Sunteți pe pagina 1din 4

Rice Gambit

by Bill Wall

The Rice Gambit is a variation of the King's Gambit Accepted. It was discovered and promoted by New
York financier and chess patron Isaac Leopold Rice (1850-1915). Rice used his money to promote his
gambit. He paid top players to analyze and play it, and sponsored chess tournaments with the opening
theme being the Rice Gambit. He spent $50,000 subsidizing Rice Gambit events.

Isaac Rice was born in Bavaria on February 22, 1850. He came to Milwaukee, Wisconsin with his parents
in 1856. The family later moved to Philadelphia where Isaac attended high school. After high school,
he went to Paris to study music for 3 years. He returned to the USA, moved to New York City and
practices music for a few years before going back to school to get a law degree in 1878.

In 1880, he graduated from Columbia College of Law, cum laude.

From 1882 to 1883, Rice was a lecturer and librarian of the political science library of Columbia Law
School. While there, he founded the academy of political science.

In 1883, he was admitted to the Association of the Bar of the city of New York to practice law.

On December 15, 1883, he played and beat Johannes Zukertort a game of chess at the Manhattan Chess
Club. It was one of 12 blindfold games played simultaneously by Zukertort.

From 1883 to 1886, he practiced railroad law and was an instructor at Columbia Law. His brother was
president of the Distillers Company of America.

In 1884, he was appointed attorney for the Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company.

In 1885, he founded The Forum, a magazine of politics, finance, drama and literature. He owned the
magazine from 1885 to 1910.

On December 14, 1885, he married Julia Hyneman Barnett of New Orleans, who was one of the first
female medical doctors in the United States. They had 6 children and all of them played chess.

In 1889, he retired from active business in law and became more involved in chess as a patron.

In 1890, Isaac Rice became the president of the Manhattan Chess Club and a chess patron. He played a
long series of practice games with world champion William Steinitz, experimenting with the Kieseritzky
Gambit.

In 1895, he discovered a variation of the Kieseritzky Gambit of the King’s Gambit Accepted, which
became known as the Rice Gambit. The opening to the Rice Gambit is 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 g5 4.h4 g4
5.Ne5 Nf6 6.Bc4 d5 7.exd5 Bd6 8.O-O (Rice’s discovery, sacrificing a knight). He played this variation in a
number of off-hand games with some of the strongest players at the Manhattan Chess Club.

In 1897, he got involved in new emerging companies and became president of the Electric Storage
Battery Company. Rice held a virtual monopoly over the manufacture of batteries in the United
States. He was also a founder of the electric automobile.
In 1898 Rice published a book on the Rice Gambit.

In 1899, he took over the Electric Boat Company, which later became General Dynamics in 1952. He
won a contract to build Navy submarines. He was the co-inventor of the modern submarine (along with
John Holland) and held several patents in submarine design. During World War I, his company built 85
Navy Subs and 722 submarine chasers. He was also the president of the first company to make rubber
tires. He organized the first taxi service in New York.

In 1900, Rice’s Electric Vehicle Company was the largest vehicle maker in the world.

In 1900, he designed his mansion, called the Villa Julia, named after his wife Julia. She was one of the
first female medical doctors in the United States. It took 3 years to build, including a sound-proof
basement for chess tournaments. The fully equipped chess room was made out of solid rock. The
mansion was located at the corner of Riverside Drive and West 89th Street in Manhattan.

In 1901, Rice sold the British Royal Navy its first submarine. He also was one of the first to manufacture
electric refrigerators and the first dried milk products.

In 1902, he was awarded a doctorate in law from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.

In 1903 Chigorin defeated Emanuel Lasker in a Rice Gambit match, held in Brighton, England. Lasker had
White in all the games and played the Rice Gambit. Chigorin won 2 games, drew 3 games, and lost 1
game.

In 1903 the Manhattan Chess Club held a Rice Gambit tournament. It was won by Julius Finn.

In January, 1904, a third edition of the Rice Gambit was published.

On February 22-March 3, 1904, a Rice Gambit tournament was held in Monte Carlo, Monaco. It was won
by Frank Marshall and Rudolf Swiderski.

In April 1904, Rice gave a dinner for all the competitors of the Cambridge Springs tournament at his
mansion in Manhattan. Rice helped organize the event and was President of the International Chess
Congress, held in Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania.

On April 30, May 7, and May 14, 1904 a Rice Gambit team tournament was held at the famous
Cambridge Springs Chess Tournament in Pennsylvania. Seven consultation games were played between
the masters.

In November,1904, a Rice Gambit was held at the Metropolitan Chess Club in London and won by
Richard Teichmann (13.5/16). Napier and Leonhardt took 2nd-3rd. Gunsberg took 4th.

In 1904 the Brooklyn Chess Club had a Rice Gambit tournament. It was won by Hermann Helms.

In October, 1904, the Rice Gambit Association was formed at the home of Isaac Rice. Rice was president
and world champion Emanuel Lasker was secretary.
In 1905 the American Chess Bulletin, Vol. 2 was published and filled with much analysis and games of
the Rice Gambit.

On April 2 to May 14, 1905, a Rice Gambit tournament was held in St. Petersburg. It was won by Mikhail
Chigorin.

In 1905 Napier defeated Marshall in a Rice Gambit match, held in London. Napier won 2 games, drew 1
game, and lost 1 game.

In 1905, a fourth edition of the Rice Gambit was published.

In 1906, the Yale vs. Princeton chess match was held at Rice’s residence. Jose Capablanca was the
adjudicator.

In December1907, Rice sold his Villa Julia mansion for $600,000. The bankers’ panic of 1907 had
strained his companies and wiped out most of his assets. He was forced to sell his mansion for less than
it had cost. The mansion was later an Orthodox Jewish school. Rice and his family then moved into a
22-room apartment at the Ansonia Hotel. His mansion was to be torn down in 1980, but saved by
Jacqueline Onassis as a historical site.

In June 1910, world champion Emanuel Lasker wrote a monograph on the Rice Gambit.

Isaac Rice died at his residence in the Hotel Ansonia on November 2, 1915. It is estimated that he spent
over $50,000 subsidizing Rice Gambit events. During his lifetime, he was considered the chess world’s
leading patron. He also built over 15 corporations, which made him a multi-millionaire. He purchased
over 500 patents during his business career.

Family friends included the top chess players in the world, such as Emanuel Lasker, Jose Capablanca,
and Frank Marshall, as well as kings of Spain and Sweden, the Czar of Russia, Madame Curie, President
McKinley, and Pope Pius X. Perhaps he played chess with some of them.

Rice had been a member and president of the Manhattan Chess Club, as well as member of the Brooklyn
Chess Club, the Franklin Chess Club in Philadelphia, the Rice Chess Club in New York, and the St.
George’s Chess Club in London.

In January,1916, the American Chess Bulletin and Hermann Keidanz published a book called Twenty
Years of the Rice Gambit. It was 391 pages of games and analysis from the Rice Gambit.

In 1916, a Rice Memorial was held in New York, funded through his widow’s estate.

Isaac Rice and Rice Gambit References:


Berger, J., ‘Zum Kieseritzky-Gambit, Rice-Abzweigung,’ Deutsche Schachzeitung, 1915
Crespi, E., ‘Gambit Rice,’ La Strategie, Jan 15, 1901
Keidanz, H., Rice Gambit ‘Souvenir Supplement’, American Chess Bulletin, Feb, 1905
Keidanz, H., Twenty Years of the Rice Gambit, 1916
Kemeny, E., ‘The Rice Gambit,’ American Chess Magazine, October 1898
Krejcik, J., ‘Zur Theorie des Ricegambit,’ Wiener Schachzeitung, March-April 1915
Lasker, Emanuel, The Rice Gambit, 5th edition, 1910
Napier, W., ‘The Rice Gambit,’ American Chess World, April 1901
Napier, W., ‘Rice Gambit Explorers,’ Checkmate, July 1903
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Checkmate, February and March 1901
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Checkmate, June 1903
NN, ‘Professor I.L. Rice,’ Checkmate, April 1904
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ American Chess Bulletin, June 1904
NN, ‘Rice Trophy for Hamilton College,’ American Chess Bulletin, Oct 1905
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Lasker’s Chess Magazine, Oct 1905
NN, ‘Professor Rice, His Trophies and Gambit,’ American Chess Bulletin, Jan 1906
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ American Chess Bulletin, Feb 1906
NN, ‘Chess and War,’ Lasker’s Chess Magazine, Nov 1907
NN, ‘Rice Gambit Accepted,’ Chess Amateur, March 1908
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit in Action,’ American Chess Bulletin, March 1908
NN, ‘Etude sur le gambit Rice,’ La Strategie, Aug 1908
NN, ‘Rice Gambit Suffers Relapse,’ Chess Weekly, Aug 22, 1908
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Supplement in American Chess Bulletin, May 1909
NN, ‘Neue Ideen im Ricegambit,’ Wiener Schachzeitung, May-June 1909
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Chess Amateur, June 1909
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Chess Weekly, Sep 18, 1909
NN, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Chess Weekly, Sep 25, 1909
NN, ‘Rice Gambit in Philadelphia, American Chess Bulletin, Jan 1911
NN, Isaac Rice Obituary, New York Times, Nov 3, 1915
Ranken, C., ‘The Rice Gambit,’ British Chess Magazine, March 1898
Rice, I., ‘The Rice Gambit,’ Chess Amateur, Feb 1908
Rice, I., ‘The Rice Gambit,’ American Chess Bulletin, April 1910
Wall, Bill, ‘The Rice Gambit,’ http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/7378/ricegamb.htm
Winter, Edward, ‘Professor Isaac Rice and the Rice Gambit,’ www.chesshistory.com

home

S-ar putea să vă placă și