Winners of The National Championship
-
# Year City Winner 1 1892 Cape Town Arthur Rivett
Edward Roberts2 1897 Cape Town Edward Roberts 3 1899 Durban Abraham Michael 4 1903 Johannesburg Francis Joseph Lee 5 1906 Cape Town Bruno Edgar Siegheim 6 1910 Cape Town Harry Duhan 7 1912 Johannesburg Bruno Edgar Siegheim 8 1920 Cape Town A.J.A. Cameron
Alexander Chavkin9 1924 Durban Alexander Chavkin 10 1926 Johannesburg Max Blieden 11 1928 Cape Town Max Blieden 12 1935 Johannesburg John C. Archer jr 13 1937 Cape Town Kurt Dreyer 14 1939 Durban Wolfgang Heidenfeld 15 1946 Johannesburg Wolfgang Heidenfeld
John M. Holford16 1947 Cape Town Wolfgang Heidenfeld
Kurt Dreyer17 1949 Durban Wolfgang Heidenfeld 18 1951 East London Wolfgang Heidenfeld 19 1953 Johannesburg John E. Eriksen 20 1955 Cape Town Wolfgang Heidenfeld 21 1957 Durban Wolfgang Heidenfeld 22 1959 Johannesburg Wolfgang Heidenfeld
Kenneth Kirby23 1961 Cape Town Woolf Gerber 24 1963 Pretoria Kenneth Kirby
Kees van der Meyden25 1965 Salisbury Piet Kroon 26 1967 Johannesburg David Friedgood 27 1969 Pretoria Piet Kroon 28 1971 Johannesburg David Friedgood 29 1973 Cape Town David Friedgood 30 1975 East London Piet Kroon
Charles de Villiers31 1977 Pretoria David A. Walker
Charles de Villiers32 1979 Johannesburg Frank Korostenski 33 1981 Cape Town Charles de Villiers 34 1983 Pretoria Donald Macfarlane 35 1985 Johannesburg Clyde Wolpe
Charles de Villiers36 1987 Pretoria Charles de Villiers 37 1989 Secunda Charles de Villiers 38 1995 Cape Town David Gluckman 39 1998 Bruma Lake Mark Rubery
Watu Kobese40 2000 Port Elizabeth Nicholas van der Nat 41 2003 Kempton Park Watu Kobese
Kenny Solomon42 2005 Cape Town Nicholas van der Nat 43 2007 Cape Town Henry Robert Steel 44 2009 Cape Town Nicholas van der Nat 45 2011 Cape Town Henry Robert Steel
Watu Kobese
Read more about this topic: South African Chess Championship
Famous quotes containing the words winners and/or national:
“The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people dont acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead.”
—Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922)
“Humanism, it seems, is almost impossible in America where material progress is part of the national romance whereas in Europe such progress is relished because it feels nice.”
—Paul West (b. 1930)