Walter Penn Shipley: Philadelphia�s Friend of Chess (McFarland & Company,
Inc., 2003, 464 pages, library bound, algebraic notation, hardback, $45) by
John S. Hilbert is yet another example of why he is one of the world�s top
chess researchers and historians and McFarland the preeminent publisher of
books devoted to the lore of the game.

The subject of this book, Walter Penn Shipley (1860-1942), was a master
strength player, chess columnist of the Philadelphia Inquirer for many years,
and one of the founding members of the Franklin Chess Club, but it is his
close friendships with World Champions Steinitz, Lasker and Capablanca that
really make this book come alive. That and the fact that Hilbert was able to
locate relatives of Shipley who very generously shared their recollections
and archives.

Today, though it is home to the World Open and the Shahade clan, we don�t
tend to think of  Philadelphia as a major chess center. This was not the case
during Shipley�s life. The city of brotherly love regularly hosted
exhibitions by top players not to mention games from the Steinitz-Lasker
World Championship match. Today it would be unthinkable for any city to
expect its best players to match up with those of New York, but for much of
Shipley�s life Philadelphia was up to the task. The Franklin Chess Club,
which Shipley helped co-found in 1885, and which merged with its rival the
Mercantile in 1955, is still going strong under the title Franklin
Mercantile. It definitely has a argument to be considered the second oldest
continuously operating  chess club in the United States with the closing of
the Manhattan in New York last year (the Mechanics� Institute of San
Francisco, which was founded in 1854, is the oldest).

Walter Penn Shipley: Philadelphia�s Friend of Chess is more than a book on
Shipley, it is also a book on chess in Philadelphia and the United States,
particularly for the period from 1880 until the First World War.  Famous
Philadelphia names like Gustavus  Reichhelm and Emil Kemeny receive in depth
treatment.

In addition to wealth of prose and games (several annotated by Swiss IM
Richard Forster) there is also an outstanding selection of photos of Shipley,
he and his family and a great one of him with Capablanca in front of the
Union League Club in Philadelphia.

Anyone with an interest in American chess history will want to get this
outstanding book.


John Donaldson
Mechanics' Institute Chess Director
57 Post Street
San Francisco, CA 94104
(415) 421-2258
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

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