West London Chess Club Gazette
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West London Chess Club Gazette
The West London Chess Club web site has a useful History section listing, amongst other items, its publication "Gazette"
Sadly all the Gazettes are afflicted with the dreaded http 404 error message.
Luckily all of these may be retrieved via the rather useful WayBack machine.
Anyone in this place from West London Chess Club know why they have been removed?
Sadly all the Gazettes are afflicted with the dreaded http 404 error message.
Luckily all of these may be retrieved via the rather useful WayBack machine.
Anyone in this place from West London Chess Club know why they have been removed?
British Chess News : britishchessnews.com
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Twitter: @BritishChess
Facebook: facebook.com/groups/britishchess
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
Bit of a late reply, but the gazettes are available again. A problem with Google Docs, apparently.
If you wish to view them, please visit https://www.westlondonchess.com/history/gazette.
If you wish to view them, please visit https://www.westlondonchess.com/history/gazette.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
Thanks for the post, some interesting stuff here.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
I note that number 51 mentions D Rabinovitch, that I think later became D Raeburn of Mitcham? There is also an intriguing comment about a dispute, "AJ Duke said (deleted by typist.)"
I note too in 52, a mention of Dr Creed, later to play for Redhill, also mention of young stars like Frank Parr and Leonard Barden.
I note too in 52, a mention of Dr Creed, later to play for Redhill, also mention of young stars like Frank Parr and Leonard Barden.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
/dev/null
Last edited by John Upham on Sun Apr 25, 2021 2:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
"Had Dr. Creed been a boxer earlier in his life?"
Dog or pugilist? He was a noted problemist (allegedly he invented the "rifleman") and musician. That's about all I know.
Dog or pugilist? He was a noted problemist (allegedly he invented the "rifleman") and musician. That's about all I know.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
/dev/null
Last edited by John Upham on Sun Apr 25, 2021 2:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
I once visited Dr Creed's home in Redhill or Reigate for a British Championship qualifying game. His initials, as I recall, were JJ or possibly JH or JA. He was very polite, thin and rather nervous, with an extensive library. His memory deserves respect.John Upham wrote: ↑Sun Apr 25, 2021 11:27 am
Possibly his forename (but not Foreman) was Apollo without making appearences on the Battlestar Galatica,
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
"I once visited Dr Creed's home in Redhill or Reigate for a British Championship qualifying game. His initials, as I recall, were JJ or possibly JH or JA. He was very polite, thin and rather nervous, with an extensive library. His memory deserves respect."
John Edward Hodgson Creed - known as "Jack". I played a club championship game there in late 60s, he was certainly in Reigate then. I think he said he had about 10000 music scores plus books. He was a useful player (about 170 then, when he must have reached retirement age), notable on club evenings for producing a brown paper bag and consuming the biscuits concealed therein, completely oblivious to the noise of the bag. He would also sit there thinking, and then chuckle a bit, which we knew denoted that he had found a really elegant idea, which he might be able to incorporate in a problem.
We had an annual fun Kriegspiel event, and when anyone was not playing, they would watch Jack's game, as he seemed to work out where all the pieces were very quickly. I think he died in the early 80s. A great character. He once asked someone if they would like to play, whilst he was playing me, I raised an eyebrow and he apologised for the implied insult. He was right though and I resigned a couple of moves later.
John Edward Hodgson Creed - known as "Jack". I played a club championship game there in late 60s, he was certainly in Reigate then. I think he said he had about 10000 music scores plus books. He was a useful player (about 170 then, when he must have reached retirement age), notable on club evenings for producing a brown paper bag and consuming the biscuits concealed therein, completely oblivious to the noise of the bag. He would also sit there thinking, and then chuckle a bit, which we knew denoted that he had found a really elegant idea, which he might be able to incorporate in a problem.
We had an annual fun Kriegspiel event, and when anyone was not playing, they would watch Jack's game, as he seemed to work out where all the pieces were very quickly. I think he died in the early 80s. A great character. He once asked someone if they would like to play, whilst he was playing me, I raised an eyebrow and he apologised for the implied insult. He was right though and I resigned a couple of moves later.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
Kevin, January 1974, I never got the chance to play him although our Redhill membership did overlap for a few months.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
A fair amount out there about Creed and chess problems (and chess variants).
e.g. https://www.chessvariants.com/page/MSpi ... uerquisite
Does anyone know if he was a medical doctor or if it was (more likely) a doctorate in some musical area?
He is listed in databases of music composers:
https://www.musicanet.org/bdd/en/compos ... ard-hogson
If anyone wants to subscribe to the Biographical Dictionary of the Organ, you get:
https://www.organ-biography.info/index. ... dgson_1904
"Creed, Dr John Edward Hodgson. Mus.D ... Grammar School ... Organist of St. Luke’s ... John’s ... Philip’s ... &c ... 1904. (13 of 78 words)"
So he was a Doctor of Music (Mus.D). Not sure which "St Luke's". I think you have to pay for access to that biography.
e.g. https://www.chessvariants.com/page/MSpi ... uerquisite
Does anyone know if he was a medical doctor or if it was (more likely) a doctorate in some musical area?
He is listed in databases of music composers:
https://www.musicanet.org/bdd/en/compos ... ard-hogson
If anyone wants to subscribe to the Biographical Dictionary of the Organ, you get:
https://www.organ-biography.info/index. ... dgson_1904
"Creed, Dr John Edward Hodgson. Mus.D ... Grammar School ... Organist of St. Luke’s ... John’s ... Philip’s ... &c ... 1904. (13 of 78 words)"
So he was a Doctor of Music (Mus.D). Not sure which "St Luke's". I think you have to pay for access to that biography.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
"January 1974, I never got the chance to play him although our Redhill membership did overlap for a few months."
Thanks Brian. I last played him in 1972 and got my only win, to go with a draw (1971) and half a dozen losses. The two I failed to lose were the only two that went beyond about 25 moves... He was an inventive player.
I would guess that the St Luke's Church is this one https://www.stlukesreigate.org.uk/ imaginatively enough in Church Road.
Thanks Brian. I last played him in 1972 and got my only win, to go with a draw (1971) and half a dozen losses. The two I failed to lose were the only two that went beyond about 25 moves... He was an inventive player.
I would guess that the St Luke's Church is this one https://www.stlukesreigate.org.uk/ imaginatively enough in Church Road.
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Re: West London Chess Club Gazette
Yes, David Rabinovich became David Raeburn of Mitcham CC. Coincidentally, I had a message from Dave Raeburn's daughter only yesterday, asking what had become of the obituary I posted on the web many moons ago. (It must have disappeared during a web reorganisation some time after Chess & Bridge bought and took over the original BCM website.) I was glad to tell her that I still have copies of most of the material I posted 20 odd years ago and was able to revise it and republish it on BritBase...Kevin Thurlow wrote: ↑Sun Apr 25, 2021 8:37 amI note that number 51 mentions D Rabinovitch, that I think later became D Raeburn of Mitcham? There is also an intriguing comment about a dispute, "AJ Duke said (deleted by typist.)"
I note too in 52, a mention of Dr Creed, later to play for Redhill, also mention of young stars like Frank Parr and Leonard Barden.
https://www.saund.org.uk/britbase/artic ... eburn.html
I was able to do the same for the obit I wrote on Frank Parr at that time...
https://www.saund.org.uk/britbase/artic ... kparr.html
I have quite a lot of other news material which I published on the web in the early 2000s, though some of the late 1990s news items (before I joined BCM) seems to have disappeared completely. I may republish some more of it in due course.
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(I prefer email to PM - contact me via this link - https://www.saund.org.uk/email.html)