Health & Fitness

Community Update

If Andy Murray's Sunday success on the grass courts of Wimbledon was an inspiration, look no further than Orange Lawn for grass court history in the making.

In 1873, lawn tennis was formally organized in the United States.
Seven years later, the Orange Lawn Tennis Club was founded in the
Montrose Section of South Orange. In 1916, the thriving Club moved to
its present location on Ridgewood Road.


At the same time tennis was growing in popularity locally, it had
become an international sensation. One reason for the attention the
sport gained was Suzanne Lenglen.
Born in 1899 in France, Lenglen won the world hard-court singles and
doubles titles in 1914. She was champion of French women's singles
(1920–23, 1925–26) and one of the winners of women's doubles (1925–26);
and from 1919 to 1923 and again in 1925, she won the British women's
singles crowns and was also a doubles champion.

Find out what's happening in South Orangewith free, real-time updates from Patch.


In 1920 she took the tennis honors at the Olympic games at Antwerp. However, she is remembered for more than her playing.  Pierre de Coubertin,
the French aristocrat and father of the modern Olympic movement,
opposed female participation at the games in their early years as
'”impratique, inintéressante, inesthétique et incorrecte.”  But Lenglen
was a product of the Jazz Age, which was the backdrop for women's
suffrage and a general sea change in social mores after World War I.
When Lenglen appeared on the Olympic courts, she wore simple dresses and
even a skirt and jersey set. Such clothes not only allowed her to move
freely, but they revealed her bare arms and calves. She was a sensation.


The next year, still the talk of the tennis circuit, Suzanne Lenglen
brought her powerful game and celebrity status to South Orange. The New York Times reported
that “Mlle. Lenglen” would “take the Court at South Orange” on Sept.
10, 1921. The sports pages of the Times covered the event, reporting the
following day that “the temperamental French girl was the start of the
afternoon’s play.” 

Find out what's happening in South Orangewith free, real-time updates from Patch.


With her partner, Mrs. David C. Mills, Lenglen beat the doubles team
of Miss Leslie Bancroft and Miss Martha Bayard, 7-5, 9-7. Lenglen’s
strokes “bordered on the the amazing and her playing as a whole was a
beautiful thing to watch.”


Lenglen’s appearance at the Orange Lawn Tennis Club was a prelude to
her successful future; she turned professional in 1926 and authored
"Lawn Tennis" (1925), "Lawn Tennis for Girls" (1930), and "Tennis by
Simple Exercises" (1937). It also heralded an era of success for the
Orange Lawn Tennis Club.  


However, Lenglen came to South Orange for more than a game. The
ticket sales at the Orange Lawn Tennis Club were donated to the American
Committee for a Devastated France. Even in 1921, South Orange was
looking forward to a prosperous future, and beyond its borders to help
others.


Sources:


  • Welk, Naoma. Images of America: South Orange. Arcadia, 2002.
  • (1921, September 9.) Mlle. Lenglen Will Play.; To Take the Court at South Orange Tomorrow in Doubles. The New York Times.





Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here