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Harry Pillsbury
Pillsbury 
 

Number of games in database: 882
Years covered: 1890 to 1905
Overall record: +227 -97 =105 (65.2%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 453 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (115) 
    C67 C78 C62 C80 C71
 Vienna Opening (70) 
    C25 C29 C28 C27 C26
 French Defense (67) 
    C14 C13 C00 C10 C11
 Orthodox Defense (65) 
    D60 D50 D55 D63 D51
 King's Gambit Accepted (51) 
    C39 C33 C34 C37 C36
 King's Gambit Declined (44) 
    C30 C31 C32
With the Black pieces:
 Ruy Lopez (64) 
    C67 C65 C60 C79 C78
 Petrov (29) 
    C42 C43
 Sicilian (14) 
    B73 B32 B30 B24 B56
 Queen's Pawn Game (13) 
    D00 D02 D04
 Four Knights (12) 
    C49 C48
 King's Gambit Declined (11) 
    C31 C30 C32
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Pillsbury vs Lasker, 1896 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Gunsberg, 1895 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Tarrasch, 1895 1-0
   Pillsbury vs G Marco, 1900 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Lasker, 1904 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Fernandez, 1900 1-0
   Lasker vs Pillsbury, 1895 0-1
   Pillsbury vs Winawer, 1896 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Mason, 1895 1-0
   Pillsbury vs Maroczy, 1900 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   1st City Chess Club Tournament (1893)
   Pillsbury - Showalter US Championship (1897)
   Hastings (1895)
   Pillsbury - Showalter US Championship (1898)
   12th DSB Congress, Munich (1900)
   Buffalo (1901)
   Vienna (1898)
   Paris (1900)
   13th DSB Congress, Hanover (1902)
   Monte Carlo (1902)
   Nuremberg (1896)
   Budapest (1896)
   London (1899)
   Monte Carlo (1903)
   Impromptu International Congress, New York (1893)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   pillsbury's best games of chess by lobsters
   pillsbury's best games of chess by bengalcat47
   Pillsbury vs World Champions Decisive Games by visayanbraindoctor
   Ideas by LaBourdonnaisdeux
   T N O P Playerss by Littlejohn
   15 N O P Players Stan Bac SP by fredthebear
   HNP: "A Genuis Ahead of His Time" by chocobonbon
   Vienna 1898 by JoseTigranTalFischer
   Vienna 1898 by suenteus po 147
   Vienna 1898 by Mal Un
   Noteworthy Games by BAJones
   Pillsbury, the Extraordinary by Okavango
   Pillsbury, the Extraordinary by StuporMundi
   Noteworthy Games by Southernrun

GAMES ANNOTATED BY PILLSBURY: [what is this?]
   Burn vs Lasker, 1895
   Tarrasch vs Chigorin, 1895
   Schlechter vs Lasker, 1895
   Janowski vs Steinitz, 1895
   Schiffers vs Chigorin, 1895
   >> 18 GAMES ANNOTATED BY PILLSBURY


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HARRY PILLSBURY
(born Dec-05-1872, died Jun-17-1906, 33 years old) United States of America

[what is this?]

Harry Nelson Pillsbury, Somerville, MA USA; died Philadelphia, PA USA.

He learned to play chess at the age of sixteen, when he was encouraged by family to study chess as a distraction after his mother died. Within four years Pillsbury had improved to the point of winning a three-game match from Wilhelm Steinitz in 1892 by the score of 2-1 at the odds of pawn and move. He also scored one of two wins against Steinitz in the World Champion's 20-board simultaneous exhibition. In 1893, he won a close match against John F Barry (+5 -4 =1) that earned him entry into his first international tournament in New York as Boston's representative. Although the congress fell through, most likely due to problems in the financial world, the so-called "Impromptu" 1893 tournament was organized in its place. Playing in his first tournament with European masters, Pillsbury barely managed a plus score and finished seventh. Pillsbury returned to New York a few months later and finished clear first in the 1893 New York Masters (sometimes called the "Manhattan Cafe") tournament ahead of a number of American masters. Pillsbury then moved to New York and began working at the Eden Musee as the operator of a chess and checkers playing automaton. In 1894, Pillsbury finished second to Jackson Showalter in a small tournament in Buffalo (Staats-Zeitung Cup) and had a poor result of =5th in a master's tournament in New York. Nevertheless, he still made a sufficiently good impression for the Brooklyn Chess Club to sponsor his trip to the 1895 chess congress in Hastings.

At Hastings, Pillsbury stunned the chess world by taking clear first in perhaps the greatest tournament of the 19th Century, ahead of a field that included Mikhail Chigorin, Emanuel Lasker, Siegbert Tarrasch, Wilhelm Steinitz, Joseph Blackburne, Amos Burn, Richard Teichmann and others. On the basis of this result, Pillsbury was invited to an elite four-player tournament in St. Petersburg, with Lasker, Steinitz, and Chigorin. Pillsbury was leading by a full game halfway through the tournament (+5 -1 =3), but fell ill during the second half, with catastrophic results (+0 -6 =3). Had Pillsbury managed to win or finish a close second he might well have secured the world championship match that eluded him. Nevertheless, this was the start of a successful tournament career that included 1st at Buffalo 1901, =1st at Vienna 1898 and Munich 1900, 2nd at Paris 1900, Monte Carlo 1902, and Hanover 1902, =2nd at London 1899, 3rd at St. Petersburg 1895-6, Budapest 1896, and Monte Carlo 1903, =3rd at Nuremberg 1896, and 4th at the Vienna Gambit tournament 1903. Pillsbury only seriously faltered at the very end, finishing =8th with a minus score at Cambridge Springs 1904, in his last tournament.

Pillsbury negotiated the final terms of the first Anglo-American cable match with Sir George Newnes, president of the London Chess Club. Sir George donated the Newnes Cup, held by the winning team each year until the next match. Pillsbury played on the first board for the US team in the first eight cable matches (+1 -2 =5). Pillsbury also helped prepare the US House of Representatives team for their 1897 cable match against the House of Commons.

Pillsbury was considered the strongest player in the US. He played two matches for the US championship against Showalter, winning both of the Pillsbury - Showalter US Championship (1897) (+10-8=3) and Pillsbury - Showalter US Championship (1898) (+7-3=2) matches. However Pillsbury was not especially eager to be named US champion: "I was not seeking the match, and even if I should win I shall leave Showalter in possession of the title; I am not in search of any title but one." The "one" title was, of course, World Champion. Pillsbury wrote to New York following his success at Hastings that there had been some talk of arranging a title match with Lasker, but, as with so many proposed world championship matches over the years, nothing came of it.

Pillsbury was accomplished at blindfold chess and often playing mutiple games blindfolded in his exhibitions. He set an early world record for number of simultaneous blindfold games, playing 20 games at Philadelphia in 1900. He was also a skilled checkers player, and would sometimes include checkers and whist games in his exhibitions. Pillsbury's exhibitions were quite impressive for the day. Jose Raul Capablanca wrote: "The effect of Pillsbury's displays was immediate. They electrified me, and with the consent of my parents I began to visit the Havana Chess Club."

Pillsbury played a number of consultation games over the years. Such games were sometimes played on off days of tournaments between players with no adjourned games. Pillsbury played with or against masters such as Henry Bird, Blackburne, Chigorin, David Janowski, Lasker, William Napier, Georg Marco, Frank Marshall, Carl Schlechter, Showalter, Tarrasch, Teichmann, and others.

While there is general agreement that Pillsbury died of syphilis, it is unknown when he contracted the disease. Syphilis shows great variability in its time course across patients and can easily mimic symptoms of other diseases, so a definitive answer is unlikely. Pillsbury was ill during the second half of the St. Petersburg tournament, which was attributed to influenza at the time. He was also quite ill during the Nuremberg tournament, and, of course, during Cambridge Springs. He suffered two strokes during the last year and a half of his life.

Pillsbury wrote no chess books. He wrote occasional newspaper reports on tournaments and matches and wrote a column for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Although there are few known correspondence games played by Pillsbury, one of the early correspondence chess organizations in the US was named in his honor (Pillsbury National Correspondence Chess Association).

Wikipedia article: Harry Nelson Pillsbury

Last updated: 2025-04-27 16:51:12

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 36; games 1-25 of 882  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. Pillsbury vs F K Young 1-0201890Casual gameA02 Bird's Opening
2. Pillsbury vs C F Burille 0-1451891Odds Match vs. Burille, -92000 Chess variants
3. Pillsbury vs C F Burille 1-0291891Odds Match vs. Burille, -92000 Chess variants
4. Pillsbury vs C F Burille 1-0351891Odds Match vs. Burille, -92000 Chess variants
5. Pillsbury vs C F Burille ½-½701891Odds Match vs. Burille, -92000 Chess variants
6. Pillsbury vs C F Burille 1-0531891Odds Match vs. Burille, -92000 Chess variants
7. Pillsbury vs Steinitz 1-0661892Odds match (pawn and move)000 Chess variants
8. Pillsbury vs Steinitz 0-1361892Odds match (pawn and move)000 Chess variants
9. Pillsbury vs Steinitz 1-0311892Odds match (pawn and move)000 Chess variants
10. Steinitz vs Pillsbury 0-1301892Steinitz Simul 20b, BostonC30 King's Gambit Declined
11. Pillsbury vs J W Young 0-1491893SimulC14 French, Classical
12. Pillsbury vs W P Shipley 0-1961893PhiladelphiaA07 King's Indian Attack
13. F K Young vs Pillsbury 1-0161893BostonC62 Ruy Lopez, Old Steinitz Defense
14. Walbrodt vs Pillsbury 0-1371893Walbrodt Exhibition, Match GameC30 King's Gambit Declined
15. Pillsbury vs Walbrodt 1-0271893Walbrodt Exhibition, Match GameC25 Vienna
16. Pillsbury vs Walbrodt ½-½641893Walbrodt Exhibition, Match GameA07 King's Indian Attack
17. Pillsbury vs Gossip 1-0471893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkA07 King's Indian Attack
18. J M Hanham vs Pillsbury  1-0521893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkC55 Two Knights Defense
19. Pillsbury vs J S Ryan 1-0541893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkA40 Queen's Pawn Game
20. E Delmar vs Pillsbury 1-0251893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkC46 Three Knights
21. Pillsbury vs L Schmidt 1-0411893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkD04 Queen's Pawn Game
22. E N Olly vs Pillsbury 0-1451893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkA01 Nimzovich-Larsen Attack
23. Pillsbury vs F J Lee 0-1601893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkB01 Scandinavian
24. Lasker vs Pillsbury 1-0551893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkC60 Ruy Lopez
25. Pillsbury vs N Jasnogrodsky 1-0271893Impromptu International Congress, New YorkD00 Queen's Pawn Game
 page 1 of 36; games 1-25 of 882  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Pillsbury wins | Pillsbury loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 11 OF 44 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Feb-13-07  laskereshevsky: In the same 1896 at NUREMBERG, PILLSBURY was clearly in the shadow, as show the 8°round placings:

Walbrodt 6.5 on 8
Lasker 6/7 Steinitz 6/8
Tschigorin 5/7 Tarrasch-Janowski 5/8
Maroczy 4.5/7 Schlechter 4.5/8
PILLSBURY 4/7 Blackburne-schiffers 4/8
.....8 Players

BUT, when they meet at the following 9°round, HARRY, like a bull in the arena, crashed EMANUEL in a 1°brillancy prize game...( in a 171 game's tournament....)

Feb-13-07  laskereshevsky: In the game, at the 1904 CAMBRIDGE-SPRINGS tournament...the same story!!!

at the 5°round the pairing show:

Janowski 4.5
Marshall-Lasker-Teichmann-Mieses 4
PILLSBURY-Schlechter-Showalter 2.5
......8 Players

At the 6°round another PILLSBURY's masterpiece......very often for H.N.P.looks like LASKER was the "TORERO'S RED CAPE" shaked in front of the "AMERICAN BULL".....

CHAPEU, MOUNSIER HARRY......
( from a LASKER estimator...)

Feb-19-07  Plato: <Lasker's win over Steinitz? Think it would have been any different had either Tarrasch or Pillsbury played him instead?>

Probably not, but Pillsbury seemed to have considerably more trouble against Steinitz than Lasker did.

May-02-07  gauer: Pillsbury was not quite a reincarnated Morphy, but his mating combos & sacrificial style sure was in the same spirit. It's too bad they never met at the board, both skilled at blind-fold play, but also having premature ends to their careers.
May-02-07  RookFile: Wow, a lot of posts over nothing. I said that for a brief moment in history, Pillsbury was the #1 player in the world. I agree with Grandmasters Bisguier and Soltis about when this time period was. Well, carry on, put in another 6 pages or so on this....
May-02-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  tamar: Pillsbury's illness skews our appreciation of how great he was.

During Nuremburg 1896, he suffered sleepless nights and fever during the early rounds, then had a recovery and beat Tarrasch, Lasker and Chigorin in successive rounds.

Some other kind of measuring stick, one incorporating quality of game, is needed to rate players like Pillsbury, Rubinstein, Charousek, and perhaps Ivanchuk, who were world class, but unable to show it because of a physical or nervous condition.

May-16-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  LIFE Master AJ: A good blog, with Pillsbury as the centerpiece. (http://www.impalapublications.com/b...)
Jun-26-07  blackburne: Harry Nelson Pillsbury. Article in spanish with best games, biography, results in the web "Ajedrez de ataque".

Article of Pillsbury:

http://www.ajedrezdeataque.com/04%2...

Other romantic players:

http://www.ajedrezdeataque.com/04%2...

---------------

Jul-14-07  vonKrolock: Following a W. A. Shinkman's account that one of his problems <"intrigued Pillsbury and other famous masters">, we can try the same test for our own, so to say, bare brains.

Acording to Michael McDowell, who kindly provided the original source too, what Shinkman actually wrote in "The Golden Argosy", was: <"A favourite position with Pillsbury, and other players."> - Well, now it's time for entering the very ancient wood in chess wide regions to follow the same paths that charmed Pillsbury's mind...

W. A. Shinkman
"New York Clipper"
July 22nd 1899


click for larger view

White To Play and Mate in Four Moves

Jul-15-07
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: I can't get it :(
Jul-15-07  RookFile: Well, Fritz gets this, when you put it on a mate search. Very pretty, I never would have thought of this.
Jul-16-07  docofthree: I like pillsbury's chances against lasker from 1895 to 1900. after 1900 you must favor lasker. dream match ups missed1 stauton vs morphy 1855 2 pillsbury vs lasker 1897 3 fischer vs kasporov 1985 (unlike many i think fischer style matches up better with kasporov than karpov.
Jul-26-07  Bassman72001: Can anyone help me? I am looking for information on Pillsbury's Knight Manuevre, and also on Botvinnik's Pawn Breakthrough
Nov-04-07  RookFile: I wonder what happenned to Pillsbury. Yes, I know that at some point he probably had syphillis. In the aforementioned book by Bisguier and Soltis, it says he tried to jump out of a building or something.
Nov-04-07  pacelli: Pillsbury would never have beaten Lasker in a match, much less Tarrasch.
Dec-05-07  brankat: H.N.Pillsbury died at the age of 34, and was always so youthful looking, that it's somehow hard to believe he would have been 135 :-)

Happy Birthday!

Dec-05-07  savagerules: < RookFile: I wonder what happenned to Pillsbury. Yes, I know that at some point he probably had syphillis. In the aforementioned book by Bisguier and Soltis, it says he tried to jump out of a building or something >

Maybe he was running from an irate husband or boyfriend of the lady he shagged and got syphillis from, in this case it makes good sense to try to jump out of a building or else he was tripping out on a very early experimentation of LSD.

Dec-05-07  moodini: "Syphilis brought his chess career and his life to a premature end in 1906." Surely the author could have written "Syphilis brought life to a premature end in 1906." and the astute reader could have worked the rest out for themselves?
Dec-05-07  parisattack: One of the greatest players of all time! The original 'power play' guy. Just his games with Lasker are a complete chess course. I rank him with Rubinstein and Keres in the group of players who certainly could have been WC. The new book, 'Harry Nelson Pillsbury - a genius ahead of his time' by Cherniaev is very good.
Dec-05-07  RookFile: I have yet to play over a Pillsbury game that was boring, whether he won, lost, or drew.
Dec-05-07  MUNGOMYERS: i think pillsbury is a genius some of his wins example lasker pillsbury st petersburg 1896 pillsbury tarrasch hastings 1895 pillsbury lasker cambridge springs 1904 pillsbury gunsburg hastings 1895 check them out he is my favourite player one of the best of all time
Dec-05-07  MUNGOMYERS: pillsbury won the biggest tournament of all time hastings 1895 ahead of players such as lasker tarrasch steinitz schlechter tchigorin bird blackburne and burn
Dec-05-07  MaxxLange: Linares 1992?
Dec-05-07  parisattack: <docofthree: ... dream match ups missed1 stauton vs morphy 1855 2 pillsbury vs lasker 1897 3 fischer vs kasporov 1985 (unlike many i think fischer style matches up better with kasporov than karpov.>

You would think some computer gurus could come up with programs that emulate the play of great players - basically by curve-fitting the program until it selected most of the moves the player actually made in a game and writing the heuristics to generalize? Then you could have at least pseudo Dream Match-Ups and even cross generation matches.

Dec-05-07  talisman: happy birthday harry.combination of Bo Belinsky and Sandy Koufax.Joe Namath and Johnny Unitas.Pele and George Best.Tony Lema and Arnold Palmer.Hot Rod Hundley and Jerry West.
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