Winner of the club championship in 1952 and 1954.
Michael Davis
By Brian Denman
According to reports in the Hastings and St Leonards Observer he was born in the spring of 1935 (N.B. probably not in Sussex ). As early as October 1947 his name appeared in the chess column of the newspaper as the joint solver of a problem with B Davis (perhaps his father). He was soon to make his mark on the local chess scene as a pupil at Bexhill Grammar School and a member of the Bexhill Chess Club. In April 1949 he played for a Hastings boys' team in a match against Brighton boys and in the same month he entered the Hastings Boys' Congress. In 1950 R G Wade gave a 20 board simul to the Hastings Junior Chess League and lost against Davis (he won the other 19 games!). Davis was part of the Bexhill Chess Club team which won the McArthur Cup in 1950 and 1951. He himself won the Sussex Junior Championship in 1952 and 1953, and in 1951 and 1952 he represented England juniors in the Glorney Cup competition.
In 1952 he made a major breakthrough in the world of adult chess by becoming the youngest person ever to win the Hastings CC Championship. He tied first with J C Waterman in the final section, but then defeated the veteran in a play-off. In the 1953-54 Hastings Congress he came 1st = in the Premier Reserves 'A' event. He followed this by drawing a three game match against a former British champion, William Winter, in the spring of 1954. Later that year he became the youngest ever winner of the county championship (age 19). On his way to the title he defeated the strong Brighton players, Dave Springgay, Roy Buckland and 14 year old John McLeod. He also won the Hastings CC Championship a second time.
In 1953 he had been awarded a State Scholarship in Natural Sciences, but he had not immediately taken up his university place. This was the time when National Service was still compulsory and he went into the R.A.F., probably towards the end of 1954. For a while he was still able to make occasional appearances in the local chess scene, but by April 1955 he had been drafted to Singapore . Once there he found time to play chess and in 1956 he became champion of Malaya .
The Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 6.10.1956 reported that he was a surprise visitor to the club and that he was shortly to take up a place at Trinity College, Cambridge. He soon made his mark on chess in Cambridge and became a member of the university's very strong National Club Championship team. In 1957 he represented the university in the annual match against Oxford and he also played in the matches from 1958-60.
He competed in the 1956-57 Hastings Congress and again won the Premier Reserves 'A' event, though this time he was the outright winner.
In April 1957 there was a surprising Brighton interlude in his chess career. He came to play for the Shoreham chess club called Downsway in a couple of matches against the Brighton and Brighton YMCA chess clubs. The Shoreham club emanated from the house of Miss Anne Gammans and Miss Pat Renwick in a local street called Downsway, and they invited friends of theirs to represent their club. According to the Worthing Herald of 28.3.1958 Michael Davis was resident in Worthing and had a sister, Rosalind, who was a local table tennis champion. Perhaps his parents had moved to Worthing and he was living there during the vacation. In this period he also played for West Sussex in the Sexton Cup and defeated his former Hastings CC colleague, Gerald Sinden.
Further national honours fell to Michael, when he represented the England students' team at Reykjavik in 1957, at Leningrad in 1960 and Helsinki in 1961. He also played for a combined Oxford/Cambridge universities' team in a tournament in Yugoslavia in 1957. Early in 1958 his grading was 2b, which was the equivalent of 217-224 under the present day method of working out grades. In 1962 he became the joint Cambridge University champion.
It appears that he now began to play little chess. The Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 2.1.1965 reported that he had been unable to compete in the latest Congress because of pressure of university work. He did, however, play for Berkshire in a match against Sussex in October 1965, drawing against Professor D B Scott on board one.
I am not sure when it was that he emigrated to Australia to become a university lecturer. In the Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 12.12.1970 the columnist, Frank Rhoden, commented that Davis seemed to have deserted chess completely for mathematics. Rhoden also returned to the same subject in the Hastings newspaper of 6.3.1971 maintaining that Davis seemed to prefer the square root of minus one, or some such mathematical 'mumbo-jumbo' to chess. The columnist added that he always thought that Davis had it in him to win the British Championship.
There was, however, to be a brief return to chess about two years later. The Brighton and Hove Gazette of 10.2.1973 reported that Davis had returned for a short time to this country to further academic pursuits at Sussex University . He played in the Enfield Chess Congress at Pickett's Lock as well as the Sussex Congress at Falmer and showed that he was still a very strong player. He also played some games for Sussex .
It was not very long before he was back in Australia and in the Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 1.3.1975 he is reported as telling Frank Rhoden that he did not have much time for chess nowadays. Instead swimming, camping, and bush-walking took up a lot of his leisure. He also received a mention in the Hastings newspaper for 8.4.1978, where Rhoden stated that he was a professor at an Australian university.
This extremely talented player seems to have been lost to chess at a relatively young age. There is a good chance that he is still alive and living in Australia . If so, he would probably have just had his 70th birthday. Perhaps in some distant town he will use the World Wide Web to locate the Hastings CC web site and point out any errors that I have made in writing about him!
I enclose a number of his games, some of which involve very pretty tactical combinations:
Phipps,JB - Davis,M Hastings Boys' Congress (6), 05.04.1951 Sources: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 21.4.1951, 6.2.1954, 22.8.1964, and 6.3.1971, Sussex Daily News of 24.5.1951, British Chess Magazine of May 1951, and 'Chess More Miniature Games' - J Du Mont- Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, London (1953). 0-1
Whyte,AD - Davis,M Hastings Congress 1951-52 Prem. Res 'D', 01.1952 Sources: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 26.1.1952 and 5.6.1976 (N.B. in the second of these versions the colours are reversed), 'Chess More Miniature Games' - J Du Mont - Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd (1953), and '100 Master Games of Modern Chess' - J Du Mont. 0-1
Benger,Dr M - Davis,M Hastings Premier Reserves 'A', 1953 Sources: British Chess Magazine of February 1953, and Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 9.8.1958, 12.12.1970, and 9.7.1977. It is uncertain whether the game was played in 1952 or 1953. 0-1
Davis,M - Winter,W Match at Hastings, game 1, 04.1954 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 15.5.1954. 1/2-1/2
Davis,M - Springgay,DG Sussex Championship, round 3, 06.02.1954 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 13.2.1954. 1-0
Davis,M - McLeod,JW Sussex Championship final, 10.07.1954 Sources: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 17.7.1954 and Sussex Daily News of 29.7.1954. 1-0
Bickerstaff,Rev. JA - Davis,M Sexton Cup W.Sussex v E. Sussex board 1, 26.03.1955 Source: Rev J A Bickerstaff. Played at Hastings. 0-1
Davis,M - Low Seow Meng Malayan Championship, 1956 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 9.6.1956. The game continued for another 16 moves, but the article suggests that Black could have resigned at the final position given. 1-0
Davis,M - Ghitescu,T Students' Team Championship, Reykjavik, 1957 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 10.8.1957. Black resigned on the 63rd move. Ghitescu was representing Rumania. 1-0
Sinden,GN - Davis,M Sexton Cup E. Sussex v W. Sussex, 13.04.1957 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 4.5.1957. Played at the Brighton CC. 0-1
Davis,M - Berrehouma,H World U26 team championship at Helsinki (1), 17.07.1961 Source: The Big Database 2003. Davis was playing for board 2 for the English team against Tunisia. 1-0
Davis,M - Hindle,OM Enfield Congress, 1973 Source: Hastings and St Leonards Observer of 1.3.1975. 1-0
Davis,M - Wright,D Sussex Congress at Falmer , 05.1973 Sources: Brighton and Hove Gazette of 2.6.1973, and British Chess Magazine of July 1973. 1-0