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World Chess Hall of Fame
Chess museum in United States
Chess museum in United States
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | World Chess Hall of Fame |
| former_name | U.S. Chess Hall of Fame |
| World Chess Hall of Fame and Sidney Samole Museum | |
| logo_alt | World Chess Hall of Fame Logo |
| image | File:Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis.jpg |
| caption | Street view |
| location | Central West End, St. Louis Missouri |
| coordinates | |
| map_type | United States St. Louis |
| established | |
| type | Hall of Fame |
| Art museum | |
| publictransit | MetroBus |
| website |
World Chess Hall of Fame and Sidney Samole Museum Art museum
The World Chess Hall of Fame (WCHOF) is a nonprofit collecting institution in the Central West End neighborhood of St. Louis, Missouri, United States. Founded in 1984, it features chess exhibits, engages in educational outreach, and maintains a list of inductees to the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame and World Chess Hall of Fame.
Formerly located in New Windsor, New York, Washington, D.C., and Miami, Florida, it moved to St. Louis on September 9, 2011. It is run by the United States Chess Trust.
The World Chess Hall of Fame is located across the street from the Saint Louis Chess Club, with which it collaborates on programming, instruction, and outreach.
The museum's permanent collection and temporary exhibitions highlight the great players, historic games, and cultural history of chess. Rotating exhibitions feature items from the permanent collection, including a piece from an Egyptian game called senet, the earliest known board game; a custom-made set of chess furniture that belonged to Bobby Fischer; and the first commercial chess computer. The museum also displays two temporary exhibitions per year.
History

Steven Doyle, president of the United States Chess Federation from 1984 to 1987, founded the World Chess Hall of Fame in 1986 as the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame.
It opened in 1988 in the basement of the Federation's then-headquarters in New Windsor, New York. The museum's small collection included a book of chess openings signed by Bobby Fischer; a silver set awarded to Paul Morphy, American chess player and unofficial World Champion; and cardboard plaques honoring past grandmasters.
In 1992, the U.S. Chess Trust purchased the museum and moved its contents to Washington, D.C., where it featured America's "big four" chess players: Paul Morphy, Bobby Fischer, Frank Marshall, and Samuel Reshevsky. It displayed the World Chess Championship trophy won by the United States team in 1993 as well as numerous chess boards and chess pieces. The museum gave visitors the opportunity to play against a chess computer. By 2001, the collection had grown to include numerous chess sets and boards and plaques commemorating inductees to the U.S. and World halls of fame.
In the late 1990s, Sidney Samole, former owner of Excalibur Electronics, proposed to move the hall of fame to Miami, where it would be located in a rook-shaped building constructed by Excalibur. Although Samole died in 2000, the U.S. Chess Trust accepted the proposal the following year. Reopened in 2001, it was renamed the World Chess Hall of Fame and Sidney Samole Museum. The museum continued collecting chess sets, books, tournament memorabilia, advertisements, photographs, furniture, medals, trophies, and journals until it closed in 2009.
Soon afterward, billionaire Rex Sinquefield agreed to pay to move the museum to St. Louis. He also renovated its new building, across the street from the Sinquefield-founded St. Louis Chess Club.
Hall of Fame
There are 74 members in the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame.
There are 53 members in the World Chess Hall of Fame. The winner of the first Women's World Chess Championship, Vera Menchik, was the first woman to be inducted into the WCHOF in 2011.
U.S. Chess Hall of Fame Inductees
The U.S. Chess Federation Recognitions Committee considers candidates for the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame and sends its nominations to the U.S. Chess Trust annually. The trustees of the U.S. Chess Trust vote on who should be inducted. The induction itself takes place at the U.S. Chess Federation Awards Luncheon during the U.S. Open or at the World Chess Hall of Fame itself. The induction is almost always performed by the chairman of the U.S. Chess Trust or the chairman of the Hall of Fame Committee.
2017 members of the committee included John McCrary (chair), Frank Camaratta, John Crumiller, William John Donaldson, John Hilbert, Randy Hough, Alexey Root, Sophia Rohde, Andrew Soltis, Peter Tamburro, and Fred Wilson.
| Count | Inductee | Induction year | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Reuben Fine | 1986 | |||||
| 2 | Robert Fischer | 1986 | |||||
| 3 | Isaac Kashdan | 1986 | |||||
| 4 | George Koltanowski | 1986 | |||||
| 5 | Frank Marshall | 1986 | |||||
| 6 | Paul Morphy | 1986 | |||||
| 7 | Harry Pillsbury | 1986 | |||||
| 8 | Sammy Reshevsky | 1986 | |||||
| 9 | Sam Loyd | 1987 | |||||
| 10 | Wilhelm Steinitz | 1987 | |||||
| 11 | Arpad Elo | 1988 | |||||
| 12 | Hermann Helms | 1988 | |||||
| 13 | Al Horowitz | 1989 | |||||
| 14 | Hans Berliner | 1990 | |||||
| 15 | John W. Collins | 1991 | |||||
| 16 | Arthur Dake | 1991 | |||||
| 17 | Arnold Denker | 1992 | |||||
| 18 | Gisela Gresser | 1992 | |||||
| 19 | George MacKenzie | 1992 | |||||
| 20 | Pal Benko | 1993 | |||||
| 21 | Victor Palciauskas | 1993 | |||||
| 22 | Arthur Bisguier | 1994 | |||||
| 23 | Robert Byrne | 1994 | |||||
| 24 | Larry Evans | 1994 | |||||
| 25 | Ed Edmondson Jr. | 1995 | |||||
| 26 | Fred Reinfeld | 1996 | |||||
| 27 | Kenneth Harkness | 1997 | |||||
| 28 | Milan Vukcevich | 1998 | |||||
| 29 | Benjamin Franklin | 1999 | |||||
| 30 | Edmar Mednis | 2000 | |||||
| 31 | Lubomir Kavalek | url=https://en.chessbase.com/post/kavalek-in-huffington-the-world-che-hall-of-fame | title=CB News - Kavalek in Huffington: The World Chess Hall of Fame | website=chessbase.com | date=December 31, 2011 | author=Lubomir Kavalek | access-date=September 13, 2016}} |
| 32 | Lev Alburt | 2003 | |||||
| 33 | Walter Browne | 2003 | |||||
| 34 | Donald Byrne | 2003 | |||||
| 35 | Anatoly Lein | 2004 | |||||
| 36 | Leonid Shamkovich | 2004 | |||||
| 37 | Yasser Seirawan | 2006 | |||||
| 38 | Irving Chernev | 2007 | |||||
| 39 | Jeremy Gaige | 2007 | |||||
| 40 | Joel Benjamin | 2008 | |||||
| 41 | Larry Christiansen | 2008 | |||||
| 42 | Nick de Firmian | 2008 | |||||
| 43 | John Fedorowicz | 2009 | |||||
| 44 | Burt Hochberg | 2009 | |||||
| 45 | Diane Savereide | 2010 | |||||
| 46 | Jackson Showalter | 2010 | |||||
| 47 | Herman Steiner | 2010 | |||||
| 48 | Boris Gulko | url=https://en.chessbase.com/post/world-che-hall-of-fame-opens-in-st-louis | title=CB News - World Chess Hall of Fame opens in St. Louis | author=Laura High | date=September 11, 2011 | website=achessbase.com | access-date=September 13, 2016}} |
| 49 | Andy Soltis | 2011 | |||||
| 50 | Alex Yermolinsky | 2012 | |||||
| 51 | Gregory Kaidanov | 2013 | |||||
| 52 | Mona May Karff | 2013 | |||||
| 53 | Abraham Kupchik | url=http://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/chess-new-shows-world-chess-hall-fame-include-burning-boards | title=On Chess: New Shows At World Chess Hall of Fame Include Burning Boards | newspaper=St. Louis Public Radio | date=May 8, 2014 | author=Brian Jerauld | access-date=September 13, 2016}} |
| 54 | Jacqueline Piatigorsky | 2014 | |||||
| 55 | Alexander Shabalov | 2015 | |||||
| 56 | Gata Kamsky | url=http://worldchesshof.org/chess-hall-of-fame/us-chess-hall-of-fame | title=US Chess Hall of Fame | website=World Chess Hall of Fame | access-date=July 28, 2017}} | ||
| 57 | Maurice Ashley | 2016 | |||||
| 58 | Edward Lasker | 2017 | |||||
| 59 | Bill Goichberg | 2018 | |||||
| 60 | Alex Onischuk | 2018 | |||||
| 61 | Max Judd | 2019 | |||||
| 62 | Susan Polgar | 2019 | |||||
| 63 | William Lombardy | 2019 | |||||
| 64 | Rex Sinquefield | 2020 | |||||
| 65 | Jeanne Sinquefield | 2020 | |||||
| 66 | James Sherwin | 2021 | |||||
| 67 | Frank Brady | 2021 | |||||
| 68 | Daniel Willard Fiske | 2022 | |||||
| 69 | James Tarjan | 2022 | |||||
| 70 | John Watson | 2022 | |||||
| 71 | Yury Shulman | 2023 | |||||
| 72 | Lisa Lane | 2023 | |||||
| 73 | William Shinkman | 2023 | |||||
| 74 | Charles Henry Stanley | 2024 |
World Chess Hall of Fame inductees
The World Chess Hall of Fame inductees are nominated by representatives of the World Chess Federation (FIDE).
| Count | Inductee | Induction year | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | José Raúl Capablanca | 2001 | ||
| 2 | Robert Fischer | 2001 | ||
| 3 | Emanuel Lasker | 2001 | ||
| 4 | Paul Morphy | 2001 | ||
| 5 | Wilhelm Steinitz | 2001 | ||
| 6 | Mikhail Botvinnik | 2003 | ||
| 7 | Tigran Petrosian | 2003 | ||
| 8 | Vasily Smyslov | 2003 | ||
| 9 | Boris Spassky | 2003 | ||
| 10 | Mikhail Tal | 2003 | ||
| 11 | Alexander Alekhine | 2004 | ||
| 12 | Max Euwe | 2004 | ||
| 13 | Anatoly Karpov | 2004 | ||
| 14 | Garry Kasparov | 2005 | ||
| 15 | Siegbert Tarrasch | 2008 | ||
| 16 | Vera Menchik | 2011 | ||
| 17 | Elisaveta Bykova | 2013 | ||
| 18 | Mikhail Chigorin | 2013 | ||
| 19 | Nona Gaprindashvili | 2013 | ||
| 20 | Maia Chiburdanidze | 2014 | ||
| 21 | Paul Keres | 2014 | ||
| 22 | Olga Rubtsova | 2015 | ||
| 23 | Lyudmila Rudenko | 2015 | ||
| 24 | Carl Schlechter | 2015 | ||
| 25 | David Bronstein | url=http://www.worldchesshof.org/uploads/2016/04/11/2016-hof-brochureweb.pdf | title=World Chess Hall of Fame Brochure | access-date=January 21, 2017}} |
| 26 | Sonja Graf | 2016 | ||
| 27 | Howard Staunton | 2016 | ||
| 28 | Johannes Zukertort | 2016 | ||
| 29 | Paula Kalmar-Wolf | 2017 | ||
| 30 | Viktor Korchnoi | 2017 | ||
| 31 | Alla Kushnir | 2017 | ||
| 32 | Aron Nimzowitsch | 2018 | ||
| 33 | Richard Réti | 2018 | ||
| 34 | Kira Zvorykina | 2018 | ||
| 35 | Akiba Rubinstein | 2019 | ||
| 36 | Mark Taimanov | 2019 | ||
| 37 | Xie Jun | 2019 | ||
| 38 | Miguel Najdorf | 2021 | ||
| 39 | Judit Polgár | 2021 | ||
| 40 | Eugene Torre | 2021 | ||
| 41 | Bent Larsen | 2023 | ||
| 42 | Lajos Portisch | 2023 | ||
| 43 | Susan Polgár | 2023 | ||
| 44 | Zhu Chen | 2024 | ||
| 45 | Irina Levitina | 2024 | ||
| 46 | Elena Donaldson-Akhmilovskaya | 2024 | ||
| 47 | Fridrik Olafsson | 2024 | ||
| 48 | Lev Polugaevsky | 2024 | ||
| 49 | Nana Alexandria | 2024 | ||
| 50 | Robert Hübner | 2024 | ||
| 51 | Vladimir Kramnik | 2024 | ||
| 52 | Efim Geller | 2024 | ||
| 53 | Oscar Panno | 2024 |
References
References
- Harold Dondis, Harold. (17 September 2001). "Chess Notes". Boston Globe.
- Dondis, Harold. (14 June 2010). "The Chess Hall of Fame is saved". [[The Boston Globe]].
- Hill, Michael. (9 April 1991). "Sparking Interest: Chess Hall of Fame celebrates game's longevity". The Item.
- Danilov, Victor J.. (1997). "Hall of Fame Museums: A Reference Guide". Greenwood Press.
- Kurzdorfer, Peter. (2003). "The Everything Chess Basics Book". Adams Media.
- (September 20, 2011). "Vera Menchik Becomes First Woman to Join World Chess Hall of Fame".
- (February 21, 2017). "Halls of Fame".
- Lubomir Kavalek. (December 31, 2011). "CB News - Kavalek in Huffington: The World Chess Hall of Fame".
- Laura High. (September 11, 2011). "CB News - World Chess Hall of Fame opens in St. Louis".
- Brian Jerauld. (May 8, 2014). "On Chess: New Shows At World Chess Hall of Fame Include Burning Boards". St. Louis Public Radio.
- "US Chess Hall of Fame".
- "World Chess Hall of Fame Brochure".
- "Bent Larsen".
- "World Chess Hall of Fame".
- "Susan Polgar".
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