John T. Mitchell

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

John Templeton Mitchell (1854–1914) was born in Scotland in 1854[Note 1] and emigrated to the USA in 1875, where he settled in Chicago where he found employment as a bank clerk[1] and became a naturalised American citizen. He became interested in duplicate whist at the age of 34, in 1888, when he read of a duplicate match in his native Glasgow and was instrumental in the formation of the Chicago Duplicate Whist Club.[2] His name is synonymous with the Mitchell Movement used in many bridge clubs today.

Whist development

Mitchell became known as the "Father of Duplicate Whist"[3] because of the movements of boards and players he designed for tournaments, a design included in his 1891 book on Duplicate Whist.[4] This relatively simple movement was refined in discussion with others during that decade in an attempt to truly compare skill at cards rather than pure chance.[5] His contemporary, E C Howell, developed a different system of movements for pairs in 1897.[6]

J T Mitchell contributed to the original Whist Reference Book,[7] and much to discussions on tactics of the game,[8] and the Laws of Whist.[9] Mitchell was elected to the post of Treasurer of the American Whist League, at that time representing Chicago, Illinois.[10]

Publications

Some books written by Mitchell have been republished in recent years[11]

  • Duplicate Whist 1897 (Classic Reprint) Paperback – Republished by Forgotten books (2018). Also by Cornell University Library (2009)
  • Duplicate Whist: Its Rules and method Of Play – Being A Full Description of The New And Scientific game Which Equalizes The Strength Of Opposite Hands, Thus Reducing The Element Of Luck To A Minimum. Originally published 1891. Republished by Obscure Press (2009)

Notes

  1. ^ Caveat - an online search of National Records of Scotland has failed to come up with anyone of this name in birth or census (1861 or 1871) records of the time

References

  1. ^ Anderson & Crilly
  2. ^ The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge p695
  3. ^ English Bridge (Feb 2010) page 35 (EBU Archive)
  4. ^ Obscure Press 2009
  5. ^ Infobridge Italian Website
  6. ^ Butler page 206
  7. ^ Butler page ix
  8. ^ Butler page 6
  9. ^ Butler page 565
  10. ^ Butler page 566
  11. ^ Amazon

Other sources