Theophilus Thompson, African American chess master

Frederick
April, 1872

Theophilus Thompson (1855-1881), a house servant of John Henshaw, editor of the Maryland Chess Review, witnesses a chess game. He immediately shows great talent for the game and, within a year, he writes a book on endgame positions, “Chess Problems: Either to Play and Mate”, published by Orestes Brownson, Jr., editor of the Dubuque Chess Journal.


Thompson is the first African American expert chess player to gain national attention. He is born enslaved in Frederick. In 1868, after emancipation, he works for John Henshaw. Thompson gains fame with the publication of his chess book, but soon falls back into obscurity. His two mentors, Henshaw and Brownson, die in the late 1870s, and then Thompson becomes infected with tuberculosis and dies in 1881.


Today, the U.S. Chess Center in Silver Spring hosts the Theophilus Thompson Chess Club for a match each Saturday.

For More Information

U.S. Chess Center, Silver Spring

View Other Mosaic Pieces

Johns Hopkins University opens

Johns Hopkins University opens its doors in 1876 as the first US institution of higher education based on a German model emphasizing graduate education. It has produced many firsts, notably the sanitation work of Abel Wolman.

Read More »

City of Columbia

“Columbia, Maryland, is the best place to raise a family in the country.” Jim Rouse creates a carefully planned city for “joyous living” in 1967.

Read More »

Land Recognition

We acknowledge the enduring presence of many American Indian tribes who once lived in Maryland and who now, having lost their lands, live in a diaspora. Read more.

© 2023 MARYLAND 400

Scroll to Top