Shelbourne Richard Lyman (October 22, 1936 – August 11, 2019) was an American chess player and teacher known for hosting a live broadcast of the 1972 World Chess Championship for the PBS television station Channel 13 in New York. This broadcast became the highest-rated public television program ever at that time, far surpassing viewership expectations.
Shelby Lyman | |
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Full name | Shelbourne Richard Lyman |
Country | United States |
Born | (1936-10-22)October 22, 1936 Brooklyn Jewish Hospital Brooklyn, New York |
Died | August 11, 2019(2019-08-11) (aged 82) Johnson City, New York |
Shelby Lyman was borm in Brooklyn, New York but grew up in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. He was a graduate of the Boston Latin School and Harvard University who after graduation taught sociology at the City College of New York for three and a half years.[1]
Shortly after the 1972 World Championship ended, he began writing a syndicated column about chess for Newsday; at its peak, this column was published in 82 newspapers around the world.[2]
He later hosted a two-hour broadcast covering the World Chess Championship 1986. This segment was recorded at WNYE-TV in Brooklyn and aired on 120 public television stations.[3]
Shelby Lyman's uncle, Harry Lyman, was a chess master in New England.
Lyman won the Boston Chess Championship as a teenager.[4] When he was twenty-seven, he won the Marshall Chess Club Championship in New York City.[1] At one point, he was the 18th-highest-ranked player in the United States.[3]
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