British Schools Chess Championship
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The British Schools Chess Championship is an annual competition for school chess teams that has been in existence continuously from 1958. The tournament is administered by the English Chess Federation and is open to all schools from the United Kingdom. The competition has been won by teams from all four countries of the UK.
Entry is open to any school in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. All players must be under-19 on 31 August of the year in which the competition begins. Teams are made up of six players.
Sponsorship
In 1938 The Sunday Times (UK) made an offer to the then British Chess Federation to donate a trophy for a competition between teams from Public schools.[1] Before further investigation of this offer could be completed the war intervened. Finally in 1957-58 competition got under way under the sponsorship of The Sunday Times (UK) newspaper. Their patronage continued until 1983, when their sister paper The Times took over. Since the withdrawal of sponsorship by The Times after the 2001 finals, the championship continued without a sponsor until 2008.
At the height of popularity in the 1970s, in excess of 1000 teams took part, but since then a decline in the number of teams has taken place. In 2007-08, the accepted entry increased from 93 teams to 135 teams, which represented the highest number of entries for four years. Yateley Manor School, from Yateley in Hampshire, sponsors from 2008-2011, supported the event through a difficult period and deserve special mention.
The competition, now known as the National Schools Chess Championships, was relaunched by the English Chess Federation in 2012 with sponsorship from St Catherine's School, Bramley to support a tournament for girls, with both U11 and U19 sections, Heathside Preparatory School, from Hampstead, London for a new U11 open section and Winchester College for the U19 open section.
National finalists
1950s
| Winners | Runners Up | 3rd Place | 4th Place | ENTRY | |
| 1958 | Calday Grange GS, Wirral | Varndean | Nottingham High School | Colfe's School | 241 |
| 1959 | Calday Grange GS, Wirral | William Ellis, London | Queen Elizabeth's GS, Barnet | Glyn Grammar School, Ewell | 247 |
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010-2015
2016 onwards
From the 2016 final onwards 16 schools played at the final, with the plate trophy going to the best result by a first round loser.
| Winners | Runners Up | 3rd Place= | Plate winner | ENTRY | |
| 2016 | Reading School | Hampton School | Millfield School, Royal Grammar School, Guildford, King Edward VI Chelmsford | City of London School | 124 |
| 2017 | Royal Grammar School, Guildford | Hampton School | Reading School, Haberdashers' Aske's School, Elstree, Queen Elizabeth's GS, Barnet | King Edward's School Birmingham | 130 |
| 2018 | Reading School | Royal Grammar School, Guildford | City of London School, Hampton School, Nottingham High School | Brighton College | 163 |
| 2019 | City of London School | Hampton School | Reading School, Royal Grammar School, Guildford, Royal Grammar School, Newcastle | St Olave's Grammar School | 142 |
| 2022[8] | Westminster School | King's College School | Wilson's School, Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, St Olave's Grammar School | Brentwood School | 112 |
| 2023[9] | Hampton School | Wilson's School | Queen Elizabeth's School, Barnet | Queen Elizabeth's School, Barnet | |
| 2024[10] | King's College School | Hampton School | Tiffin School | University College School |
In 2020 the finals were not played due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.[11] There was no competition in 2020-21.[12]