There is a bit of history at Orange Lawn Tennis Club. I'm happy to see they were more accommodating than MCC. Althea ended up winning the Eastern Grass Court Championships twice.
There is a list of tournament champions in the hallway which is quite impressive. The club was also a founding member of the USTA.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Grass_Court_Championships
yahooyahoo said:
There is a bit of history at Orange Lawn Tennis Club. I'm happy to see they were more accommodating than MCC. Althea ended up winning the Eastern Grass Court Championships twice.
There is a list of tournament champions in the hallway which is quite impressive. The club was also a founding member of the USTA.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Grass_Court_Championships
no surprise about MCC. At that time they didn't even admit Catholics
ml1 said:
yahooyahoo said:
There is a bit of history at Orange Lawn Tennis Club. I'm happy to see they were more accommodating than MCC. Althea ended up winning the Eastern Grass Court Championships twice.
There is a list of tournament champions in the hallway which is quite impressive. The club was also a founding member of the USTA.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Grass_Court_Championships
no surprise about MCC. At that time they didn't even admit Catholics
They also excluded Jews, among others.
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I didn’t know this (the rejection, and the grass) about Maplewood.
From “The Athletic”:
Gibson had grown up as a solid athlete, though she told people she was better at basketball than tennis. By the time she entered Florida A&M University in 1949, she was a three-time national champion of the American Tennis Association, the tennis equivalent of Negro League Baseball in the days when the USTA did not allow Black players. The ATA remains a thriving association that holds tournaments and supports the development of players of color throughout the U.S.
Gibson’s growing reputation earned her an invitation to the National Indoor Championships, where she made the finals. After that performance, the chatter began in tennis circles about whether she would receive one of the 56 invitations to the U.S. National Championships, which is what the U.S. Open was called then.
The committee of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association, now the USTA, based its invitations on how players performed during the American summer grass court swing at private clubs in Newport, R.I., East Hampton, South Orange and Maplewood. Those clubs did not allow Black players to participate in their tournaments, which were invitationals. This institutional Catch-22 made it impossible for Gibson to build a case to receive an invitation.
In her autobiography, Gibson wrote about biding her time rather than choosing to agitate. Like Ashe, who in his early career had to walk a line between public agitation for civil rights and the muffling expectations of the sport which he played, Gibson did not view herself as a figurehead.
Gibson had an ally on the other side of the club gates. Alice Marble, one of the top White American players of the first half of the 20th century, believed that Gibson deserved an invitation to the U.S. National Championships and wrote an opinion piece on the topic in American Lawn Tennis Magazine.
“If tennis is a game for ladies and gentlemen, it’s also time we acted a little more like gentlepeople and less like sanctimonious hypocrites,” Marble wrote. “If there is anything left in the name of sportsmanship, it’s more than time to display what it means to us. If Althea Gibson represents a challenge to the present crop of women players, it’s only fair that they should meet that challenge on the courts, where tennis is played.
“She might be soundly beaten for a while but she has a much better chance on the courts than in the inner sanctum of the committee, where a different kind of game is played.”
After the letter appeared, Gibson decided to test the waters. She applied to a tournament at the Maplewood Country Club in New Jersey. The club rejected her for lack of record.
But then Orange Lawn broke the dam, allowing her to play in the Eastern Grass Court Championships, the second-most important American tournament behind Forest Hills. A decent showing and the USLTA’s hands would be tied. She won a match against Virginia Rice Johnson, lost the next one, but then made the quarterfinals at the National Clay Court Championships in Chicago. Her tennis talked.