When chess was king

In the half-decade prior to the Civil War's outbreak, the United States saw a chess boom. Across the country chess clubs sprouted and flourished, especially in metropolitan areas. The game was so popular that newspapers printed weekly chess columns.
Locally, the Quincy Daily Whig regularly carried a column devoted to chess news and games for its readers. Feeding the hunger for more information on the game, a handful of national chess journals came into being. They covered the top players and laid out the strategy and tactics used in matches. A local riverboat pilot, who had plied the western waters for 25 years, stated "that within the last year, card playing among steamboat travelers in the West, had diminished fully one-half, and chess had taken its place. ..." He attributed the rise of chess to Paul Morphy and said that the country owed him "a great debt of gratitude."
Born in New Orleans in 1837, Paul Morphy picked-up the game by watching his father and Uncle Ernest play. The latter, considered "a very strong player," was known as the "Chess King of New Orleans." By age 8, Paul was playing the best players in the Crescent City. When Gen. Winfield Scott passed through New Orleans in December 1846, on his way to take command of the American forces in the Mexican War, he inquired about playing a game of chess. Gen. Scott was told a match would be arranged with one of New Orleans's better players. When a child was introduced, Scott was indignant and thought it was a bad joke at his expense. It was explained that the boy was a worthy opponent. On the 10th move Scott was checkmated. He did no better in the second game. At age 13, Paul Morphy was one of the best players in the United States and had replaced his Uncle Ernest as the "Chess King of New Orleans."
As the child's skills developed, Ernest Morphy, without a doubt, became his nephew's greatest admirer. Devoted to Paul, he used his prestige and influence to arrange matches with America's best chess players. In addition, Ernest sent notations of Paul's games to chess publications in both Europe and the United States. In New Orleans, Ernest Morphy worked as a cotton trader and appraiser. But in 1854, he went north, first settling in Claremont County, Ohio where he remained for two years. From there, he moved to Quincy, where he eventually co-operated a business manufacturing paper bags.
Ernest, however, did not leave his love of chess behind in New Orleans, but found a new group of associates who were as committed to the game as he -- men like Edward Ambrose Dudley, John Tillson, Alexander Pearson, J. G. Martin, and G. Rowland. The 1859 city directory revealed that the Quincy Chess Club occupied a room at the "s w c of Main and 3d," giving the members a place to meet, play, watch, and to discuss the game.
About the club, it could be said that the members were as good as the best, and easily, better than the rest. For example, before moving to Quincy in 1851, Edward Ambrose Dudley lived in Kentucky. A member of the Lexington Chess Club, he was considered in his prime "the most brilliant chess-player in the West, and perhaps in the country. ..." While in the Bluegrass State, Dudley had taken on Benjamin Raphael, who placed fourth in the first American Chess Congress held in 1857 and Johann Jacob Loewenthal, the Hungarian grandmaster, both world-class players.
At the height of the chess boom, local club members, John Tillson and Ernest Morphy, co-edited a periodic column for the Quincy Daily Whig. The articles paralleled and chronicled the rise of Ernest's nephew to the pinnacle of the chess world. Paul won the First American Chess Congress held in New York in the fall of 1857. The victory established him as the best player in the United States and prompted him to cross the Atlantic where he took on the top European players. Within six months he had challenged and beaten the best Europe had to offer and proved "to himself and his contemporaries that he was the best player in the world." Once back home, Paul was treated as a celebrity. At a banquet in Boston, Dr. Oliver Wendell Homes toasted: "Paul Morphy, the World Chess Champion." It was the spring of 1859, and the youthful Morphy was universally hailed the world's greatest chess player.
Meanwhile, with interest at its peak, the Quincy Chess Club, without leaving town, took on clubs from both Chicago and St. Louis. The Daily Herald proclaimed that "the Chicago Chess Club will play a match game of chess by telegraph, with four players of this city. ..." The paper added: "Mr. Ernest Morphy, an uncle of ... Paul Morphy, will be one of the players here." On Jan. 18, 1859, in a six-hour game -- with players limited "to ten minutes for each move," the Quincyans came out on top. A second game played on the 21st took only two hours and was won by Chicago.
Under the headline "A CHESS FIGHT" the Whig and Republican stated, "The Quincy Chess Club and the St. Louis Chess Club are just now engaged in a chess battle, by telegraph." Their first "cutting-edge telegraphic consultation" game commenced Dec. 28, 1859. The locals lost, but they returned to action on Jan. 13, 1860, with a team comprised of E. Morphy, John Tillson, Rowland and, Richardson, and took the second game, splitting the match.
It was written in the Daily Whig that "chess matches, so frequent last winter, seem to be out of date just now." And, so it was.
Ernest Morphy continued on in Quincy, dying unexpectedly on March 7, 1874 at age 67. Gen. Tillson submitted a brief sketch of his life to the Chess Record in Philadelphia. The piece was picked up and carried worldwide from the Dubuque Chess Journal to The City of London Chess Magazine. Tillson said of his friend: "American Chess will miss, and mourn a noted votary. ..." He quoted Ernest's favorite chess maxim -- "never dodge your own errors," explaining, "If you find a line of play defective, generally, far better to stick to it than attempt correction. It is like changing front in the heat of battle."
Phil Reyburn is a retired field representative for the Social Security Administration. He authored "Clear the Track: A History of the Eighty-ninth Illinois Volunteer Infantry, The Railroad Regiment" and co-edited "'Jottings from Dixie:' The Civil War Dispatches of Sergeant Major Stephen F. Fleharty, U.S.A."
Sources
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Hooper, David and Whyld, Kenneth. The Oxford Companion to Chess. New York: Oxford University Press, 1984.
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"Past Imperfect, A Chess Champion's Dominance---and Madness." Accessed 11/16/2013, http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/history.2011/12 .
Redmond, Patrick H. History of Quincy, and Its Men of Mark. Quincy: Hairs & Russell, Book and Job Printers, 1869.
Tartajubow On Chess. "Ernest Morphy." February 6, 2014. Accessed 02/26/2014. http://tartajubow.bogspot.com .
The Quincy Daily Whig, January 20 & 24, 1859; May 23, 1859; and June 13, 1859.
The Quincy Daily Herald, January 15, 1859 and March 8, 1874.
The Quincy Whig & Republican, May 6, 1859 and December 30, 1859.
Williams, C. S. Williams' Quincy Directory, City Guide, and Business Mirror, Vol. 1---1859-‘60. 1859.
Wilson, Fred, ed. A Picture History of Chess. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1981.





