Donald MacMurray was born on November 14, 1914. His father was an alcoholic who drowned after falling off a pier. His mother was a cleaning lady who lived in the slums of Hell’s Kitchen in New York City. Despite the odds of such a background MacMurray possessed the highest IQ ever recorded up to the early 1930s, earned a BA degree from the University of Chicago in eight and a half months, and a law degree from Columbia University in one year. He was also a strong chess master.
“Meckele” as he was generally known in New York chess circles was also an expert in languages and learned to speak Yiddish so he could frequent the Yiddish Theater. In 1935 to 1936 MacMurray completed his degrees and returned to New York and was married to his childhood girlfriend.
During the mid-1930s he played in several Manhattan chess club championships, always scoring well. Among his victims were Isaac Kashdan and Arnold Denker. Before leaving for Chicago to participate in the 1932 Western Chess Association tournament Denker and MacMurray played a short warm-up match that was drawn. Other well-known master who went down in defeat against MacMurray were Weaver Adams and I.A. Horowitz.
In the US Open Championship of 1937 he shared third place with George Treysman and then in 1938 he scored a remarkable 10.5 out of 11 in the Consolation Master’s section of the US Open after having narrowly missed qualifying for the finals.
In late summer in 1938, MacMurray was playing in the New York State Championship in Cazenovia when he began experiencing a worsening of nausea and stomach pains that were especially noticeable when he was laughing. At one point MacMurray was having dinner with Arnold Denker and the pain was so bad he had to leave the table and at Denker’s request. Another tournament participant, long time master Dr. Joseph Platz, examined MacMurray and discovered a cancer in his stomach that was the size of q grapefruit. Just three months later on December 2, 1938, MacMurray died at age 24.
In this game MacMurray easily defeats veteran master Harold Morton of Providence, Rhode Island. Morton was born on January 19, 1906 and won the championship of New England many times. He won the Massachusetts Championship in 1933, 1934, and 1935 and played in the 1936 US Championship.
On February 17, 1940, he was killed in a car accident in Iowa when he hit a truck. His passenger, I.A. Horowitz, survived. The two were giving simultaneous exhibitions throughout the country.
[Event "Chicago"]
[Site ""]
[Date "1937.09.04"]
[Round ""]
[White "Donald MacMurray"]
[Black "Harold Morton"]
[Result "1-0"]
[ECO "C49"]
[Annotator "Stockfish 18"]
[PlyCount "35"]
[EventDate "1937.??.??"]
{C49: Four Knights Game} 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bb5 Bb4 {The
Rubinstein Variation 4...Nd4 is an attempt to unbalance the position, but it
also fizzles out to boring equality.} 5. O-O O-O 6. Bxc6 bxc6 7. Nxe5 Re8 8. d4
Bxc3 9. bxc3 Nxe4 10. Re1 Nd6 {This looks rather awkward, but it is best and
there is no way for whi.e to take advantage of it} (10... d5 {is more common.}
11. f3 Nxc3 12. Qd2 Nb5 13. Nxc6 Rxe1+ 14. Qxe1 Qd7 {looks drawish.}) 11. Qg4
Qf6 12. Ba3 {[%mdl 2048]} Rd8 {The idea is apparently to guard the d-Pawn so
the B can be developed. It does not speak well for black’s position to have
to waste time using his R to guard the P.} (12... Re6 13. c4 Ba6 {and black
has full equality.}) 13. Re3 {This R-lift is a handy idea worth remembering.}
Nf5 {Walking into a pin can’t be good, but black wants to free his game with
...d5.} 14. Rf3 d5 {This defends the c-Pawn and exposes white's Q to a
discovered attack, but now white gets a strong attack Black's best chance was
to sactifice a P in order to dislodge white's N.} (14... d6 15. Nxc6 Re8 16. d5
Bd7 {and black has finally gotten developed and his position is organically
sound/}) 15. Qh5 {Excellent, Black is threatened with 16.g4 and is at a loss
for a decent move.} g6 {This results in a fatal weakening of the K's position
ans MacMurry forcfully demonstrates.} (15... Qe6 {removes the Q fron danger
and after} 16. g4 Nd6 17. Re3 Re8 18. Rae1 Qf6 19. Nxc6 Rxe3 20. Rxe3 Be6 {
White is clearly better, but black ha avoided immediate disaster.}) 16. Ng4 Qh8
{It’s hard to believe this loses immediately! Other moves would not have
saved the game though.} (16... Qe6 17. Qg5 Re8 18. Nf6+ {wins}) (16... gxh5 17.
Nxf6+ Kg7 18. Nxh5+ Kh8 19. Re1 {White is winning.}) ({This is black's best
try.} 16... Kh8 17. Nxf6 gxh5 18. Re1 h4 19. Re5 {Material is equal, but
black's position is lost. He will sacrifice a R for two pieces leaving him
with great piece activity while black's position remains very passive.}) 17.
Qg5 Be6 18. Rxf5 {[%mdl 512] Black resigned. Why?!} (18. Rxf5 Bxf5 19. Nh6+ Kg7
20. Be7 {Technically this is not as strong as the immediate 20.Nf5+, but it is
the most practical. The threat is Bf6+} (20. Nxf5+ Kg8 21. Ne7+ Kg7 22. Qe5+ f6
(22... Kh6 23. Bc1+ g5 24. Qxg5#) 23. Qxc7 {and all that remains is for white
to bring his R into play with Re12 and black is helpless.}) 20... Rd6 21. Nxf5+
Kg8 22. Bxd6 cxd6 23. Re1 {White is a piece up.}) 1-0

















