Joseph Henry Blackburne

Joseph Henry Blackburne

Joseph Henry Blackburne, the "Black Death"
Full name Joseph Henry Blackburne
Country England
Born 10 December 1841(1841-12-10)
Manchester, England
Died 1 September 1924(1924-09-01) (aged 82)
London, England

Joseph Henry Blackburne (10 December 1841 – 1 September 1924), nicknamed "The Black Death", dominated British chess during the latter part of the 19th century. He learned the game at the relatively late age of 18 but quickly became a strong player and went on to develop a professional chess career that spanned over 50 years. At one point he was the world's second most successful player, with a string of tournament victories behind him, but he really enjoyed popularising chess by giving simultaneous and blindfold displays around the country. Blackburne also published a collection of his own games, and was a chess correspondent for a leading journal until his death.

He was also noted for heavy drinking of Scotch whisky, especially during exhibition games, and this became the subject of many anecdotes. However he occasionally became violent when drunk, and his victims included other chess players.

Contents

Biography

Joseph Henry Blackburne was born in Manchester in December 1841. His father was a temperance reformer who travelled all over Britain and Ireland, taking his son with him. Ironically Joseph Blackburne became famous for his heavy drinking of whisky while playing chess.[1][2]

He learned how to play draughts as a child but it was not until he heard about Paul Morphy's exploits around Europe that he switched to playing chess,[3] at the age of 18-19:

I learnt the game in, say, 1859[3]
—Blackburne

Blackburne joined the Manchester Chess Club around 1860.[4] In July 1861 he lost 5-0 in a match with Manchester's strongest player, Edward Pindar (and champion of the Provinces), but 3 months later Blackburne defeated Pindar (five wins, two draws, one loss). Next year he became champion of the city club, ahead of Pindar and Bernhard Horwitz (who taught him endgame theory).[5]

Blackburne's introduction to blindfold chess was a little later: in November 1861 Louis Paulsen give a simultaneous blindfold exhibition in Manchester, beating Blackburne among others; Blackburne was soon playing chess blindfolded with three players simultaneously.[4][5]

Competitive chess

Less than two years after learning the moves, Blackburne entered the 1862 London International Tournament (the world's first chess round-robin or all-play-all tournament) and defeated Wilhelm Steinitz in their individual game, although Blackburne finished in 9th place. Up to that point time-keeping was measured with hourglasses, and it was Blackburne who suggested chess clocks.[1] This trip cost Blackburne his job back in Manchester (accounts vary about what it was), and he became a professional chess player.[1]

In the 1868-69 season he won the British championship by beating the current holder, Cecil Valentine De Vere, and he was therefore regarded as England's best player.[1] His first major international success was in a strong tournament at Baden-Baden in 1870, where he shared 3rd place with Gustav Neumann, behind Adolf Anderssen and Wilhelm Steinitz but ahead of Paulsen, De Vere, Simon Winawer, Samuel Rosenthal and Johannes von Minckwitz.[6]

Blackburne was regularly one of the world's top five players from 1871 to 1889, although Steinitz, Emanuel Lasker and, during his brief prime, Johannes Zukertort were clearly better players; and he remained in the top 20 until 1902, when he was 61 years old.[7] His best results were in international tournaments. Although tournaments were much less frequent then than they are now,[2] Blackburne played in nearly one strong tournament per year from 1870 to 1899; in particular he competed regularly in the German Chess Championship, which was an open tournament.[8] In the 1870s and 1880s he was almost always a high prize-winner. His best results were 1st equal with Steinitz at Vienna 1873, where the commentators nicknamed Blackburne "the Black Death" (Steinitz won the play-off);[1] 1st in London 1876 with a score of 10/11, ahead of Zukertort; and 1st in Berlin 1881, 3 points ahead of Zukertort. He also achieved 2nd place in: a strong mini-tournament in London 1872 (behind Steinitz but ahead of Zukertort), George Alcock MacDonnell and De Vere; shared 2nd place at Hamburg 1885 (with Siegbert Tarrasch, James Mason, Berthold Englisch and Max Weiss; behind Isidor Gunsberg; ahead of George Henry Mackenzie and five others); shared 2nd place at Frankfurt 1887 (with Weiss; behind Mackenzie; ahead of Curt von Bardeleben, Tarrasch and several others).[8] His worst result from this 20-year period was 6th place in the 1882 Vienna "super-tournament", the one occasion on which all his major rivals placed ahead of him.[8]

In the mid to late 1890s Blackburne's was less successful in tournaments, but by this time he was competing against the next generation of players, Emanuel Lasker and Lasker's major rivals. Blackburne's worst results were 10th place at Hastings 1895 and 11th at Nuremberg 1896; but both of these tournaments included Lasker and most of the other top players of the new generation; and in both of these he finished ahead of several of the new stars and ahead of the few competing players of his own generation.[1][8]

Chessmetrics concludes that Blackburne's best performances, taking account of the strength of his opponents, were his second places at Frankfurt 1887 (behind Mackenzie) and London 1892 (behind Emanuel Lasker). At London 1892 he finished only ½ point behind Emanuel Lasker and 2 points ahead of the third-placed player, Mason.[7] Emanuel Lasker thought that Blackburne had more talent than Steinitz, but lacked the willpower and capacity for hard work needed for becoming world champion.[9]

Blackburne's match results look much less impressive. In particular he was twice thrashed by Steinitz, in 1862 (+1, -7, =2) and 1876 (+0, -7, =0); but in 1862 Blackburne had been playing chess for barely 2 years, and in 1876 Steinitz was playing at his life-time best and in the middle of a 24-game winning streak.[10] Emanuel Lasker annihilated Blackburne in 1892, but Lasker also beat Steinitz very decisively in their 1894 championship match. Blackburne was also comfortably beaten in 1881 by Zukertort (+2 =5 −7), who was in great form at the time;[11] and Zukertort's health and play were declining rapidly when Blackburne beat him in 1887 (+5-1=7).[12] On the other hand against Gunsberg Blackburne won his 1881 match (+7 -4 =3) and lost his 1887 match (+2, -5, =6); the 1887 match was Gunsberg's strongest performance,[13] and Gunsberg only narrowly lost a world title match against Steinitz in 1890 (+6=9-4).[8]

The 1876 match against Steinitz was held at the West-end Chess Club in London.[14] The stakes were £60 a side with the winner taking all. This was a considerable sum of money in Victorian times – £60 in 1876 would be roughly equivalent to £29,000 in 2006's money.[15] This was the first time that spectators were charged an entrance fee (half a guinea, = 52.5P in decimal terms) to see a chess match.[1]

Exhibitions and other games

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a b c d e f g h

After losing his job and discovering that he had a special aptitude for blindfold chess, in Blackburne began give blindfold and simultaneous exhibitions all over Britain,[1] and for most of his career made most of his income from these exhibitions, including blindfold displays against up to sixteen opponents simultaneously.[16] He even travelled to Australia and New Zealand in 1885 to give exhibitions.[1]

The Teesside Chess Association (formed in 1883; now called the Cleveland Chess Association) invited world-class players to give exhibitions, in order to raise money for the Association. Blackburne's fee for two simultaneous displays and a blindfold event in 1889 was 9 guineas (about £4,600 at 2006 values[17]). Players paid the club 1/- (5P in decimal terms) for a simultaneous game or 2/6d (12.5P in decimal) to play him blindfold. In the simultaneous games he won 29, drew two and lost only one; in the blindfold he won seven and drew one with no losses.[18]

In addition he played top board for the British team in 11 of the Anglo-American cable matches which commenced in 1896 and in the first six matches he recorded a score of 3½-2½ against the top American, Harry Pillsbury.

It is estimated that Blackburne played 100,000 games in his career, more than any other professional chess-player.[1] However he still had time to marry twice and with his second wife, Mary Fox, he had a son, Julius.[19]

The dubious chess opening the Blackburne Shilling Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nd4?!) has been named for Blackburne because he purportedly used it to win quickly against amateurs, thus winning the shilling wagered on the game. Chess historian Bill Wall questioned this story because he could find no record of any games Blackburne played with this opening. The opening is mentioned by Steinitz in his book The Modern Chess Instructor (1889).[20]

Hard drinking

Blackburne's fondness for drinking whisky at the board once led him to down an opponent's glass. Shortly afterwards, the opponent resigned, leading him to quip, "My opponent left a glass of whisky en prise and I took it en passant". In an interview with a liquor industry publication, Blackburne once claimed that drinking whisky cleared his brain and improved his chessplay.[16]

There is even a story that part of the prize fund at Hastings 1895 was paid in advance, and for Blackburne the "currency" was a case of Scotch. Mr. Blackburne finished the case of Scotch during the first six rounds of play at which point his game fell off.

During a simultaneous exhibition at Cambridge University, the students thought they would gain an advantage by placing two bottles of whisky near the boards. Blackburne won all his games very quickly and finished off both bottles of whisky before the exhibition was over.[1]

Blackburne could become violent when drunk – in 1889 Steinitz claimed that Blackburne had assaulted him in London (1867) and a few years later in Paris, and that Blackburne had also assaulted three other men, one even smaller than the five-foot-tall Steinitz.[21][22]

Writings

In 1889 he published Mr. Blackburne's Games at Chess, edited by P. Anderson Graham.[1][4]

For many years Blackburne was a chess correspondent for The Field, the UK's leading sports journal, and held that position until his death.

Final years

In 1914, at the age of 72, Blackburne won a Special Brilliancy Prize for his win over Aron Nimzowitsch at the great St. Petersburg 1914 tournament, but failed to qualify for the final stage.[23] That same year he tied for first place in the British championship with Frederick Yates, but ill health prevented him from contesting the play-off for the title. This was Blackburne's last major tournament. However in 1921 Blackburne was still giving simultaneous exhibitions.[1]

In 1922 his wife died. Blackburne died of a heart attack on 1 September 1924 at the age of 82.[1] He is buried in the Brockley and Ladywell Cemeteries in Lewisham.

Notable games

Legacy

Blackburne is an icon of Romantic chess because of his wide open and highly tactical style of play. His large black beard and aggressive style earned him the nickname of "der Schwarze Tod" ("the Black Death", based on the plague of the same name) after his performance in the 1873 Vienna tournament.[1] In 1881, according to one retrospective rating calculation, he was the second most successful player in the world.[7] He was especially strong at endgames and had a great combinative ability which enabled him to win many brilliancy prizes, but he will be best remembered for his popular simultaneous and lightning displays which captured the imagination of the general public who flocked to watch him.

Mr. Blackburne's Games at Chess, which he published in 1899, has been recently reprinted by Moravian Chess. It contains over 400 of his games, around 20 problems composed by him, and a short biography.

Tournament results

Sources:[1][6][8][24]

Date Location Place Notes
1862 London International Tournament 9= Adolf Anderssen won; Blackburne shared last place.
1867 Dundee International Tournament 5 Behind Gustav Neumann, Wilhelm Steinitz, George Alcock MacDonnell and Cecil Valentine De Vere
1869 2nd British Chess Championship 1 Beat De Vere in the final.
1870 Baden-Baden 3= Tied with Neumann; behind Adolf Anderssen and Steinitz; but ahead of Louis Paulsen, De Vere, Szymon Winawer, Samuel Rosenthal and Johannes von Minckwitz
1872 London 2 Behind Steinitz; ahead of Zukertort, MacDonnell and De Vere
1873 Vienna 1= Tied with Steinitz, who won both games of the playoff match
This is where Blackburne was nicknamed "the Black Death".
1876 London 1 Ahead of Johannes Zukertort; Blackburne scored 10/11; this was just a month after Steinitz had whitewashed Blackburne 7-0 in a match.
1878 Paris 3 Behind Winawer and Zukertort
1880 Berlin 1= Tied with Berthold Englisch and Adolf Schwarz
1881 Berlin 1 3 points ahead of Zukertort (2nd)
1882 Vienna 6 Behind Steinitz, Winawer, James Mason, Zukertort and George Henry Mackenzie
1883 London 3 Behind Zukertort and Steinitz; ahead of Mikhail Chigorin, Englisch, Mackenzie, Mason, Rosenthal, Winawer and Henry Edward Bird
1885 Hamburg 2= With Siegbert Tarrasch, Mason, Englisch and Max Weiss; behind Isidor Gunsberg; ahead of Mackenzie and 5 others.
1887 Frankfurt 2= With Weiss; behind Mackenzie; ahead of Curt von Bardeleben, Tarrasch and several others; Zukertort could only finish 14=.
1889 Breslau 8= With Mason; behind Tarrasch, Amos Burn, Jacques Mieses, von Bardeleben, Johann Bauer, Gunsberg, and Louis Paulsen. Ahead of Johann Berger, Emil Schallopp, Johannes Metger, Alexander Fritz, von Minckwitz, Semyon Alapin, Max Harmonist, Emanuel Schiffers and George H. D. Gossip.[25]
1889 New York 4 Behind Chigorin, Weiss and Gunsberg; ahead of Burn and 15 others. This tournament was extremely strong, as it was designed to select a challenger for Steinitz' title.[26]
1890 Manchester 2 Behind Tarrasch; ahead of Mackenzie, Bird and Mason
1892 Belfast International Tournament 1= equal first with Mason
1894 Leipzig 4 Behind Tarrasch, Paul Lipke and Richard Teichmann; ahead of Carl August Walbrodt, Dawid Janowski, Georg Marco, Mieses and Carl Schlechter
1895 Hastings 10 Behind Harry Nelson Pillsbury, Chigorin, Emanuel Lasker, Tarrasch, Steinitz, Emanuel Schiffers, von Bardeleben, Teichmann and Schlechter; ahead of Walbrodt, Burn, Janowski, Mason, Bird, Gunsberg, Adolf Albin, Marco, William Pollock, Mieses, Samuel Tinsley and Beniamino Vergani.
1896 Nuremberg 11 Behind Em. Lasker, Géza Maróczy, Pillsbury, Tarrasch, Janowski, Steinitz, Walbrodt, Schiffers and Chigorin; ahead of Rudolf Charousek, Marco, Albin, Winawer, Jackson Showalter, Moritz Porges, Schallopp and Teichmann.
1897 Berlin 3 Behind Charousek and Walbrodt; ahead of Janowski, Burn, Alapin, Marco, Schlechter, Caro, Chigorin, Schiffers, Metger, Winawer, Wilhelm Cohn, Hugo Suechting, Teichmann, Englisch, Adolf Zinkl, Albin and von Bardeleben.[27]
1898 Vienna 11 Behind Tarrasch, Pillsbury, Janowski, Steinitz, Schlechter, Chigorin, Burn, Lipke, Maroczy and Simon Alapin; ahead of Schiffers, Marco, Showalter, Walbrodt, Halprin, Horatio Caro, David Graham Baird and Trenchard.
1899 London 6 Behind Em. Lasker, Janowski, Maroczy, Pillsbury and Schlechter; ahead of Chigorin, Showalter, Mason, W. Cohn, Steinitz, Lee, Bird, Tinsley and Teichmann (who withdrew after 4 games due to illness). Blackburne, as Black, beat Lasker; this was the first time a British player had defeated a reigning world champion.
1904 Hastings (British Championship) 3  
1907 (British Championship) 2=  
1910 (British Championship) 2=  
1913 (British Championship) 3  
1914 St. Petersburg --- Blackburne did not qualify for the 5-player final stage, in which the placings were: 1 Em. Lasker; 2 José Raúl Capablanca; 3 Alexander Alekhine; 4 Tarrasch; 5 Frank Marshall. At 3.5/10, Blackburne had the 4th-5th best score of the 6 players who did not qualify for the finals - behind Ossip Bernstein, Akiba Rubinstein, and Aron Nimzowitsch; tied with Janowski; and ahead of Gunsberg. Won a Special Brilliancy Prize for his win over Nimzowitsch.[23]
1914 (British Championship) 1= Tied with Frederick Yates; this was Blackburne's last international tournament; he was 72.

Match results

Here are Blackburne's results in matches:[1][8][13]

Date Opponent Result Location Score Notes

1862-3 Dec.-Jan. London, Steinitz-Blackburne +7 =2 -1

1862-63 Wilhelm Steinitz Lost London 2/10 +1=2-7 Only 2 years after Blackburne started playing chess.
1876 Wilhelm Steinitz Lost London 0/7 +0=0-7  
1881 Johannes Zukertort Lost London 4½/14 +2=5−7  
1881 Isidor Gunsberg Won Düsseldorf 8½/14 +7-4=3  
1887 Zukertort Won London 9½/5½ +5-1=7 Zukertort's health and play declined rapidly after he lost the 1886 World Championship match to Steinitz.
1887 Gunsberg Lost Düsseldorf ½/5 +0=1−4 In 1890 Gunsberg gave Steinitz a good fight in a world title match (Steinitz won by +6=9-4).
1891 Celso Golmayo Zúpide Won Havana 6/10 +5=2−3  
1891 Vasquez Won Havana 5½/6 +5=1−0  
1892 Emanuel Lasker Lost  ?? 2/10 +0-6=4  
1895 Curt von Bardeleben Drew London 4½/9 +3=3−3  

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Joseph Henry Blackburne, by Bill Wall". Archived from the original on 28 October 2009. http://web.archive.org/web/20091028083235/http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/black.htm. 
  2. ^ a b c d Fine, R. (1952). The World's Great Chess Games. André Deutsch (now as paperback from Dover). 
  3. ^ a b "Chess and alcohol". http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/winter54.html#5940._Chess_and_alcohol. 
  4. ^ a b c Available as an e-book; not specified whether it has been translated to algebraic chess notation: "Mr. Blackburne's Games at Chess". http://www.chesscentral.com/pickard/blackburne_chess.htm. 
  5. ^ a b Hooper & Whyld (1996). The Oxford Companion to Chess. Oxford University Press. 
  6. ^ a b "Baden-Baden 1870". http://www.endgame.nl/bad1870.htm. 
  7. ^ a b c "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Joseph Blackburne". http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/PlayerProfile.asp?Params=199510SSSSS3S012785000000111000000000000010100. 
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "Major Chess Matches and Tournaments of the 19th century". http://www3.sympatico.ca/g.giffen/19thcent.htm. 
  9. ^ Wilson, Fred (1981). A picture history of Chess. Dover Publications 
  10. ^ "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Wilhelm Steinitz". http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/PlayerProfile.asp?Params=199510SSSSS3S126127000000111000000000000010100. 
  11. ^ "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Johannes Zukertort". http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/PlayerProfile.asp?Params=199510SSSSS3S147051000000121000078300000010100. 
  12. ^ "Johannes Zukertort by Bill Wall". Archived from the original on 28 October 2009. http://web.archive.org/web/20091028034326/http://www.geocities.com/siliconvalley/lab/7378/zuk.htm. 
  13. ^ a b "Chessmetrics Player Profile: Isidor Gunsberg". http://chessmetrics.com/cm/CM2/PlayerProfile.asp?Params=199510SSSSS3S147051000000121000078300000010100. 
  14. ^ The development of London chess clubs is described at Charles Dickens, Jr (1879). "Dickens's Dictionary of London, by Charles Dickens, Jr., 1879 - CHA-CHR". http://www.victorianlondon.org/dickens/dickens-chr.htm. 
  15. ^ This is as a percentage of average earnings, which are the best measure for the results of several days' hard work. If we use average prices as the conversion factor, the 2006 value is about £3,900 - "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1830–2006: 2006 equivalent of £60 guineas in 1876". http://www.measuringworth.com/ukcompare/result.php?use%5B%5D=CPI&use%5B%5D=DEFIND&use%5B%5D=WAGE&use%5B%5D=GDPCP&use%5B%5D=GDPC&year_early=1876&pound71=60&shilling71=0&pence71=0&amount=60&year_source=1876&year_result=2008. 
  16. ^ a b Harold C. Schoenberg, Grandmasters of Chess, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, Rev. Ed. 1981, p. 67.
  17. ^ Conversion based on average incomes: "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1830–2006: 2006 equivalent of 9 guineas in 1889". http://www.measuringworth.com/ukcompare/result.php?use%5B%5D=CPI&use%5B%5D=DEFIND&use%5B%5D=WAGE&use%5B%5D=GDPCP&use%5B%5D=GDPC&year_early=1887&pound71=9&shilling71=9&pence71=0&amount=9.45&year_source=1887&year_result=2008. 
  18. ^ "History of the CCA". http://www.clevelandchessassociation.org.uk/cca/history/index.htm. 
  19. ^ "Relatives and Spouses of Chess Masters, by Bill Wall". Archived from the original on 25 October 2009. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/relative.htm&date=2009-10-25+09:50:51. 
  20. ^ "Blackburne Shilling Gambit". 2005. Archived from the original on 12 December 2004. http://web.archive.org/web/20041212010630/http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/shilling.htm. 
  21. ^ "(unknown)" (PDF). International Chess Magazine: 332. November 1889. http://www.chesscafe.com/text/spinrad04.pdf. 
  22. ^ Winter, E.. "Chess with Violence". http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/violence.html. 
  23. ^ a b The Grand International Masters' Chess Tournament at St. Petersburg, 1914, David McKay, c. 1915, pp. 2, 4.
  24. ^ "St. Petersburg 1909 and 1914". http://www.endgame.nl/stpeter.htm. 
  25. ^ Gino Di Felice, Chess Results, 1747–1900, McFarland, 2004, p. 118. ISBN 0-7864-2041-3.
  26. ^ "New York 1889 and 1924". http://www.endgame.nl/newyork.htm. 
  27. ^ Di Felice 2004, p. 175.

External links