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FM Peter Jamieson
#1
It is with great sadness that Hamilton Chess Club shares the unexpected passing of FM Peter Jamieson. 

Peter was a loyal member of the club for many years. He was 2 times Scottish Chess Champion. He played for Scotland at the Olympiad. He is remembered for a draw with GM Mikhail Tal with a famous photo encapsulating the event. 

Hamilton Chess Club is grateful for Peter's presence and our thoughts are with his family at this time.

I will give details of the funeral arrangement when I have them. 

Thor Saemundsson on behalf of Hamilton Chess Club
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#2
Such sad news. RIP, Peter.
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#3
(22-10-2025, 11:24 PM)ruairidhmckay Wrote: It is with great sadness that Hamilton Chess Club shares the unexpected passing of FM Peter Jamieson. 

Peter was a loyal member of the club for many years. He was 2 times Scottish Chess Champion. He played for Scotland at the Olympiad. He is remembered for a draw with GM Mikhail Tal with a famous photo encapsulating the event. 

Hamilton Chess Club is grateful for Peter's presence and our thoughts are with his family at this time.

I will give details of the funeral arrangement when I have them. 

Thor Saemundsson on behalf of Hamilton Chess Club

That’s terrible news. I first met Peter when he beat me in the Scottish more than 50 years ago on his way to winning the title. Since then I have been with him to a number of Senior Team tournaments in Europe. He was always good company, and a fine chess player. We will miss him very much.
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#4
I didnt know Peter well but what a gentle and nice guy. I played him and graciously accepted a draw when we both knew he could wipe the floor with me. Anytime I met him he always spoke to me warmly and said hi. I was pleasantly surprised when I was told of his achievements afterwards, he's a great loss to both Hamilton and to Chess Scotland as a whole
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#5
This is indeed a very sad loss. For all of the above, and more, not least for the world of Wind Technology, in which Peter was acclaimed internationally. Personally I can't yet grasp that I'll no longer be able to play any more of our innumerable friendly Blitz games that stretch way back to our Glasgow University student days. Peter has been a longstanding friend through so many mutual chess adventures as well as beyond chess.

In his seminal scientific work, 'Innovation in Wind Turbine Design' (1st ed 2011), Peter playfully managed to work in a reference taken from H J R A Murray's groundbreaking 'A History of Chess' (1913): 'According to Murray, the earliest written referenceto windmills of the 5th century BC lists it [...] as something a devout Buddhist would have nothing to do with, albeit in the context of small air driven rotors for amusing children'.

Peter's was a kind, gentle and frequently very widely informed wit. Condolences to family and friends
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#6
Yes indeed a very sad loss and the last time I was speaking to him at length was during an ICCF v Glasgow Select match (where he sadly ended up playing another Scottish player due to a no-show from one of the ICCF team who decided to stay in the pub) on 15 August 2022 at the Hilton Hotel in Glasgow. I was helping Alan McGowan with some research and asked Peter to confirm the details we hold on Scottish Chess Personalia. Chessbase holds his middle name as Michael but he said it wasn't that but a family name from his mother's side (McKeich)! Took me a few minutes to convince myself that he wasn't winding me up!
Every time I played him they were tough games (+1 -2 =1 which should probably have been +1 -3!) and even the game I did manage to win was after a very long struggle. And the 2 games I lost were quite comprehensive though hard fought. 
He played plenty of exciting attacking games and had Tal in some trouble in the Nice Olympiad. 
Jamieson - Tal, Nice Ol 1974
1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Nf6 5. Nxf6+ gxf6 6. Bc4 Qc7 7. Qh5 e6 8. Ne2 Na6 9. Bf4 Qb6 10. Bb3 Nb4 11. O-O Bd7 12. Bg3 Qb5 13. Qf3 Qg5 14. a3 Na6 15. Nc3 f5 16. Bf4 Qg6 17. Nb5 Rg8 18. Nd6+ Bxd6 19. Bxd6 O-O-O 20. Bf4 Be8 21.
Rad1 Nc7 22. c4 Qg7 23. Qg3 Qxg3 24. hxg3 b5 25. f3 bxc4 26. Bxc4 Nd5 27. Bxd5 Rxd5 28. Kf2 f6 29. Rh1 Bg6 30. Rc1 Kb7 31. Rc4 Rgd8 32. Rhc1 Be8 33. Rb4+ Ka8 34. Re1 Bf7 35. Rc1 a5 36. Rbc4 e5 37. dxe5 fxe5 38. Bg5 Rb8 39. R1c2 Be8 40. b4 1/2-1/2

I would be quite happy to piece together a proper database of his games if people would send me what they have to the usual places!

My personal condolences to his family and friends.
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#7
As a person Peter was kindly and thoughtful, and avoided the limelight. I was surprised to discover recently that his family did not know he was an ex Scottish chess champion.

It is less well known that Peter was British Boys champion in 1963. Peter's first championship win came in 1965 at the tender age of nineteen. That was before even my time in chess, but I remember the second time in 1973 because I had travelled from being on holiday with my parents, to watch the last round. Unfortunately I had miscalculated and arrived on the day of the lightning which had just finished and SCA President Walter Munn was putting the last boards and sets in his car. He told me Peter had won the Championship by a point.
These old championship tournament reports are on the website and are very interesting, especially for senior players.
It seems that I wasn't the only one who had miscalculated as the last round in 1973 had been scheduled at a different time and some players including Peter had been caught out; he had turned up just before the hour ran out and managed to win the decisive game despite having only an hour of the two and a half available.
https://www.chessscotland.com/champions/...champions/

Peter was a close friend of longtime organiser and arbiter Ted Fitzjames and also a work colleague at Howdens (wind energy, where I think he started his career). Ted started my old Howden Chess Club, where Peter played for a good few years. His other long work associations that I know of were with Garrad Hassan (a leading energy consultancy) and later Strathclyde University where he doubled up on his time teaching and mentoring PhD students in the new ways of wind energy, while somehow fitting in writing two editions of his (as Craig says) seminal work.
Chesswise, I managed two hard-fought wins against my creative former club-mate, and two draws of which I was quite proud. Mostly however he won decisively. When he had activity, he seemed to rapidly recognize the hidden possibilities and come into his own.

He was also my Glorney cup manager for at least four years in the 70s. He was always helpful and encouraging to we juniors. At one of these events we learned that he had (perhaps prophetically) brought a boomerang with him. This may have been because he had come straight from a wind energy conference; we understood he would be arriving a day late, just in time for the chess. On the way down I and the other players were in a train carriage that had stopped in a station somewhere in England, and another train was stopped next to us on the next platform. It was greatly amusing to see Peter looking at us from the other carriage - traveling in the opposite direction! Just as well we were behaving.

Sometimes he would relate a key issue of his current wind energy project, perhaps with the aid of salt cellars and cutlery and even the napkin, and I would try to (sort of) follow. While I was visiting him in hospital he took a call from an old work colleague who was anticipating meeting him at a conference. Peter explained he would be unable to attend. I didn't know the conference was about multi-rotor systems. Peter had told me before that this was an idea he had long advocated, which had long ago been shelved as impractical but which to his evident excitement was now making a comeback due the latest theoretical developments, of which some were down to him. Not that he told me this last part!
Philosophical and practical as he was near the end, he must have been frustrated to miss hearing about these conference proceedings by a couple of days.
For anyone with access to LinkedIn there is a lovely obituary there (search for eg Garrad and Jamieson) and a very appreciative thread underneath, from what seems to comprise the great and the good in wind energy.

As well as to his family and friends, Peter's departure is a great loss to a number of spheres in which he contributed his best.
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#8
Peter's daughter Rose has advised the following arrangements for his funeral:

Monday 10th of November at 12pm
South Lanarkshire Crematorium
31 Sydes Brae
Blantyre G72 0TL
Anyone from the chess community who wishes to pay their respects is welcome to attend.
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#9
(29-10-2025, 07:44 PM)ruairidhmckay Wrote: Peter's daughter Rose has advised the following arrangements for his funeral:

Monday 10th of November at 12pm
South Lanarkshire Crematorium
31 Sydes Brae
Blantyre G72 0TL
Anyone from the chess community who wishes to pay their respects is welcome to attend.

Sadly we won’t be able to go as we are currently away in the USA and won’t be back in time. So my wife Janice (who also knew him and his wife Adele) and I will have to tender our apologies. We have many happy memories of both of them at chess tournaments. So please pass on our condolences and say hi from us to the many Senior Chess Friends who are sure to turn up.
Alastair & Janice White.
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#10
Is someone able to provide a date of death; to be added to Peter's biography page.
Thank you.
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