On this day … 17 July 1852

The Preston Chronicle reported that Howard Staunton, the British chess champion and writer of the game’s leading handbook, had visited Preston as guest of the town’s chess club. Staunton was only one of the distinguished chess masters in attendance, but it was his presence that represented a coup for what the Chronicle described as ‘the spirited little club’.

Howard Staunton - Victorian chess champion
Howard Staunton

The club’s meeting place was the Literary and Philosophical Institution on Cross Street and it was there that two of the club members, Mr F. Myers and Mr H. Stanley, challenged Staunton to a game.

He gave them a pawn and two moves start and battle commenced at two o’clock. They were still playing four hours later, with forty moves made, when it was time to break for dinner. Staunton ‘admitted that the Prestonians had the better of the game’.

The dinner was ‘on table at seven o’clock’ in the Assembly Room at the Bull Hotel (now Bull and Royal) and ‘after justice had been done to the feast’ the chairman, Alderman James German, rose to address the guests, remarking:

‘He was glad that in a commercial community like that of Preston, where it was often thought they were too much engrossed with the all-absorbing pursuit after money, they should have met to pay a compliment to one who sought to make life less toilsome and more agreeable.’

Staunton, a somewhat controversial character reputed to be the illegitimate son of the fifth Earl of Carlisle, was also a renowned Shakespeare scholar and claimed to have taken the part of Lorenzo in The Merchant of Venice with the celebrated actor Edmund Kean as Shylock. He later more or less gave up chess to dedicate himself to producing an acclaimed edition of Shakespeare’s works.

Johann Lowenthal - chess master
Johann Lowenthal

The Mr F. Myers, who with his partner had proved a challenging opponent for Staunton, had taken on another of the chess masters, Johann Lowenthal, the previous day, this time with the assistance of a Major Robertson from the Manchester chess club, and held him to a draw.


Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Staunton
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_L%C3%B6wenthal


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