Richard MacQueen "Dick" Wellstood (November 25,
1927 – July 24, 1987) was an American jazz pianist.
He was one of the two great stride pianists (along with
Ralph Sutton) to emerge during the 1940s when members of their generation were
generally playing bebop. He kept an open mind toward later styles (he loved
Monk) while sounding at his best playing classic jazz. A little more subtle
than Sutton, Wellstood was also a powerful pianist who was a superb interpreter
of the music of James P. Johnson and his contemporaries.

During those years, Mr. Wellstood played the piano to pay
his way through college. He later worked his way through the Columbia
University Law School, from which he graduated in 1958. He was the house
pianist at New York City clubs Metropole and Nick's in the late 1950s and
1960s. he did session work as well playing on albums such as The Freewheelin’ Bob
Dylan (1963) and Odetta & The Blues (1962)
Wellstood played with the Gene Krupa Quartet. When Mr.
Krupa first retired in 1967, Mr. Wellstood joined a group that played clubs
along the Jersey Shore, a group known variously as the Fifth Avenue Four, Can
of Worms and Dick Wellstood's Hot Potatoes. Work at Law Firm. He later joined the World's Greatest Jazz Band.
He played locally in the 1970s playing solo concerts,
performing at jazz parties, and recording quite a few memorable albums. In 1977 completed a tour of the UK with the
Dutch Swing College Band. In the 1980s he played often with Kenny Davern. From
1980 to 1986,
he was the house pianist at Hanratty's restaurant at 92nd and 2nd
in Manhattan for 6–8 months a year. In 1985, a slow summer for him, Mr.
Wellstood decided to put his law degree to use. He spent 10 months with a law
firm and returned to Hanratty's.

''The firm liked my work, and I could have stayed
there,'' he said. ''But I realized that all those years in music had ruined me
for something like the law.'' John S. Wilson, a music critic of The New York
Times, noted that despite the layoff, ''Mr. Wellstood's stride piano-playing
was as energetic and virtuosic as ever.''
In 1987 he died of a heart attack in Palo Alto,
California where he went to attend the Peninsula Jazz Party. At the time of his death he was the pianist for
Bemelman's Bar of the Carlyle Hotel in New York City.
(Compiled and edited from Wikipedia, AllMusic and NY
Times)