Owen Hindle
CountryEngland
Born (1940-03-14) 14 March 1940
TitleFIDE Master (1986)
Peak rating2380 (January 1978)

Owen Hindle (born 14 March 1940) is an English chess FIDE Master and a Chess Olympiad individual bronze medal winner (1964).

Biography

Owen Hindle was one of England's leading chess players in the 1960s. He was British Lightning Chess champion in 1965 and represented his country on numerous occasions.

He played in the British Chess Championship several times. In this tournament, Owen Hindle achieved the best result in 1964, in Whitby, when he shared 2nd place (Michael Haygarth won the tournament). Owen Hindle also regularly participated in the Hastings International Chess Congress tournaments, where in 1965 he beat Svetozar Gligorić, one of the strongest grandmasters at the time. In 1967, in Vrnjačka Banja, he participated in the World Chess Championship Zonal Tournament.[1]

Owen Hindle played for England in the Chess Olympiads:[2]

Owen Hindle played for England in the Clare Benedict Cups:[3]

  • in 1963, at the fourth board in the 10th Clare Benedict Chess Cup in Lucerne (+1, =4, -0), winning a team bronze medal,
  • in 1965, at the third board in the 12th Clare Benedict Chess Cup in West Berlin (+0, =4, -1),
  • in 1966, at the third board in the 13th Clare Benedict Chess Cup in Brunnen (+0, =1, -4).

Owen Hindle is also known as a chess journalist and historian. From 1960 to 1963, he worked for London's chess magazine Chess.[4] He has written several books on chess and the history of chess, including books about English chess players Joseph Henry Blackburne and Cecil Valentine De Vere. Owen Hindle is the author of a study on the history of Norfolk and Norwich chess clubs.[5]

In 1968 Owen Hindle married the Scottish chess master Kathleen Patterson.[6]

Literature

  • Owen Hindle. Further Steps in Chess. 1968. ISBN 978-0850363586
  • Owen Hindle. J.H. Blackburne: the Final Years (Chess masters). 1998. ISBN 978-1901034110
  • Robert H. Jones, Owen Hindle. The English Morphy?: The Life and Games of Cecil De Vere, First British Chess Champion. 2001. ISBN 978-0953132140

References


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