the 8th American Open, held in Santa
Monica. There were 428 players in the event. Bobby Fischer showed up in the
last round and signed autographs.
In November,
1972, the Beale AFB Open was won by Henry Giertych (1929-2002), John Manson,
and John Bales.
In 1972, Roy
Ervin won the Hayward Regional tournament. There were 201 players.
In 1972, Steve
Sawyer began editing the CALIFORNIA CHESS TOURNAMENT BULLETIN.
By the end of
1972, the Berkeley Chess Club had over 400 USCF members.
In 1973, musician
and actor Bobby Darin (1936-1973) was about to sponsor
the richest chess tournament ever, the Bobby Darin International Chess Classic.
However, he died during a heart operation on Los Angeles and the event was
canceled. Bobby Darin was always explaining chess
during his Bobby Darin show. He was playing chess just before he went into
surgery. His wife, Sandra Dee, was also a chess player. Bobby Darin's son, Dodd, runs a chess publishing house.
In February,
1973, Craig Barnes won the Central California Grand Prix, held in Berkeley. 2nd
place went to James McCormick. The tournament had 267 players.
In March, 1973,
Arthur Bisguier won the 3rd Lone Pine International. 2nd place went to Walter
Browne and Laszlo Szabo.
In March, 1973,
Philip Smith won the Northern California Open, held in Sacramento.
In March, 1973,
Henry Giertych won on tiebreak over William Archbold in the Beale AFB Spring
Open.
In April, 1973,
James McCormick, Gene Lee, Dennis Waterman, and Robert Newbold won the Western
Open, held in San Jose.
In April, 1973,
Kenneth Fitzgerald won the Santa Cruz Open. In April, 1973, Russell Vorpagel
won the Visalia Amateur Open.
In May, 1973,
Diane Savereid won the Southern California Women's Championship, held in
Hollywood, with a 6-0 score. Lima Grumette took 2nd.
In June, 1973,
Larry Christiansen (2390) of Riverside won the 1973 U.S. Junior Championship,
held in San Francisco. Mark Diesen took 2nd.
In June, 1973,
Romeo Rodriquez, James McCormick, and Max Burkett won the San Anselmo Open.
In June, 1973, Lt
Col Henry Giertych won the Beale AFB Ch. Bill Wall and John Manson took 2nd-3rd
place.
In June, 1973,
Takashi Kurosaki won the California Junior Championship, held in San Francisco.
In July, 1973,
Craig Barnes won the 10th Annual Stamer Memorial in San Francisco.
In July, 1973,
Kim Commons won the Paul Masson American Class Championship, held in Saratoga.
2nd-3rd went to John Dedinsky and Roy Ervin. The tournament had 537 players.
In July, 1973,
David Strauss won on tiebreak over Walter Browne in the California Chess
Classic, held in Los Angeles.
In July, 1973,
John Williams won the Simi Valley Chess Club Championship.
In August, 1973,
Jeff Kent won the San Diego Open. There were 158 players.
In August, 1973,
Paul Stang won the Fort Ord Championship.
In September
1973, Walter Browne won the Golden West Open, held in Los Angeles. There were
347 players. 2nd place went to Kim Commons.
In September
1973, Tibor Weinberger won on tiebreak over Boris Siff and James McCormick in
the California Open, held in Monterey. All scored 6-1.
In September,
1973, John Grefe of Berkeley won the 22nd U.S. Chess Championship, held in El
Paso. He tied with grandmaster Lubomir Kavalek.
In 1973, the
California State Championship was won by David J. Strauss.
In September,
1973, Ruben Rodriguez won the Pacific Coast Open, held in Los Angeles. There
were 144 players.
In 1973, the 4th
Redwood City Open was won by Boral Menas.
In November,
1973, James Tarjan won the 9th American Open. Kim Commons took 2nd, followed by
Ruben Rodriguez. There were 403 players.
In 1973, Walter
Browne won the 3rd Los Angeles Open. Anthony Saidy took 2nd place. There were
116 players.
In 1973, the 3rd
California High School Championship was won by Scott Stewart.
In 1973, the
Monterey Park Chess Club Championship was won by Ming-Farn Chen.
In December,
1973, Alex Suhobeck won the Monterey Coast Classic.
In March, 1974,
Walter Browne won the 4th annual Louis D. Statham Tournament in Lone Pine.
In April, 1974,
Svetozar Gligoric won the Los Angeles International (Eagle Rock). Florin
Gheorghiu and Julio Kaplan took 2nd-3rd, followed by Edmar Mednis.
In 1974, Larry
Christiansen won the San Bernadino Open.
In 1974, Nick
DeFirmian won the 1st Cal Poly Open.
In July, 1974,
Larry Christiansen or Riverside tied with Peter Winston in the U.S. Junior
Championship, held in Philadelphia.
In July 1974, the
annual Pacific Southwest Open was held in Santa Monica. James Ulrich won the
event on tiebreak with a 6-1 score, The others that
scored 6-1 were William Batchelder, Julius Loftsson, Tibor Weinberger, Ray
Martin, and Alan Pollard.
In 1974, the 10th
Monterey International Open was won by Russo-American master Alex Suhobeck.
In 1974, Jeremy
Silman won the San Francisco Championship.
In 1974, Randall
Hough won the Riverside Chess Club Championship.
In 1974, the LERA
Peninsula Class Championship, held in Sunnyvale, was won by Dennis Waterman.
In 1974, John
Milton won the San Rafael Open.
In 1974, E4 Van
R. Vandiver won the Fort Ord Championship.
In September,
1974, Lewis Castle won the Beale AFB Open.
In November,
1974, Kim Commons and Peter Biyiasas won the 10th American Open.
In 1974, George
Koltanowski of San Francisco became president of the United States Chess
Federation.
In 1974, Peter
Prochaska was the founding chaiman of CalChess (The Northern California Chess
Association) and the first General Director of the National Chess League.
From 1975 through
1977, Lina Grumette of Hollywood published New Move chess magazine.
In April 1975,
James Tarjan won the Western Qualifying Tournament in Hollywood. Tibor
Weinberger took 2nd place.
In April, 1975,
Vladimir Liberzon won the 5th Louis D. Statham Masters-Plus Chess Tournament at
Lone Pine.
In July 1975,
Peter Biyiasis won the Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica. Kim
Commons took 2nd place.
In August 1975,
Walter Browne won the 3rd annual Paul Masson tournament near Saratoga. Peter
Biyiasis took 2nd place. It was the largest outdoor chess tournament ever held,
with 735 players.
On September 30,
1975, Charles Bagby died in San Francisco. He had been a member of the
Mechanics' Institute Chess Club since 1938. He was born in 1903.
In October 1975,
Jeff Kent and Tibor Weinberger tied for 1st place at the championship tournament
of The Chess Set of West Hollywood.
In November,
1975, Kim Commons and David Strauss won the 11th American Open. Strauss later
became an International Master, but quit competitive chess and became involved
in medical research (life expectancy studies) and was professor of statistics
at the University of California.
In March, 1976,
Tigran Petrosian won the 6th Lone Pine International.
In 1976, CHESS
4.5 won the Paul Masson "B" Class Championship in Saratoga with a 5-0
score.
On August 6,
1976, Gregor Piatigorsky died. He was born in 1903.
On September 27,
1976, Irving Rivise died in Los Angeles. He was a former California State
champion and former vice president of the United States Chess Federation. He
was born in 1918
In November,
1976, Walter Browne, Yasser Sierawan, and John Pike won the 12th American Open.
In March 1977,
Yuri Balashov, Dragutin Sahovic, Oscar Panno, and Nona Gaprindashvili won the
7th Lone Pine International.
In March 1977,
Jack Peters won the Southern California Invitational Championship, held in
Hollywood.
In June 1977, the
strongest championship tournament of the Santa Monica Bay Chess Club was held.
John Peters, Roy Ervin, Allan Pollard, and Tibor Weinberger all tied for 1st
place.
In July 1977,
James Tarjan won the annual Pacific Southwest Open, held in Santa Monica. He
scored 6-0. 2nd place went to Calvin Blocker.
In 1977, the
Southern California chess championship was held in Hollywood, and won by Jack
Peters.
In 1977, the
California State Chess Federation was broken up into the Northern California
Chess Federation and the Southern California Chess Federation.
In November 1977,
the 13th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Jack Peters and Cicero
Braga.
In April 1978,
Bent Larsen won the 8th Lone Pine International.
In November 1978,
the 14th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by David Strauss and Paul
Whitehead.
In 1979, Glorin
Gheorghiu, Vladimir Liberzon, and Vlastimil Hort won the 9th Lone Pine
International.
In 1979, LeRoy
Johnson died at the age of 84. He was president of the California Chess
Federation for 10 years.
In 1979, the
Southern California chess championship was held in Hollywood, and won by Vince
McCambridge and Julius Loftsson.
In 1979, Jeff
Long won the Southern California Open Championship, held in West Covina.
In 1979, Yassar
Seirawan won the US Junior Invitational championship, held in Hollywood.
In November 1979,
the 15th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Perry Youngworth.
In March 1980,
Roman Dzindzichashvili won the 10th Lone Pine International.
In April 1980,
Viktor Korchnoi win the 11th and last Lone Pine
International.
In 1980, Doug
Root and Perry Youngworth won the Southern California Open Championship, held
in Los Angeles.
In 1980, John
Grefe won the California State Championship.
In November 1980,
the 16th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Walter Browne, John
Grefe, and David Strauss.
In 1981, Kamran
Shirazi won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Los Angeles.
In July 1981,
James Tarjan and Jack Peters tied for 1st in the annual Pacific Southwest Open
in Santa Monica.
In August 1981,
the 82nd U.S. Open was held in Palo Alto. Tied for 1st place were Florin
Gheorghiu, Larry Christiansen, Jeremy Silman, Nick de Firmian, and John Meyer.
In 1981, John
Grefe won the California State championship.
In November 1981,
the 17th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Nick de Firmian and
John Watson.
In 1982, the Berkeley
Chess School was formed.
In 1982, Doug
Roor and James Tarjan won the Southern California Open Championship, held in
Anaheim.
In 1982, John
Grefe won the California State championship.
In November 1982,
the 18th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Jack Peters, James
Tarjan, and Ian Rogers.
In 1983, Louis
Statham died.
In 1983, Kamran
Shirazi won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Los Angeles.
In 1983, the 84th
US Open was held in Pasadena. Larry Christiansen and Viktor Korchnoi tied for
1st place.
In November 1983,
the 19th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Larry Christiansen,
David Strauss, and Nikolai Minev.
In 1984, Kamran
Shirazi won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Los Angeles.
In November 1984,
the 20th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Jack Peters and Igor
Ivanov.
In 1985, Kamran
Shirazi won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Pasadena.
In November 1985,
the 21st American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won byYasser Seirawan, Igor
Ivanov, and David Strauss.
In 1986, Larry
Remlinger and Dan Durham won the Southern California Open Championship, held in
San Diego.
In November 1986,
the 22nd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Lev Alburt, Walter
Browne, and Boris Gulko.
In 1987, Doug
Root won the title of Southern California Open Champion on tiebreak, held in
Commerce. Victor Frias of New York won the event, but was not a California
resident.
In November 1987,
the 23rd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Yasser Seirawan.
In 1988,
California was split into Northern California and Southern California for
representation to the United States Chess Federation.
In 1988, Kamran
Shirazi won the Southern California Open Championship, held in Long Beach.
In November 1988,
the 24th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Jack Peters.
In 1989, Jack
Peters won the Southern California Invitational Championship, held in Commerce.
In November 1989,
the 25th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Gata Kamsky, Larry
Christiansen, Maxim Dlugy, Walter Browne, and Nick de Firmian.
In November 1990,
the 26th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Walter Browne and Igor
Ivanov.
In the 1990s,
National Master Robert Snyder ran several tournaments in the area and taught
chess to Will Smith and Nicholas Cage and family.
From March 2-14,
1991, the Pan Pacific Grandmaster Chess Tournament was held in San Francisco.
The event was won by Eugene Torre. 2nd place went to Patrick Wolff. 3rd-6th
went to Mikhail Tal, Joel Benjamin, Ian Rogers, and Larry Christiansen. 7th
place went to John Fedrorowicz. 8th-10th place went to Utut Adianto, Lubomir
Ftacnik, and Susan Polgar. 11th place went to John Grefe. 12th place went to
Walter Browne.
In 1991, Jennie
Frenklakh won the California Elementary Scholastic championship.
In August 1991,
the 92nd US Open was held in Los Angeles. Michael Rohde and Vladimir Akopian
tied for 1st place.
On October 1,
1991, Sam Shankland was born in Berkeley, California.
In November 1991,
the 27th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Joel Benjamin.
In November 1992,
the 28th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Cris Ramayrat, Jeremy
Silman, David Strauss, and Anthony Siady.
On October 20,
1993, Harry Borochow died.
In November 1993,
the 29th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Loek Van Wely.
In 1994, Joseph
Neale was a postal worker who was dismissed from a part-time city job coach
coaching chess as a community center in Riverside, California. He took his
grudge to City Hall where he shot the mayor, three members of the Council, and
two policemen in 1998. 11 other people sustained minor injuries from flying
glass. None of the shots were fatal.
In November 1994,
the 30th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Dmitry Gurevich.
In 1995,
Christopher Black won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In August 1995,
the 96th US Open was held in Concord. The winner was Alex Yermolinsky.
In 1995, John
Grefe won the California State championship.
In November 1995,
the 31st American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Igor Ivanov.
In November 1996,
the 32nd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Alex Yermolinsky.
In 1997, Steve
Jacobi won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 1997,
Izumikawa won the Northern California Chess Championship.
In November 1997,
the 33rd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Alex Goldin, Igor
Ivanov, and Walter Browne.
In 1998, Albert
Rich won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In November 1998,
the 34th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Cyrus Lakdawala and
Pavel Blatny.
In 1999,
Alexander Levitan won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In November 1999,
the 35th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Eduard Gufeld.
In 2000,
Kavyashree Mallanna won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2000, the
Southern California Chess Championship was held in Hollywood, and won by Cyrus
Lakdawala and Jack Peters.
In November 2000,
the 36th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Andranik Matikozyan.
In 2000,
Alexander Levitan won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2001, Levon
Altounin won the Southern California championship.
In November 2001,
the 37th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Melikset Khachiyan.
In 2002, Frisco
Del Rosario won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2002, Ricardo
DeGuzman won the CalChess State Championship.
In November 2002,
the 38th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Pavel Blatny and Yuri
Shulman.
In January 2003,
the Los Angeles Chess Club was officially established by Senior Master Mick
Bighamian in the West Los Angeles area on Santa Monica Blvd.
In June 2003,
Adrian Keatinge-Clay won the 30th Arthur Stamer Memorial.
In August 2003,
Lev Pisarsky won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In August 2003,
Alan Bishop and Matthew Robertson tied for 1st at the San Luis Obispo County
Championsip.
In September
2003, Dmitry Zilberstein won the CalChess (Northern California) State
Championship in San Francisco. He won on tiebreaks over Timothy Taylor
andTigran Ishkhanov
In 2003, the
104th US Open was held in Los Angeles. The winner was Alexander Shabalov.
In November 2003,
the 39th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Suat Atalik, Varuzhan
Akobian, and Pavel Blatny.
In November 2003,
the 37th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Melikset Khachiyan.
In 2004, Albert
Rich won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In Septembert
2004, Vladimir Mezentsev won the CalChess State Championship. 2nd place went to
Ricardo DeGuzman. 3rd place went to John Donaldson.
In November 2004,
the 40th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Melikset Khachiyan.
In 2005, GM
Walter Browne of Berkeley won the U.S. Senior Open.
In 2005, Albert
Rich won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In September
2005, Alex Yermolinsky won the CalChess State Championship, held in San
Francisco.
In November 2005,
the 41st American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Vladimir Mezentsev.
In November 2005,
Cusi and De Guzman tied for 1st in the 35th Carroll Capps Memorial.
In December 2005,
Leah Koltanowski died in San Francisco at the age of 99. She was the wife of
George Koltanowski.
In 2006, Mike
Splane won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2006, Josh
Friedel won the CalChess State Championship.
On September 22,
2006, Hans Poschmann died at the age of 73.
In November 2006,
the 42nd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by David Pruess and
Melikset Khachiyan.
In 2007, Mike
Splane won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2007, Josh
Friedel won the CalChess State Championship.
In November 2007,
the 43rd American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Alex Yermolinsky.
In 2008, Sam
Shankland won the CalChess State Championship.
In 2008, Mike
Splane won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
On October 29,
2008, Bill Addison died.
In November 2008,
the 44th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Melikset Khachiyan.
In 2009, Frisco
Del Rosario won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell.
In 2009, Sam
Shankland won the CalChess State Championship.
On October 1,
2009, Jerry Hanken died from complications of diabetes.
In November 2009,
the 45th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Melikset Khachiyan on
tiebreak over Andranik Matikozyan, and Julian Landaw.
In July 2010,
Ricardo DeGuzman won the Sacramento Championship.
In July 2010,
Mike Splane won the Kolty Chess Club championship in Campbell
In August 2010,
the 111th US Open (Jerry Hanken Memorial) was held in Irvine. The winner was
Alejandro Ramirez. 2nd-5th were V. Akobian, A.
Shabalov, Julio Sadorra, and D. Naroditsky.
In September
2010, Jesse Kraai won the CalChess (Northern California) State Championship in
San Francisco. 2nd-3rd went to Steven Zierk and Saku Uesugi.
In October 2010,
Jesse Kraai won the Bay Area Chess California Class Championhip in Burlingame.
In November 2010,
the 46th American Open, held in Santa Monica, was won by Josh Friedel, Melikset
Khachiyan, and Enrico Sevillano.
In 2010, Samuel
Sevian of Santa Clara became the youngest chess master in the U.S. at the age
of 9. He was born on December 26, 2000. He became an expert at the age of 8
years and 64 days. He was rated 2201 at the age of 9 years, 11 months and 15
days.