Brevity and Brilliancy in Chess. A Collection of Games at This "Royal Pastime," Ingeniously Contested and Ending with Scientific Problems. Culled from the Whole Range of Chess Literature
Brevity and Brilliancy in Chess. A Collection of Games at This "Royal Pastime," Ingeniously Contested and Ending with Scientific Problems. Culled from the Whole Range of Chess Literature
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Brevity and Brilliancy in Chess. A Collection of Games at This "Royal Pastime," Ingeniously Contested and Ending with Scientific Problems. Culled from the Whole Range of Chess Literature

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Author: Hazeltine, Miron James (1847-1907)

Year: 1866

Publisher: D Appleton and Company

Place: New York

Description:

xvi+249+[10 ad] pages with frontispiece with tissue guard, diagrams and index. Small octavo (7 1/2" 5") bound in original publisher pebbled green cloth with new spine label in white with gilt lettering, board ruled blind stamped. (Betts: 24-5, Bibliotheca van der Linde-Niemeijeriana: 3163) First edition.

125 games with letter notes and 15 problems by various composers. Includes index of players. The frontispiece shows C H Stanley ad J H turner with a game of chess and J Lowenthal as spectator.

Miron James Hazeltine, chess authority and chess editor of the New York Clipper for more than fifty years, was born in Rumney, New Hampshire, November 13, 1824. He was of German ancestry and was the son of James Hazeltine and his wife Lydia Steams. In the fall of 1847 he entered Amherst College, but while there he was severely injured in the gymnasium, causing him to leave college in the spring of 1849 and making him a semi-invalid the rest of his life. Later he went to Lowell, Massachusetts, where he started to study law and where he remained for four years. He then went to New York City where, from 1859 to 1861, he was principal of the Clinton Institute, a classical private school. He was married in Waterville, New Hampshire, July 21, 1853, to Hanna M. Bryant, a relative of William Cullen Bryant, and by her had seven children. He began his first chess column in the New York Saturday Courier, February 3, 1855, a pioneer attempt and probably the first chess column in the United States. In August, 1856, he began his chess column in the New York Clipper, and never missed a single issue until shortly before his death, a period of more than fifty years. In the late 1860's he moved to Campton Village, New Hampshire, where he was a justice of the peace from 1871 on. Afterwards he moved to Thornton, New Hampshire, where he died February 24, 1907. Hazeltine was a classical scholar and made a translation of Anacreon from the Greek. For Beadle he wrote the Dime Chess Instructor (1860) and published his Brevity and Brilliancy in Chess in New York in 1866. His collection of books on chess was one of the largest and most valuable in New England.

Condition:

Occasional pencil marginalia through out and back end paper, corners gently bumped, spine renewed with new spine label, some light shelf wear else a very good copy.