Origin and early years
There has been much dispute over the invention of modern tennis, but the officially recognized centennial of 4️⃣ the game in 1973 commemorated its introduction by Major Walter Clopton Wingfield in 1873.
He published the first book of rules 4️⃣ that year and took out a patent on his game in 1874, although historians have concluded that similar games were 4️⃣ played earlier and that the first tennis club was established by the Englishman Harry Gem and several associates in Leamington 4️⃣ in 1872.
Wingfield's court was of the hourglass shape and may have developed from badminton.
The hourglass shape, stipulated by Wingfield in 4️⃣ his booklet "Sphairistiké, or Lawn Tennis," may have been adopted for patent reasons since it distinguished the court from ordinary 4️⃣ rectangular courts.
At the time, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) was the governing body of real tennis, whose rules it had 4️⃣ recently revised.After J.M.
Heathcote, a distinguished real tennis player, developed a better tennis ball of rubber covered with white flannel, the 4️⃣ MCC in 1875 established a new, standardized set of rules for tennis.
Meanwhile, the game had spread to the United States 4️⃣ in the 1870s.
Mary Outerbridge of New York has been credited with bringing a set of rackets and balls to her 4️⃣ brother, a director of the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club.
But research has shown that William Appleton of Nahant, Massachusetts, 4️⃣ may have owned the first lawn tennis set and that his friends James Dwight and Fred R.
Sears popularized the game.
An 4️⃣ important milestone in the history of tennis was the decision of the All England Croquet Club to set aside one 4️⃣ of its lawns at Wimbledon for tennis, which soon proved so popular that the club changed its name to the 4️⃣ All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club.
In 1877 the club decided to hold a tennis championship, and a championship subcommittee 4️⃣ of three was appointed.
It decided on a rectangular court 78 feet (23.
8 metres) long by 27 feet (8.2 metres) wide.
They 4️⃣ adapted the real tennis method of scoring-15, 30, 40, game-and allowed the server one fault (i.e.
, two chances to deliver 4️⃣ a proper service on each point).
These major decisions remain part of the modern rules.
Twenty-two entries were received, and the first 4️⃣ winner of the Wimbledon Championships was Spencer Gore.
In 1878 the Scottish Championships were held, followed in 1879 by the Irish 4️⃣ Championships.
There were several alterations in some of the other rules (e.g.
, governing the height of the net) until 1880, when 4️⃣ the All England Club and the MCC published revised rules that approximate very closely those still in use.
The All England 4️⃣ Club was the dominant authority then, the British Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) not being formed until 1888.
In 1880 the first 4️⃣ U.S.
championship was held at the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club.
The victor was an Englishman, O.E.Woodhouse.
The popularity of the game 4️⃣ in the United States and frequent doubts about the rules led to the foundation in 1881 of the U.S.
National Lawn 4️⃣ Tennis Association, later renamed the U.S.
Lawn Tennis Association and, in 1975, the U.S.
Tennis Association (USTA).
Under its auspices, the first official 4️⃣ U.S.
national championship, played under English rules, was held in 1881 at the Newport Casino, Newport, Rhode Island.
The winner, Richard Sears, 4️⃣ was U.S.
champion for seven consecutive years.
Tennis had taken firm root in Australia by 1880, and the first Australian Championships were 4️⃣ played in 1905.
The first national championships in New Zealand were held in 1886.
In 1904 the Lawn Tennis Association of Australasia 4️⃣ (later of Australia) was founded.
The first French Championships were held at the Stade Français in 1891, but it was an 4️⃣ interclub tournament that did not become truly international until 1925; the French Federation of Lawn Tennis was established in 1920.
Other 4️⃣ national championships were inaugurated in Canada (1890), South Africa (1891), Spain (1910), Denmark (1921), Egypt (1925), Italy (1930), and Sweden 4️⃣ (1936).
In 1884 a women's championship was introduced at Wimbledon, and women's national championships were held in the United States starting 4️⃣ in 1887.