Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Cecil Purdy

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
Australia Egypt

Role
  
Chess master


Name
  
Cecil Purdy

ICCF World Champion
  
1950–53

Children
  
John Purdy

Cecil Purdy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

Full name
  
Cecil John Seddon Purdy

Born
  
27 March 1906 Port Said, Egypt (
1906-03-27
)

Title
  
International Master (1951) ICCF Grandmaster (1953)

Died
  
November 6, 1979, Sydney, Australia

Books
  
Guide to Good Chess, Chess Made Easy, CJS Purdy's Fine Art o, CJS Purdy on the Endg, How Purdy Won: 1st World Ch

Education
  
Cranbrook School, Sydney

Evolution of chess style 169 cecil purdy vs madsen the first correspondence world championship


Cecil John Seddon Purdy (27 March 1906, Port Said, Egypt – 6 November 1979, Sydney, Australia) was an Australian chess International Master (IM), writer, and inaugural World Correspondence Chess champion. Purdy earned the Grandmaster of Correspondence Chess title in 1953. He was also an influential chess magazine writer, editor, and publisher.

Contents

Cecil Purdy QUOTES BY CECIL PURDY AZ Quotes

Life

As a child he moved with his family from Egypt to New Zealand, then to Tasmania, Australia, before they settled in Sydney when he was 12, where he was educated at Cranbrook School. While in Tasmania one of his classmates was future film star Errol Flynn.

He began his chess career at the age of 16 and soon decided to become a full-time chess writer and player. Initially an over the board (OTB) player, he soon began to mix OTB play with correspondence play. He was four times winner of the Australian Chess Championship, in 1935, 1937, 1949, and 1951. He won the first two Australian Correspondence Chess Championships, in 1938 and 1945. He also won the New Zealand Chess Championship in 1924/25. In Auckland 1952, he drew a hard-fought match with Ortvin Sarapu, at the time by far the best player in New Zealand. They were thus declared Australasian co-champions.

He was married in 1934 to Anne Crakanthorp (1915–2013), the daughter of two-time Australian Chess Champion Spencer Crakanthorp. The marriage produced two children, John (1935–2011) and Diana. John Purdy followed in his father's (and grandfather's) footsteps in winning the Australian Chess Championship in 1955 and 1963. Diana was also a keen chessplayer, and married leading New Zealand player Frank Hutchings in 1960.

Purdy founded and edited the magazine Australasian Chess Review (1929–1944); this became Check (1944–45), and finally Chessworld (1946–1967). He was described by Bobby Fischer as being a great chess instructor. Some of his writings are still in print. He is somewhat famous for saying "Pawn endings are to chess as putting is to golf."

In 1976 he was awarded the Order of Australia for services to chess.

Death

Purdy died from an aneurysm while playing chess over the board, with his final words allegedly being "I have a win, but it will take some time" (Dunne 1991:119). However Australian grandmaster Ian Rogers reports that Purdy's last words were "I have to seal a move", and that Purdy "wasn't even winning in the final position — Cecil wouldn't have mistaken a drawn position for a winning position."

Books

  • Purdy, C.J.S. (2003), C.J.S. Purdy on the Endgame, Thinker's Press, ISBN 1-888710-03-9 
  • Purdy, C.J.S. (1972), How Fischer Won: World Chess championship, 1972, E. J. Dwyer, ISBN 978-0855742089 
  • Purdy, C.J.S. (1950), Guide To Good Chess, Horwitz 
  • References

    Cecil Purdy Wikipedia