

Wimbledon
Tournament Begins
July 9, 1877
On July 9, 1877, the All England Croquet and Lawn
Tennis Club begins its first lawn tennis
tournament at Wimbledon, then an outer-suburb of
London. Twenty-one amateurs showed up to compete
in the Gentlemen's Singles tournament, the only
event at the first Wimbledon. The winner was to
take home a 25-guinea trophy.
Tennis has its origins in a 13th-century French
handball game called jeu de paume, or "game
of the palm," from which developed an indoor
racket-and-ball game called real, or
"royal," tennis. Real tennis grew into
lawn tennis, which was played outside on grass
and enjoyed a surge of popularity in the late
19th century.
In 1868, the All England Club was established on
four acres of meadowland outside London. The club
was originally founded to promote croquet,
another lawn sport, but the growing popularity of
tennis led it to incorporate tennis lawns into
its facilities. In 1877, the All England Club
published an announcement in the weekly sporting
magazine The Field that read: "The All
England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club, Wimbledon,
propose [sic] to hold a lawn tennis meeting open
to all amateurs, on Monday, July 9, and following
days. Entrance fee pounds 1 1s 0d."
The All English Club purchased a 25-guinea trophy
and drew up formal rules for tennis. It decided
on a rectangular court 78 feet long by 27 feet
wide; adapted the real tennis method of scoring
based on a clock face--i.e., 15, 30, 40, game;
established that the first to win six games wins
a set; and allowed the server one fault. These
decisions, largely the work of club member Dr.
Henry Jones, remain part of the modern rules.
Twenty-two men registered for the tournament, but
only 21 showed up on July 9 for its first day.
The 11 survivors were reduced to six the next
day, and then to three. Semifinals were held on
July 12, but then the tournament was suspended to
leave the London sporting scene free for the Eton
vs. Harrow cricket match played on Friday and
Saturday. The final was scheduled for Monday,
July 16, but, in what would become a common
occurrence in future Wimbledon tournaments, the
match was rained out.
It was rescheduled for July 19, and on that day
some 200 spectators paid a shilling each to see
William Marshall, a Cambridge tennis
"Blue," battle W. Spencer Gore, an Old
Harrovian racket player. In a final that lasted
only 48 minutes, the 27-year-old Gore dominated
with his strong volleying game, crushing
Marshall, 6-1, 6-2, 6-4. At the second Wimbledon
in 1878, however, Gore lost his title when his
net-heavy game fell prey to a innovative stroke
developed by challenger Frank Hadow: the lob.
In 1884, the Lady's Singles was introduced at
Wimbledon, and Maud Watson won the first
championship. That year, the national men's
doubles championship was also played at Wimbledon
for the first time after several years at Oxford.
Mixed doubles and women's doubles were
inaugurated in 1913. By the early 1900s,
Wimbledon had graduated from all-England to
all-world status, and in 1922 the All England
Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, as it was then
known, moved to a large stadium on Church Road.
In the 1950s, many tennis stars turned
professional while Wimbledon struggled to remain
an amateur tournament. However, in 1968 Wimbledon
welcomed the pros and quickly regained its status
as the world's top tennis tournament.
The Wimbledon Championships, the only major
tennis event still played on grass, is held
annually in late June and early July.
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