- for a postponement, but
Lichtenhein refused and the
league ruled the game forfeited. In a
gesture of sportsmanship,
Lichtenhein then made an
offer to reschedule...
-
pinpoint when the
first zwischenzug was pla****.
Three early examples are
Lichtenhein–Morphy, New York 1857; Rosenthal–De Vere,
Paris 1867; and Tartakower–José...
-
Theodor (Theodore)
Lichtenhein (January 1829 – 19 May 1874) was an
American chess master. Born at Königsberg, in East Prussia, he
learned chess at the...
- Calder, and
attended by
Martin Rosenthal and E.P Dey for Ottawa; Sam
Lichtenhein for the Wanderers;
George Kennedy for the
Canadiens and M. J.
Quinn and...
-
family friend M**** in the quarter-finals, the
German master Theodor Lichtenhein in the semifinals, and
ultimately Paulsen himself in the finals, to win...
-
Kendall (better
known as
George Kennedy) of the
Montreal Canadiens, Sam
Lichtenhein of the
Montreal Wanderers, Tom
Gorman of Ottawa, M.J.
Quinn of Quebec...
- Sam
Lichtenhein.
McCafferty incorporated the
Wanderers and sold
shares of the club to the public. The
majority of
shares were
bought by
Lichtenhein, and...
-
Arena Gardens planned for Toronto. The
Wanderers incorporated, with Sam
Lichtenhein taking a
majority position. The 1910–1911
season saw the
start of labour...
-
Samuel Edward Lichtenhein (October 24, 1870 – June 21, 1936) was an American-Canadian
businessman and
sports executive. He was the
owner and president...
-
competitive club, and when the
Montreal Arena burned down,
owner Sam
Lichtenhein elected to
suspend the club. The team is
officially credited with having...