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Charles Henry Stanley
Number of games in database: 75
Years covered: 1844 to 1868
Overall record: +34 -25 =10 (56.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games
      Based on games in the database; may be incomplete.
      6 exhibition games, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Giuoco Piano (10) 
    C50 C53 C54
 Sicilian (6) 
    B21 B20 B32 B40
 Vienna Opening (6) 
    C26
 King's Gambit Accepted (4) 
    C33
With the Black pieces:
 Giuoco Piano (7) 
    C53 C50
 Queen's Gambit Declined (6) 
    D30 D31
 French Defense (6) 
    C01 C00
 King's Pawn Game (5) 
    C44
 King's Gambit Accepted (4) 
    C38 C33 C39
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   E Rousseau vs C Stanley, 1845 0-1
   J Schulten vs C Stanley, 1844 0-1
   C Stanley vs Morphy, 1857 1-0

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CHARLES HENRY STANLEY
(born 1819, died 1901) United Kingdom (citizen of United States of America)

[what is this?]
Charles Henry Stanley was born in Brigton, England in September, 1819. In 1839, he defeated Howard Staunton (+3-2=1), but Howard Staunton was giving odds of a pawn and move. Stanley emigrated to New York in 1842 and worked at the British Consulate. He was regarded as the best chess player in New York from 1842 to 1857. In 1844, he defeated John William Schulten in two matches in New York. He was considered to be America's first chess champion until he lost a match with Paul Morphy in 1857. He started America's first chess column in the Spirit of the Times on March 1, 1845, which contained the first chess problem published in America. The chess column ran until October, 1848. In 1845, he, again, defeated John William Schulten in a match in New York. In December, 1845, he defeated Eugene Rousseau at the New Orleans Chess Club (Sazerac Coffee House) in the first unofficial US Championship (15 wins, 8 losses, 8 draws). This was the first organized chess event in the United States. The stakes for the event was $1,000. Rousseau’s second was Eugene Morphy, the uncle of Paul Morphy. Paul Morphy attended the match at the age of 8 and became interested in chess. In 1846 Stanley defeated Charles Vezan in New York and George Hammond in Chicago. In October 1846, he started the "American Chess Magazine: a periodical Organ of Communication for American Chess-Players", which folded in September 1847. In 1846 he published the first book in America on a chess match, "31 Games of Chess." From 1848 to 1856, he edited a chess column in "The Albion." In February, 1850 he defeated John Turner of Louisville, Kentucky in Washington, DC and drew a match against Johann Jacob Loewenthal (+3-3=0) in New York. In 1852 he suggested the holding of an international chess tournament at the Great Exhibition in New York in 1853, but nothing came of it. In 1852, he drew a match with Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint Amant in New York (+4-4=0). In 1855 he organized the first World Chess Problem tournament. In 1857 he was knocked out in the first round of the 1st American Chess Congress by Theodore Lichtenhein, winning 2 games and losing 3 games. In December, 1857, Stanley’s daughter, Pauline, was born. She was named after Paul Morphy. In 1859, he published "Morphy’s Match Games" and "The Chess Player’s Instructor." In 1860 he returned to England and took 2nd in the 3rd British Chess Association Congress in Cambridge, England, losing to Ignatz Von Kolisch. From 1860 to 1862, he edited a chess column in the Manchester Express and Guardian. In 1861, he won a tournament in Leeds, England. In 1868, he lost a match to George Henry Mackenzie in New York. He was an alcoholic who spent his last 20 years in institutions on Ward’s Island and in the Bronx. He died in 1901.

 page 1 of 3; games 1-25 of 75  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves Year Event/LocaleOpening
1. C Stanley vs J Schulten 1-043 1844 New York m1C23 Bishop's Opening
2. J Schulten vs C Stanley 0-150 1844 New York m2C53 Giuoco Piano
3. J Schulten vs C Stanley 1-027 1844 New York m1C23 Bishop's Opening
4. J Schulten vs C Stanley 0-134 1844 New York m2C23 Bishop's Opening
5. J Schulten vs C Stanley 1-071 1844 New York m2C23 Bishop's Opening
6. C Stanley vs J Schulten ½-½33 1844 New York m1C53 Giuoco Piano
7. J Schulten vs C Stanley 0-138 1844 New York m2C53 Giuoco Piano
8. C Stanley vs E Rousseau ½-½66 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34B21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
9. E Rousseau vs C Stanley ½-½58 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C01 French, Exchange
10. C Stanley vs E Rousseau 1-063 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C23 Bishop's Opening
11. E Rousseau vs C Stanley  1-037 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C44 King's Pawn Game
12. C Stanley vs E Rousseau  0-155 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C50 Giuoco Piano
13. E Rousseau vs C Stanley 0-155 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34D30 Queen's Gambit Declined
14. C Stanley vs E Rousseau  1-049 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C50 Giuoco Piano
15. E Rousseau vs C Stanley  0-166 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C01 French, Exchange
16. C Stanley vs E Rousseau  0-154 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34D30 Queen's Gambit Declined
17. E Rousseau vs C Stanley 0-118 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34D30 Queen's Gambit Declined
18. C Stanley vs E Rousseau 1-036 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C50 Giuoco Piano
19. E Rousseau vs C Stanley 1-069 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C70 Ruy Lopez
20. C Stanley vs E Rousseau  ½-½48 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34B40 Sicilian
21. E Rousseau vs C Stanley  0-137 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C44 King's Pawn Game
22. C Stanley vs E Rousseau 1-019 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34B21 Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4
23. E Rousseau vs C Stanley  ½-½50 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C53 Giuoco Piano
24. C Stanley vs E Rousseau  1-034 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C50 Giuoco Piano
25. E Rousseau vs C Stanley 1-040 1845 New Orleans m ;HCL 34C70 Ruy Lopez
 page 1 of 3; games 1-25 of 75  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Stanley wins | Stanley loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
Feb-04-05   euripides: Judging from the games, Stanley appears to be an American, who was playing in New York and New Orleans in the 1840s and visited England in the 1850s. Anyone know more ?
Feb-04-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  sneaky pete: <euripides> Born England, 1819, moved to the USA in the 1840s, was considered the American champion from 1845 when he defeated Rousseau in a match until 1857 (Morphy).
Feb-04-05   euripides: <pete> many thanks !
Jun-27-05
Premium Chessgames Member
  Knight13: Charles Henry Stanley (1819 - 1901) was the first chess champion of the United States. He became the champion in 1845 after defeating Eugène Rousseau of New Orleans in a match for the championship. Stanley was an Englishman who came to the USA in 1843, and his English ideas had a great influence on American chess.

One of his ideas was to have a regular newspaper column devoted to chess, which he started in 1845 in The Spririt of the Times. He also started the American Chess Magazine in 1846, but others copied the idea (which originated in England), and competition forced the magazine out of business.

In 1855 he organized the first World Problem Tournament.

In 1846 he published the first US book on a chess match, 31 Games of Chess.

Stanley is a little known figure who has been eclipsed by the achievements of the world famous Paul Morphy. He played Morphy in 1857, losing the title of US Chess Champion to his much better opponent.

He was married and later had a daughter Pauline, who was named after Morphy.

--- Wikipedia

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