1st African-American chess grandmaster enters Hall of Fame
Maurice Ashley was 14 when he saw a high school friend playing chess and challenged him to a match. He lost badly, but it sparked a love affair that started him playing nearly nonstop ever since.
There were the countless hours competing against the hustlers in city parks, and the serious players at chess clubs in Manhattan. There were the years spent against increasingly tougher competition in college, and ultimately against the best of the best at tournaments around the country and abroad.
All that playing has led the 50-year-old Ashley to some trailblazing accomplishments - the first African-American to be designated as a chess grandmaster, and last Wednesday, the first African-American to be inducted into the US Chess Hall of Fame in St. Louis. He received his honor as the US Chess Championship got under way, with Ashley taking on commentating duties.