In 1939, the United States of America Chess Federation was created in Illinois through the merger of the American Chess Federation and National Chess Federation. The American Chess Federation, formerly the Western Chess Association, held an annual open championship since 1900; that tournament, after the merger, became the
U.S. Open. The National Chess Federation, founded in 1927 to organize U.S. participation in the
Olympiads, had held the prestigious invitational
U.S. Championship since 1936. The combined membership at the time was around 1,000. Membership experienced consistent, modest growth until 1958, when
Bobby Fischer won the U.S. Championship at the age of 14. This began the "Fischer era", during which USCF membership grew thirty-fold, to approximately 60,000 in 1974, after Fischer had won the
World Chess Championship. The Fischer era did not last long, but the USCF has grown substantially since then, largely because of the explosive growth of
scholastic chess. Annual national championship tournaments are now held at different grade and age levels; none of these tournaments, which now attract thousands of players, even existed prior to 1969. At its founding, the USCF had no employees and no headquarters, but in 1952, it hired a Business Manager (the position eventually became
Executive Director), headquartered in New York. In 1967, headquarters moved to
Newburgh, New York; in 1976,
New Windsor, New York; in 2006,
Crossville, Tennessee; and in 2022,
St. Louis, Missouri. ==Governance==