Vera Menchik | |
---|---|
Full name | Vera Frantsevna Menchik Věra Menčíková |
Country | Russian Empire Czechoslovakia United Kingdom |
Born | Moscow, Russian Empire | 16 February 1906
Died | 26 June 1944 Clapham, London, United Kingdom | (aged 38)
Women's World Champion | 1927–44 |
Vera Menchik ( Russian: Вера Францевна Менчик, Vera Frantsevna Menchik; Czech: Věra Menčíková; 16 February 1906 – 26 June 1944) was a Russian-born British-Czechoslovak chess player who became the first women's world chess champion. She also competed in tournaments with some of the world's leading male chess masters, with occasional successes including two wins over future world champion Max Euwe.
Her father, František Menčík, was born in Bystrá nad Jizerou, Bohemia, while her mother, Olga (née Illingworth; [1] c. 1885–1944 [2]), was English. He was the manager of several estates owned by the nobility in Russia, and his wife was a governess of the children of the estate owner.
Vera Menchik was born in Moscow in 1906. Her sister Olga Menchik was born in 1907. When Vera was nine years old, her father gave her a chess set and taught her how to play. When she was 15, her school club organised a chess tournament and she came second.
After the Russian Revolution, her father lost a mill he owned and eventually also the big house where the family lived. The marriage broke down; her father returned to Bohemia, and in the autumn of 1921, Olga and her daughters went to Hastings, England, to live with Olga's mother. As Vera spoke only Russian, she hesitated to go to the local chess club, but at last, on 18 March 1923, she joined the Hastings Chess Club and began to take lessons from John Drewitt. Then, she became a pupil of the grandmaster Géza Maróczy. [3] During 1923, she played in several team matches.
In December 1923, she played in her first Hastings Congress and got a draw against Edith Price, the then British ladies' champion.
In the next Hastings Christmas Chess Congress 1924/25, she played again in Group A, first class, and finished second with five points out of seven. She met Miss Price in the last round of the Group of the Winners and again drew.
In 1925, she contested two matches against Edith Price, winning both of them, and she was considered the strongest lady player in the country. As she was not British, she could not enter the national competition.
In January 1926, she won the first Girls' Open Championship at the Imperial Club in London with her sister Olga coming third. In 1927, she retained this title and Olga came second. Next year, Vera was too old to play, and Olga again came second. [1] [3]
She won the first Women's World Championship in 1927 and successfully defended her title six times in every other championship held during her lifetime, losing only one game, while winning 78 and drawing four games.
She also won two matches against Sonja Graf for the Women's World Champion title by 3–1 at Rotterdam 1934, and by 11½–4½ at Semmering 1937.
Starting in 1929, she participated in a number of Hastings Congress tournaments:
The biggest and strongest tournament Menchik played in was the Moscow tournament of 1935, which featured World Champions Botvinnik, Capablanca, and Lasker, as well as a host of elite players and future grandmasters like Flohr, Ragozin, Spielmann, Levenfish, Lilienthal, etc. She finished last, 20th out of 20 competitors, with a score of (+0−16=3). [10]
Other major international tournaments include Carlsbad 1929, where she finished last, 22nd out of 22 players, with a score of (+2−17=2), [11] and Lodz in 1938, where she finished 15th out of 16, with a score of (+1−9=5). [12]
Menchik's best results at international tournaments came at Ramsgate 1929. This was a Scheveningen system match, [13] with 7 players from one team competing against 7 from another. Menchik finished with an unbeaten score of (+3−0=4). [14] In 1934 she finished in 3rd place out of 9 players at Maribor, behind Lajos Steiner and Vasja Pirc, but ahead of the likes of Rudolph Spielmann and Milan Vidmar, with a score of (+3−1=4). [15] In 1942 she won a match against Jacques Mieses (+4−1=5), [16] 77 years old at the time.
When Menchik entered the Carlsbad 1929 chess tournament, at a time it was unusual for a woman to play against masters, Albert Becker is said to have joked that any player she defeated would join the "Vera Menchik Club".
Although Menchik finished last in the tournament, she did succeed in making Becker the first member of the "club".
This story may be apocryphal, however, given that the earliest known source for it is a book printed in 1980, 51 years after when it is said to have occurred. [17]
In addition to Becker, the "club" eventually included Conel Hugh O'Donel Alexander, Abraham Baratz, Eero Böök, Edgard Colle, Max Euwe, Harry Golombek, Mir Sultan Khan, Frederic Lazard, Jacques Mieses, Stuart Milner-Barry, Karel Opočenský, Brian Reilly, Samuel Reshevsky, Friedrich Sämisch, Lajos Steiner, George Alan Thomas, William Winter, and Frederick Yates. [16] [18] [19] [20]
In 1937, at the age of 31, Menchik married Rufus Henry Streatfeild Stevenson (1878–1943), 28 years her senior, who was subscriptions editor of British Chess Magazine, a member of the West London Chess Club, and later honorary secretary of the British Chess Federation. Stevenson was a widower, having been married to Agnes Stevenson, a four-time British ladies' chess champion. [21] Rufus Stevenson died in 1943.
On 26 June 1944, Menchik, her sister Olga, and their mother were killed in a V-1 flying bomb attack which destroyed their home at 47 Gauden Road in the Clapham area of South London. [22] All three were cremated at the Streatham Park Crematorium on 4 July 1944. [23]
Vera Menchik is the longest-reigning women's world chess champion in history, having held the title for 17 years. [24] Her dominance over her contemporaries can be seen in her matches against Sonja Graf. Graf was the second strongest women's player in the world at the time and had been coached by the legendary Siegbert Tarrasch, but looking at both the games and the final result, their playing levels were completely different. In the two matches, Menchik won twelve games to three, with five draws. The fourth world champion, Alekhine, wrote after one of her victories against Sonja Graf in 1939 that "it is totally unfair to persuade a player of an acknowledged superclass like Miss Menchik to defend her title year after year in tournaments composed of very inferior players", [25] the specific tournament in question being the seventh Women's World Chess Championship.
Menchik had a good record against Max Euwe (2-2, 1 draw), [26] and Samuel Reshevsky (1-1). [27] However, against the other very best male players, she did not fare well. She lost to Jose Raul Capablanca (9-0), Alexander Alekhine (7-0), Mikhail Botvinnik (2-0), Paul Keres (2-0), Reuben Fine (2-0) and Emanuel Lasker (1-0). [24]
She was inducted into the World Chess Hall of Fame in 2011. [28]
The trophy for the winning team in the Women's Chess Olympiad is called the Vera Menchik Cup.
Vera Menchik | |
---|---|
Full name | Vera Frantsevna Menchik Věra Menčíková |
Country | Russian Empire Czechoslovakia United Kingdom |
Born | Moscow, Russian Empire | 16 February 1906
Died | 26 June 1944 Clapham, London, United Kingdom | (aged 38)
Women's World Champion | 1927–44 |
Vera Menchik ( Russian: Вера Францевна Менчик, Vera Frantsevna Menchik; Czech: Věra Menčíková; 16 February 1906 – 26 June 1944) was a Russian-born British-Czechoslovak chess player who became the first women's world chess champion. She also competed in tournaments with some of the world's leading male chess masters, with occasional successes including two wins over future world champion Max Euwe.
Her father, František Menčík, was born in Bystrá nad Jizerou, Bohemia, while her mother, Olga (née Illingworth; [1] c. 1885–1944 [2]), was English. He was the manager of several estates owned by the nobility in Russia, and his wife was a governess of the children of the estate owner.
Vera Menchik was born in Moscow in 1906. Her sister Olga Menchik was born in 1907. When Vera was nine years old, her father gave her a chess set and taught her how to play. When she was 15, her school club organised a chess tournament and she came second.
After the Russian Revolution, her father lost a mill he owned and eventually also the big house where the family lived. The marriage broke down; her father returned to Bohemia, and in the autumn of 1921, Olga and her daughters went to Hastings, England, to live with Olga's mother. As Vera spoke only Russian, she hesitated to go to the local chess club, but at last, on 18 March 1923, she joined the Hastings Chess Club and began to take lessons from John Drewitt. Then, she became a pupil of the grandmaster Géza Maróczy. [3] During 1923, she played in several team matches.
In December 1923, she played in her first Hastings Congress and got a draw against Edith Price, the then British ladies' champion.
In the next Hastings Christmas Chess Congress 1924/25, she played again in Group A, first class, and finished second with five points out of seven. She met Miss Price in the last round of the Group of the Winners and again drew.
In 1925, she contested two matches against Edith Price, winning both of them, and she was considered the strongest lady player in the country. As she was not British, she could not enter the national competition.
In January 1926, she won the first Girls' Open Championship at the Imperial Club in London with her sister Olga coming third. In 1927, she retained this title and Olga came second. Next year, Vera was too old to play, and Olga again came second. [1] [3]
She won the first Women's World Championship in 1927 and successfully defended her title six times in every other championship held during her lifetime, losing only one game, while winning 78 and drawing four games.
She also won two matches against Sonja Graf for the Women's World Champion title by 3–1 at Rotterdam 1934, and by 11½–4½ at Semmering 1937.
Starting in 1929, she participated in a number of Hastings Congress tournaments:
The biggest and strongest tournament Menchik played in was the Moscow tournament of 1935, which featured World Champions Botvinnik, Capablanca, and Lasker, as well as a host of elite players and future grandmasters like Flohr, Ragozin, Spielmann, Levenfish, Lilienthal, etc. She finished last, 20th out of 20 competitors, with a score of (+0−16=3). [10]
Other major international tournaments include Carlsbad 1929, where she finished last, 22nd out of 22 players, with a score of (+2−17=2), [11] and Lodz in 1938, where she finished 15th out of 16, with a score of (+1−9=5). [12]
Menchik's best results at international tournaments came at Ramsgate 1929. This was a Scheveningen system match, [13] with 7 players from one team competing against 7 from another. Menchik finished with an unbeaten score of (+3−0=4). [14] In 1934 she finished in 3rd place out of 9 players at Maribor, behind Lajos Steiner and Vasja Pirc, but ahead of the likes of Rudolph Spielmann and Milan Vidmar, with a score of (+3−1=4). [15] In 1942 she won a match against Jacques Mieses (+4−1=5), [16] 77 years old at the time.
When Menchik entered the Carlsbad 1929 chess tournament, at a time it was unusual for a woman to play against masters, Albert Becker is said to have joked that any player she defeated would join the "Vera Menchik Club".
Although Menchik finished last in the tournament, she did succeed in making Becker the first member of the "club".
This story may be apocryphal, however, given that the earliest known source for it is a book printed in 1980, 51 years after when it is said to have occurred. [17]
In addition to Becker, the "club" eventually included Conel Hugh O'Donel Alexander, Abraham Baratz, Eero Böök, Edgard Colle, Max Euwe, Harry Golombek, Mir Sultan Khan, Frederic Lazard, Jacques Mieses, Stuart Milner-Barry, Karel Opočenský, Brian Reilly, Samuel Reshevsky, Friedrich Sämisch, Lajos Steiner, George Alan Thomas, William Winter, and Frederick Yates. [16] [18] [19] [20]
In 1937, at the age of 31, Menchik married Rufus Henry Streatfeild Stevenson (1878–1943), 28 years her senior, who was subscriptions editor of British Chess Magazine, a member of the West London Chess Club, and later honorary secretary of the British Chess Federation. Stevenson was a widower, having been married to Agnes Stevenson, a four-time British ladies' chess champion. [21] Rufus Stevenson died in 1943.
On 26 June 1944, Menchik, her sister Olga, and their mother were killed in a V-1 flying bomb attack which destroyed their home at 47 Gauden Road in the Clapham area of South London. [22] All three were cremated at the Streatham Park Crematorium on 4 July 1944. [23]
Vera Menchik is the longest-reigning women's world chess champion in history, having held the title for 17 years. [24] Her dominance over her contemporaries can be seen in her matches against Sonja Graf. Graf was the second strongest women's player in the world at the time and had been coached by the legendary Siegbert Tarrasch, but looking at both the games and the final result, their playing levels were completely different. In the two matches, Menchik won twelve games to three, with five draws. The fourth world champion, Alekhine, wrote after one of her victories against Sonja Graf in 1939 that "it is totally unfair to persuade a player of an acknowledged superclass like Miss Menchik to defend her title year after year in tournaments composed of very inferior players", [25] the specific tournament in question being the seventh Women's World Chess Championship.
Menchik had a good record against Max Euwe (2-2, 1 draw), [26] and Samuel Reshevsky (1-1). [27] However, against the other very best male players, she did not fare well. She lost to Jose Raul Capablanca (9-0), Alexander Alekhine (7-0), Mikhail Botvinnik (2-0), Paul Keres (2-0), Reuben Fine (2-0) and Emanuel Lasker (1-0). [24]
She was inducted into the World Chess Hall of Fame in 2011. [28]
The trophy for the winning team in the Women's Chess Olympiad is called the Vera Menchik Cup.