Dubuque's World of Checkers Museum, in the news:

General Discussion about the game of Checkers.
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Palomino
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Dubuque's World of Checkers Museum, in the news:

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Friday, October 5, 2007
By MARY NEVANS-PEDERSON TH staff writer
Dubuque's Deweber has checkered past, future
Local checkers collection takes national stage
Photo: Jeremy Portje
Image
Don Deweber aka Mr. Checkers,
of Dubuque, has one of the nation's
top checkers museums at his home.

The International Checker Hall of Fame might have been bigger and splashier than Dubuque's World of Checkers Museum, but the former is gone, leaving the latter as the preeminent repository for checker memorabilia in the United States.

The International Checker Hall of Fame housed in the Chateau Walker, in Petal, Miss., was destroyed by a fire Sept. 29. It was founded in 1976 by Charles Walker, a former state checkers champion.
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The World of Checkers Museum is housed in a small Dubuque apartment and several storage rooms. It was founded in 1993 by inveterate checker collector Don Deweber, who continues to add to his extensive accumulation.


"It seems as though everything was destroyed in the fire (at the International Checker Hall of Fame), so what you've got in Dubuque is now unique," said Alan Millhone, president of the American Checker Federation.

In the world of checkers, the loss of the massive Walker collection is devastating.

"You can't begin to put a dollar amount to it. It was Charles Walker's life's dream and now it's gone. It's left a tremendous void," said Millhone, of Belpre, Ohio.

Deweber, who has been known as Mr. Checkers for as long as he can remember, echoed that sentiment this week, after he learned about the devastating fire and called the Walker family, whom he considers friends.

"It is a great loss to the checker community. None of those things can be replaced. (Walker) put millions of dollars into preserving checker history," he said. Deweber toured Walker's mansion and museum several times and Walker once came to Dubuque to see Deweber's collection.

The World of Checkers Museum contains hundreds of checker sets and Deweber knows the historical context surrounding each one. The sets, of all sizes and materials, are tucked carefully into drawers, cupboards and closets. Checker memorabilia are artfully displayed on shelves and tables around the apartment.

"These things tell you so much about the history of the times," said Deweber, gently examining a faded 73-year-old box of checkers with musical notes on the top of each.

"For so long, everyone played checkers and merchants advertised with them," he said.

Deweber has hundreds of examples of commercial uses of checkers. Several years ago he donated his 20,000-volume collection of checker books to Loras College. About 5,000 of the books ended up in the Cleveland Public Library's special collections department.
Last edited by Palomino on Wed Oct 10, 2007 9:19 am, edited 3 times in total.
CHECKERS: The Mind Sport of Kings and Ordinary Men.
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Palomino
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ROADSIDE AMERICA article

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FROM:
Image
Image
World of Checkers Museum
Dubuque, Iowa
This shrine to checkerdom is also the apartment of its director, Don Deweber, who prefers to be known as "Mr. Checkers." Self described as an "old whiskered codger" and "checkers bibliomaniac," Deweber has lined his walls with checker books and filled his dresser drawers, kitchen cabinets, closets, and shelves with checker sets. "I eat, live, and sleep checkers," he told us. "People could easily spend a week here and not see everything."

Deweber limits himself to the domestic game -- there are no Chinese Checkers here -- and his interest flags after the mid-20th century. But aside from these restrictions, anything goes. "I went without a lot of meals to buy some of these things," he told us. "If I get a checkers book, I want every edition, every printing. A normal collector wouldn't do that. I had 500 copies of one book."

The collection of Mr. Checkers grew so vast that in 2004 he donated the world's largest checkers library to nearby Loras College, "and I still had so many books that I ended up giving 5,000 to the Cleveland Library." His quiet approach differs markedly from that of the flashy Charles Walker and his International Checkers Hall of Fame. In fact, Walker offered to move Mr. Checkers (and his collection) into his Hall, an invitation that Deweber is glad that he declined, given the Hall's subsequent immolation.

Despite its double-duty as Deweber's home, The World of Checkers Museum is run as a real attraction that welcomes visitors. But you have to call first, if the line is busy? "I'm usually on-line," he told us, "bidding on eBay."
CHECKERS: The Mind Sport of Kings and Ordinary Men.
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