"Early Chess Career (1884-1911)"
The definitive biography of the six-time British champion covers the early years of his rich chess career (1905-1911). The biography is not only a contribution to the unknown chapters of Yates' chess career, but also an analysis of Yorkshire and, in part, British Chess. The publication contains 137 mostly unknown Yates games, player indexes, and openings.
Frederick Dewhurst Yates was an English chess master who won the British Chess Championship on six occasions. He started a career in accountancy, but in 1909, abandoned it in favour of becoming a professional chess player and journalist. Yates almost won the British Championship in 1911, when he tied for first place with Henry Atkins, but lost the play-off. He went on to secure the title in 1913, 1914, 1921, 1926, 1928 and 1931.
Despite considerable domestic success, his record in international tournaments did not do him justice. Nevertheless he defeated most of his illustrious adversaries, the most notable exceptions being Emanuel Lasker and José Raúl Capablanca. His victory against Alexander Alekhine at Karlsbad in 1923 won the brilliancy prize, while his win against Milan Vidmar at San Remo in 1930 was described by Alekhine as the finest game played since the war.
As a journalist he was the chess columnist of the Manchester Guardian and with William Winter, the co-author of Modern Master Play (1929). He wrote accounts of two world championship encounters; those between Alekhine and Capablanca, and Alekhine and Bogoljubow. His life ended prematurely, when a leaking gas pipe caused him to asphyxiate during his sleep.
Content:
003 Foreword
007 Introduction
010 Part One: The beginning of Yates' chess career (1884-1907)
080 Part Two: A difficult road among Yorkshire's chess elite (1907-1908)
161 Part Three: On the road to the Yorkshire County Chess Champion (1908-1909)
248 Part Four: On the road to the Northern County Chess Union Champion (1909-1910)
374 Part Five: Chess Summer in 1910
472 Part Six: On the road to British chess elite (1910-1911)
648 Conclusion
651 Appendix
653 Literature and sources
655 Index of openings
655 Index of players