Henry Bird (chess player)

Henry Edward Bird (Portsea in Hampshire, 14 July 1829[1] – 11 April 1908) was an English chess player, author and accountant. He wrote the books Chess History and Reminiscences and An Analysis of Railways in the United Kingdom.

Drawing of Henry Bird by Sam Loyd, 1877 Scientific American Supplement

Although Bird was a practicing accountant, not a professional chess player, it has been said that he "lived for chess, and would play anybody anywhere, any time, under any conditions."[2]

Tournament play

At age 21, Bird was invited to the first international tournament, London 1851. He also participated in tournaments held in Vienna and New York City. In 1858 he lost a match to Paul Morphy at age 28, yet he played high-level chess for another 50 years. In the New York tournament of 1876, Bird received the first brilliancy prize ever awarded, for his game against James Mason.[2]

Legacy

In 1874 Bird proposed a new chess variant, which played on an 8×10 board and contained two new pieces: guard (combining the moves of the rook and knight) and equerry (combining the bishop and knight). Bird's chess inspired José Raúl Capablanca to create another chess variant, Capablanca Chess, which differs from Bird's chess only by the starting position.

It was Bird who popularized the chess opening now called Bird's Opening (1.f4), as well as Bird's Defense to the Ruy Lopez (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nd4). Bird's Opening is considered sound, though not the best try for an opening advantage. Bird's Defense is regarded as slightly inferior, but "trappy".

Bibliography

  • Bird, H. E. Chess Masterpieces (London: Dean, 1875)
  • Bird, H. E. The Chess Openings, Considered Critically and Practically (London: Dean, 1877; New York: Lockwood, 1880, 1886)
  • Bird, H. E. Chess Practice (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1882; Sampson Low, Marston & Company, 1892)
  • Bird, H. E. Chess History and Reminiscences (London: Dean, 1893)
  • Bird, H. E. Chess Novelties and Their Latest Developments (London, New York: F. Warne, 1895)
gollark: As I don't really want to pay for things, the "offsite backup" I'm working on will probably just copy critical data (encrypted) into arbitrary free cloud storage accounts.
gollark: My server is an actual physical thing at home with a disk from 2012.
gollark: The OIR™ frontend, for instance, is actually just a random HTML file which is not checked into version control or anything.
gollark: Mine is nominally contained in a git repo, but I have to manually compile and `scp` it over to the server after making changes, and also there are some random but entirely necessary things contained in the webroot and not the repo so I have to have separate backups of it.
gollark: It Depends™.

See also

Notes

  1. A date of 1830 has been given, but baptismal records indicate 1829. Renette, Hans (2016). H.E. Bird: A Chess Biography with 1,198 Games. McFarland. p. 20.
  2. Harold C. Schoenberg, Grandmasters of Chess, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, Rev. Ed. 1981, p. 66.

References

  • Hooper, David; Whyld, Kenneth (1992), The Oxford Companion to Chess (second ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-280049-3, OCLC 34618196
  • Renette, Hans (2016), H.E. Bird: A Chess Biography (first ed.), McFarland & Company, ISBN 978-0-7864-7578-0
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.