- Arthur Dake
Arthur Dake (Darkowski) (
8 April 1910 –28 April 2000 ) was an American chess master. He was born inPortland, Oregon and died inReno, Nevada .He was born into a Polish family with Jewish roots, [http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/jews.html] who immigrated to America before
World War I . At age 16 he became a merchant seaman, traveling to Japan, China, and the Philippines. In 1927 he returned to high school in Oregon and learned chess from aRussia n immigrant living in a localYMCA . He resumed work as a sailor and landed inNew York City in 1929. New York was the center of chess in the U.S. at that time, and Dake teamed with leading checkers player Kenneth Grover in aConey Island chess and checkers stand that accepted any challenger at 25 cents a game. TheWall Street Crash of 1929 made that business unviable.Dake's first chess tournament was the 1930 New York State Championship, in which he finished third. [http://chesszoom.org/hof/misc/dake_com.txt] In 1931 he won the championship of the
Marshall Chess Club . TheGreat Depression years saw unparalleled U.S. dominance of world chess competition. When US teams won four consecutiveChess Olympiads in 1931, 1933, 1935, and 1937, Dake who played in 1931–1935 was one of their major members, along withIsaac Kashdan ,Frank Marshall ,Reuben Fine ,Israel Horowitz , andAbraham Kupchik , winning two individual medals: silver (1933) and gold (1935).
* In 1931, on third board in 4th Olympiad inPrague (+5 –2 =7).
* In 1933, on fourth board in 5th Olympiad inFolkestone (+9 –2 =2).
* In 1935, on fourth board in 6th Olympiad inWarsaw (+13 –0 =5). [ [http://www.olimpbase.org OlimpBase :: the encyclopaedia of team chess ] ]In 1931, Dake tied for 1st-3rd with
Akiba Rubinstein andFrederick Yates , inAntwerp . In 1932, he tied for 3rd-5th, afterAlexander Alekhine and Kashdan, inPasadena . He defeated World Champion Alekhine in their game at Pasadena, becoming the first American to do so. In 1934, he took 3rd in theU.S. Open Chess Championship . In 1934, he tied for 3rd-4th in Syracuse (Samuel Reshevsky won). In 1934, he tied for 2nd-3rd in theManhattan Chess Club Championship. In 1934/35, he tied for 1st-3rd with Kashdan and Fine inMexico City . In 1935, he took 2nd, behind Fine, in the U.S. Open. In 1936, he tied for 6-7th in the first U.S. Championship. In 1936, he tied for 2nd-3rd, behind Horowitz, in the U.S. Open. In 1938, he tied for 6-7th in the second U.S. Championship.He had met his wife Helen on the return ocean liner trip from Warsaw in 1935, and they moved back to Portland, where Dake had a career with the
Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles for more than 30 years.Dake was a member of a U. S. Group which went to
Moscow in 1946. He drew two games against Soviet grandmaster Andreas Lilienthal. In 1950, Dake played board 6 for the USA in a radio match againstYugoslavia . He scored one draw and one loss againstStojan Puc . In 1952, he tied for 4th-5th inHollywood (Svetozar Gligorić won). In 1954, Dake lost one game toDavid Bronstein in USA - USSR Match.Except for the USA - Yugoslavia match Hollywood 1952, the USA - USSR Match, and various minor local events in the Pacific Northwest, Dake apparently played little serious competitive chess for 37 years, from the 1938 United States Championship until he unexpectedly showed up to play in Lone Pine 1975. In the 1987 US Open, held at Portland, Oregon, Dake's home town, he scored 8-4 (at the age of 77 !).
He was awarded the
International Master title in 1954, and received the honorary Grandmaster title in 1986 in recognition of his results in the 1930s. He was the oldest competitive chess grandmaster in history, and died in 2000 at age 90. Dake spent his last night playing blackjack in the Sands Regency Casino in Reno Nevada. He died of natural causes. [ [http://www.chesscenter.com/twic/twic287.html#14 The Week in Chess 287 ] ]Casey Bush wrote the book "Grandmaster from Oregon" on Dake's chess career and life.
References
*citation
last=Bush | first=Casey
year=1991 | title=Grandmaster from Oregon: The Life and Games of Arthur Dake
publisher=Portland Chess Press, 1991
id=OCLC|24203479. ASIN: B0006F1J3Q
*Parr, Larry, "Arthur Dake: An American Original", "Chess Life ", December 1984, p. 28.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E00E2D71F38F932A25756C0A9669C8B63 NY Times obituary, May 11, 2000]External links
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