One year on since the last episode, this is a belated addition to
the sequence of posts recovering the forgotten story of the British
Chess Club of Paris.
The Club flourished in the City of Light from 1926 up to the War of 1939-45
providing chessic divertissements for ex-pat and visiting
British players. It joined the local leagues, took part in Parisian/French chess
administration, and ran its own internal tournaments. Through lean years and
years of plenty, the BCCP kept the flag flying for les jouers
d'échecs britanniques - although chess wasn't their only
amusement: they enjoyed a bon repas as well...
The Club's most high profile event was a team consultation game-by-cable
against the Manhattan Chess Club in 1931 (the BCCP lost). There was a fulsome account of the
event in the British Chess Magazine, probably submitted by the
Club's enthusiastic publicity manager George Langelaan (the originator of the spoof coat-of-arms above). Post-war he became a sci-fi author best known for The
Fly; he also wrote (in French) a chess-themed
robo-shocker. Among other members of the Club there were - for greater or
lesser periods of time - one-time Scottish Champion H.K. Handasyde, then
domiciled in Paris; Laurent Henry Mortimore who went on to serve with
distinction in the war (to be decorated by both the British and the French, as
was Langelaan also); and briefly - before he was expelled from France as a spy
- the notorious and self-promoting occultist Alesteir
Crowley. He was a decent player, as he was the first to admit; though it is
doubtful that he was good enough to beat Tartakover in a Paris league match as
he claimed - even with the spirited assistance of "the Baron" (who Crowley consulted in the gents).
We also came across a Mr Wechsler, who briefly played for the BCCP
in 1929. Notwithstanding the generous help of Dominique Thimongier of the
authoratitive Heritage des Echecs Francais, we couldn't quite pin down his actual
name among the chess-playing Wechsler family, three of whom were active on the
British chess scene in the 1920s and 1930s. They played with various and
confusing initials, sometimes in the same events.
So which of them was it who séjourned in Paris? And why? Now the truth about the
Wechsler of the BCCP can be told.