The first online chess game happened in December 1844 Yes, 181 years ago,
two teams played Chess 60km away using the electrical telegraph
Date:
Tue, 16 Dec 2025 22:05:00 +0000
Description:
The 1844 Washington-Baltimore telegraph chess match started remote play, inspiring later international competitions, teletype games, and massive
online platforms today.
FULL STORY
On 26 November 1844, two chess teams faced off while separated by 60 kilometers, as the Washington Chess Club played a team in Baltimore using the newly built electrical telegraph.
Three consulting members played on each side, transmitting moves over the
wire. Washington opened with a pawn to the center, and Baltimore mirrored it.
This method allowed a full game without either team being physically present, marking what is considered the first online chess game.
Organizing telegraphed play
Alfred Vail and Henry Rogers developed a system to assign numbers to each of the 64 squares, converting traditional descriptive notation into numeric
codes.
Moves such as pawn to queens bishops four became 11 to 27, simplifying transmission across the telegraph.
The system logged each play meticulously, including corrections in real time.
Although records of all games are incomplete, some sources report that 686 moves were transmitted without interruption.
Spectators occasionally observed the process, and operators recorded the
number of people present.
The telegraph itself was simple, consisting of a battery, a switch, and a magnet.
Despite its apparent simplicity, signals weakened over distance, wires broke, and early equipment often failed, so there was a need for consistent
monitoring of the line to ensure accurate reception.
The Baltimore-Washington telegraph ran alongside railroad tracks, and overhead insulated copper wire replaced failed underground attempts.
Despite Congress funding the initial line, practical daily use remained minimal, and most activity consisted of demonstrations and curiosity-driven experiments.
Telegraph chess inspired similar experiments abroad, including matches
between London and Gosport in 1845.
Later, US grandmaster Bobby Fischer transmitted moves from New York to Havana in 1965 via teletype.
In a promotional game in 1999, Russian grandmaster Garry Kasparov played an online game against the world.
Today, the internet has taken telecom chess to fabulous new heights, with one site alone, chess.com, hosting up to 20 million games daily, sometimes
pushing server capacities.
Chess is particularly compatible with telecommunications because it can be transmitted as concise, precise information.
Why have technologists taken the opportunity to play chess using so many generations of telecommunications? This is likely because Chess is popular
and inherently suitable for long-distance play.
There are similarities in thinking processes [between] engineering design,
and the sort of puzzle solving that a chess game involves, says Kazdan of
Case Western Reserve.
However, this connection may be one-sided. Many engineers like chess. Im not sure many chess players like engineering.
Via AOL
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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/the-first-online-chess-game-happened-in-december -1844-yes-181-years-ago-two-teams-played-chess-60km-away-using-the-electrical- telegraph
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