Comment I just noticed "Philcha can and no doubt will speak for himself ..." - God, you're hard taskmaster, Krakatoa! I'll assume the the eagle-eyed SyG has spotted any problems with refs.
- Response And here I thought you were just snubbing me! :-) Thanks for your thorough and thoughtful comments, which I will respond to below. Krakatoa (talk) 20:28, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- OK, I think I've addressed all of your points. See what you think. Thanks again. Krakatoa (talk) 23:14, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Support I'm happy to pass this as A-class. Great job, Krakatoa! --Philcha (talk) 18:22, 8 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Early life and education[edit]
- Done Any info on the unusual name "Hatfeild", which looks like a misprint (especially as he was raised in Hatfield) but was apparently traditional in the family? OTOH The Aussie air ace and presumed grandson was named George Hatfield Dingley Gossip (or is the latter a misprint, as Winter's source says this info is from "an Australian website about World War One aces"). Diggle in G.H. Diggle in the April 1983 Newsflash had doubts about the spelling.
- Yes, "Hatfeild" screams out "typo", but it's not. See Chess Note 5100 Whyld's May 2001 BCM piece, referenced there, has a copy of Gossip's signature, which clearly reads "G. Hatfeild D. Gossip". Whyld says that Gossip's father was "George Hatfeild Gossip". My guess is that Gossip's son (presumably Gossip's grandson, bearing the surname "Gossip", would be fathered by one of his sons, not a daughter) went with "Hatfield" to spare the kid from having to correct people's misspelling of his middle name 1,000 times. Or it could be that the Australian aces website (I put a link to it in the article) used "Hatfield" thinking that "Hatfeild" must be wrong - or simply misreading "Hatfeild" as the more normal "Hatfield". Or the kid could have been named "Hatfeild", but started using "Hatfield" because he was tired of having a weird middle name and/or of having to correct people's constant misspelling of it. Note that the sources regarding "The Jew of Chamant" all list the real name of the pseudonymous author as "Hatfield", not the correct "Hatfeild". Krakatoa (talk) 22:04, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done "the seat of his aunt" is correct but old-fashioned. "ancestral home of the family into which his aunt had married"?
- These Briticisms confuse me. I didn't know exactly what "seat of his aunt" meant, so I just copied it. Similarly, "the King of Wooden Spoonists", which is apparently a real thigh-slapper to you Brits, mystified me. (I just now looked up "wooden spoon" in the Compact Oxford English Dictionary.) Krakatoa (talk) 20:28, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- "seat of his aunt" could be material for another "bit of fun". Or you could just link to Family seat. BTW in Britain only pantomime heroes (traditionally played by young women!) slap their thighs :-) --Philcha (talk) 21:47, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Gad, I just can't avoid these faux pas! Yes, the "seat of his aunt" double entendre occurred to me, but I let it pass. I have rewritten the "seat of his aunt" thing along the lines you suggested. Krakatoa (talk) 22:04, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Done Krakatoa (talk) 22:22, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Non-chess career and family[edit]
- Done I've copyedited to make clear that the censuses were in UK.
- Done I think the chronology is very unclear. Looking at the text and citations:
- "By 1864, Gossip was appearing in London chess circles" (section "Chess career"
- George Gossip (son, age 11 months) born 1870, presumably (?) in UK.
- 1871 in UK census
- Five years incl 1879 to 1880 in Paris.
- All his other kids born in UK?
- 1881 in UK census
- 1884 moved to Autralia
- 1888 left Australia (Winter), moved to USA.
- 1891 in UK census
- 1894 Montreal (letter 20 Oct)
- 1895-1897 Buffalo
- "vanishing for 12 years in 1895 and finally returning to this country (UK) to die at Liphook, Hants in 1907" (Winter)
- I agree that the chronology is very unclear. Gossip traveled an extraordinary amount (especially for those pre-air travel days) and it's hard to figure out when he was where. Diggle also mentions in the Newsflash article that Gossip lived in Germany at one point, but doesn't say when. Krakatoa (talk) 20:28, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Trying to address your concern, I've moved all the stuff about his travels to the Non-chess career/Family section, which I've renamed "Non-chess career, family, and world travels". See how it reads now. Krakatoa (talk) 23:04, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- A lot better. But it still omits the fact that he apparently moved to London by 1864, mentioned in "Chess career". I don't think it would hurt to mention that in "... world travels". If you don't like that, perhaps you could move "Chess career" before "Non-chess career, family, and world travels", since chess is what makes him notable. --Philcha (talk) 16:23, 7 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Actually, I don't know whether he was living in London in 1864. He was "appearing" there, but he may have traveled there from elsewhere, as he did when he lived in East Bergholt (see below). Gossip's travels even within England were pretty extensive. I have avoided getting into them, since I daresay they would bore the s*** out of every non-British reader. To wit:
- As mentioned in the article, he grew up at his aunt's seat in Derbyshire, and at Hatfield, in Yorkshire.
- As mentioned in the article, his college education was at Westmorland.
- As mentioned in the article, he was appearing in London chess circles by 1864.
- In an 1873 letter, he wrote that he had spent "the greater part of my life" in the West Riding of Yorkshire (Diggle, p. 1).
- The 1871 census shows that he was living in London at the time of the census.
- As mentioned in the article, his child Helen was born in London c. 1872.
- But Diggle writes that as of the London 1872 tournament (2nd British Chess Federation Congress, held in July - Di Felice, p. 54) he was living "at East Bergholt, near Colchester" and "making chess-playing visits to London" (Diggle, p. 1).
- As mentioned in the article, his next children, Harold and Mabel, were born in East Bergholt (c. 1874 and 1879, respectively).
- As of the 1881 census, he was living in Ipswich.
- As of the 1891 census, he was back in London.
- As mentioned in the article, in 1907 he died in Liphook,
Herts, England.
Krakatoa (talk) 20:50, 7 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done I'd include Diggle's "the King of Wooden Spoonists". I like the examples of Gossip's tendency to bigotry given later, as I think WP is far too bloody solemn. There are other opportunities in the Winter page, mostly penned by Diggle. If sources give me an opportunity to lighten up I use them, even in paleontology and biology articles ("Pleistocene periwinkles" at Small shelly fauna, "Swiss Army knives" at Arthropod). One academic even used a couplet from Byron about "pukin' ... in the Euxine" in an article about mid-late Proterozoic atmosphere and ocean chemistry, and if I get a chance ...
Done Krakatoa (talk) 21:23, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done The details of Gossip's last 12 years and death sit rather oddly at the end of this section. Issues like this make me prefer a straight chronological structure (sub-dived if appropriate) and then separate assessments of playing strength & style, personality, influence on the game, chess and other writings, etc.
Chess books and articles[edit]
- Done I'd reduce the big Steinitz quote to:
- Mr Gossip had practiced the unfair ruse of carefully preserving stray skittles games which he had happened to win or draw, generally after many defeats, against masters whose public records stood far above his own, ..., thus leading the public to believe that the author stood on a par with them, or was even their superior.
Done Krakatoa (talk) 20:37, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Manner and reputation[edit]
- Done I love the story about the ledger! And the Steinitzian invective re the Steinitz gambit - with a little more grandiloquence Staunton could have written it! And "New York 1889, a major tournament where he won 11 games and finished above the bottom"!
- Done The mixing and comparing of Elo and Chessmetrics ratings is confusing, as Elo and Chessmetrics numbers don't map on to each other. How about:
- By Arpad Elo's calculation, Gossip's strength during his five-year peak was equivalent to an Elo rating of 2310.[1] Today FIDE, the World Chess Federation, often awards the Grandmaster title to players with Elo ratings of 2500 and above.[citation needed] Chessmetrics calculates that his peak was in April 1889, ranking him number 50 in the world at that time with a Chessmetrics score of 2470 (for comparison the top three Chessmetrics scores for April 1889 were over 2700[2]). Chessmetrics also ranks him number 17 in the world during four one-month periods between February and July, 1873. Like Diggle, Chessmetrics regards New York 1889 as Gossip's best individual performance, concluding that he scored 39% against opponents with an average rating of 2595, giving him a performance rating of 2539 for that tournament.[3]
- Done Ref needed for "Today FIDE, the World Chess Federation, often awards the Grandmaster title to players with Elo ratings of 2500 and above."
Done Krakatoa (talk) 21:32, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done What's the threshold Elo rating for the next level down (?IM)?
- 2400 (added that, and 2300 threshold for FM, given that Elo rated him at 2310). Krakatoa (talk) 21:32, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Thanks for adding "FIDE master" as well, that really helps the perspective. Very wise of you to consign "GM / IM norm" to a footnote. We could almost use Gossip as a poster-child for the rise of world chess strength 1875-1900.
- Done Need to explain why Chessmetrics says his peak was 1889 but gives him a much higher world ranking for 1873. Could point out that opportunities for top-level competition were still rare around 1873 - {{ cite book | author=Fine, R. | title=The World's Great Chess Games | publisher=Andre Deutsch | date=1952 | chapter=Wilhem Steinitz | page=31 }} Might also be worth pointing out that chess got a lot stronger between 1873 and 1889: Chessmetrics gives Gossip a score of 2352 for Jul 1873 but only Steinitz was over 2700 and only 3 others over 2600 (July 1873 rating list).
- I have revised this section along the lines you have suggested. I think it is still likely to be confusing to readers who haven't heard of Elo ratings, GM norms and such. Krakatoa (talk) 20:39, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- In "However, Chessmetrics calculates that Gossip's highest rating was 2470 (number 50 in the world) in April 1889" the word "However" makes it look like a disagreement between Elo & Chessmetrics. I'd prefer e.g. "Another assessment system, Chessmetrics, calculates that ...". To keep things as clear as possible I'd suggest for the next sentence e.g. "By comparison, the world's three highest-rated players at that time had Chessmetrics scores exceeding 2700." What do you think? --Philcha (talk) 16:23, 7 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Done Dude, I already cited those sites! Apparently not prominently enough, so I've now stated explicitly where the reader can play over the games. Krakatoa (talk) 22:20, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done remove link to Winter (2004) as it's extensively cited.
Done Krakatoa (talk) 20:45, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
- Done I'd use Diggle's "the King of Wooden Spoonists" here.
Done Krakatoa (talk) 21:33, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Done Krakatoa (talk) 21:33, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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