My Fifty Years of Chess
My Fifty Years of Chess
My Fifty Years of Chess
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My Fifty Years of Chess

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Author: Marshall, Frank James (1877-1944) inscribed

Year: 1942

Publisher: Horowitz and Harkness

Place: New York

Description:

vi+242 pages with 13 illustrations, portraits and diagrams with index. Octavo (8 3/4" x 5 3/4") bound in original publisher's green cloth with gilt lettering within a black box on cover and spine. Volume 2 in the chess classic series. Inscribed "To Roy, Phillis and Margaret, With kind remembrances from Frank and Carie Marshall. New York, NY August 4th, 1944.". (Betts: 29-72) First edition.

Frank Marshall was born on August 10, 1877, he was born in the city of Brooklyn (at present, the district of New York), the American chess player, one of the strongest world chess theorists at the beginning of the 20th century. Frank Marshall began playing chess in Canada, where in 1894 became by the champion of the Montreal's chess club. On returning to America won the champion's title of the chess club, located in Brooklyn (1899). He won the one-round tournament at the chess congress, held in London (1899). In 1900 shared the 3rd-4th place with G. Marosi in Paris and once defeated upon the tournament's winner, Em. Lasker. In 1903 occupied the 2nd place in Vienna (gambit tournament). In 1904 occupied the 3rd place at the tournament, held in Monte Carlo, and at the Cambridge-Springs became by the winner (the highest sports success), in 2 points having outrun Lasker and D. Yanovsky. F. Marshall was awarded by the US champion title for the victory a the tournament, but he refused of this title, because G. Pillsbury didn't participate at the competition. He won 15 matches from 23 ones (1 match was in a draw). However, he was defeated by Lasker at the match for the world championship (1907) (+0, -8, =7); he also suffered the large defeats at the matches with Z. Tarrasch (1905; +1, -8, =8) and Capablanca (1909; +1, -8, =14). Yanovsky (1899; +1, -3, =0; 1905; +8, -5, -4; 1908, +2, -5, =3; 1912, +6, -2, =24 1916, +4, -1, =3); R. Teikhmann (1902; +2, -0, =3); A. Rubinstein (1908; +3, -4, =1); J. Mizes (1908; +5, -4, =1); O. Duras (1913; +3, -1, =1). In 1909, having won at the match of J. Showalter (+7, -2, =3), he became by the US champion. In 1936, being unconquerable, he became by the champion, having expressed a wish this title would played at the tournaments in future. A participant of a number of the All-world Olympiads. The role of Marshall in the chess development in USA is great. In 1915 he organized the chess club - "Marshall chess club" and up to the life end remained by its leader.

Condition:

Inscribed on front end paper. Some offset darkening to pastedowns, closed tear at head page 25, light edge wear else a very good copy.