Newell W. Banks
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Newell William Banks (October 10, 1887 – 1977) was an American checkers and chess player. Banks played his first game of blindfold checkers at age five years and six months at the Detroit Chess and Checker Club. In 1947, at age 60, for 45 consecutive days (4 hr per day) Banks played 1387 blindfold checker games, winning 1331 games, drawing 54 and losing only two, while playing six games at a time.[citation needed] He also set a new blindfold speed record playing 62 games in four hours, winning 61 and 1 drawn at the Convention Hall, Detroit, Michigan.[citation needed] Banks also played chess and is counted among the few players who have mastered both games. In the Master's Invitational Chess Tournament in Chicago, 1926, Banks defeated Isaac Kashdan and U.S. Chess Champion Frank Marshall, and drew with former champion Jackson Showalter, Samuel Factor, and Oscar Chajes.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Korn, Walter (1978). America's Chess Heritage. David McKay, p. 128. ISBN 0-679-13200-7.
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