The Chalmers Family – St. James the Less, Scarsdale Inquirer, Junior Wightman Cup, and APTA National Champion

The Reverend Alan Reid Chalmers was the rector of St. James the Less from 1920 – 1940 and was a keen tennis player and apparently the person to beat in singles. The July 8, 1922 edition of the Scarsdale Inquirer reported on the Men’s Singles and said the “the most noteworthy event… was the defeat of Rev. Alan R. Chalmers, who was on his way to being the club’s perpetual and universal champion.”

Born in Cambridge, MA, Chalmers was the son of an Episcopal minister who served the Church of the Holy Trinity in New York City for 27 years before his death. He was educated at St. Paul’s School, Garden city, LI and Princeton (1908). After a short business career he attended the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge MA and graduated in 1913. Upon graduation he married the former Ruth Nash, a Vassar graduate, and served as a missionary in Cody, WY before moving to Scarsdale in 1920.

Ruth Nash Chalmers started a long career as editor of the Scarsdale Inquirer in 1926 and retired in 1957. Her retirement was covered in a special edition of the Scarsdale Inquirer captioned The Scarsdale Chalmers

The Chalmers had four daughters and one, Ruth, remained a long-time member of the club. She was a graduate of Scarsdale High School and Smith College, and was a ranking junior tennis player and a member of the Junior Wightman Cup Squad. She also toured in England with the Camp Merestead field hockey team and later as manager of the U.S. women’s lacrosse association touring team to Great Britain and Ireland. In 1957, she and Richard Hebard of Scarsdale won the National Mixed Doubles Championship of the American Platform Tennis Association.

FMTC needs additional courts because of explosive popularity of paddle; land leased from Cranes to build the new courts

The explosive popularity of paddle, with the accompanying demand for more courts and for weekend and night play, led to some discussion in the late 1930s and the 1940s about the kind of club Fox Meadow should be.

Some long-term members who were also neighbors complained about the increase in activities and the noise. They urged the Club to remain small and low-key, with membership limited to numbers the existing small clubhouse could accommodate. Yet pressure to expand paddle facilities proved irresistible. The first step was to find a place to put more platforms.

The Club built additional courts on land it leased from the Crane heirs in 1938 for $150 a year. The site was a 40′ x 250′ strip of land running along the Club’s southern boundary. Although the Cranes had begun to sell parts of the estate, efforts to buy the property outright stalled.

This situation finally changed in 1943.

Source: Diana Reische, Fox Meadow Tennis Club – The First Hundred Years, 1983

FMTC documentation of Women’s Tennis Championships begins, finally

For inexplicable reasons, the list of winners in women’s tournaments begins twenty-nine years after the list of those in men’s matches. There seems to have been no official record of a Club championship in women’s tennis until after World War II.

Between 1923 and 1931 The Scarsdale Inquirer mentions four women who won tournaments: Muriel Bray (1923), Mrs. Stuart Cowan (1926), Mrs. J.T. Hall (1929), and Caroline Atkinson (1931). They may have been winners in the traditional Women’s Invitational, a week-long event held annually for at least two decades.

Astonishing as it may seem, the first documented Women’s Singles and Doubles Club championships were not played until 1948, or sixty years into the Club’s history

Inauguration of John Parker Compton Memorial Tournament; a boy who loved tennis

Allied troops were advancing in Italy, but the Nazis still held the Apennine Mountains, and suspected Allied sympathizers faced execution by the Germans. In hopes of rescuing a priest and a family who were in jeopardy, two young American paratroopers dropped behind enemy lines in March of 1945.

One was a teenager from Scarsdale, John Parker Compton. As he neared the priest’s church, a sniper shot and killed him. Later the Nazis killed the priest and burned his church.

After the war, the Compton family had the church rebuilt and a memorial plaque installed.

At home, John’s parents Randolph and Dorothy,created a living memorial to the boy who had played so much tennis at Fox Meadow Tennis Club, a tennis tournament for boys eighteen and under.

Paul Sullivan and his pal John Compton played many a game together. “Then John went off to Exeter,” Sullivan recalls, “and a year at Princeton before enlisting. My father, Paul Sullivan, Sr., and Randolph Compton jointly proposed to FMTC and the Scarsdale Recreation Department that such a tournament be established. It was quickly approved, and Randolph and Dorothy Compton established a trust fund to provide the funds necessary.”

Kitty Fuller chaired the first John Parker Compton Memorial Tournament, held at Fox Meadow on June 24, 1946. Sanctioned from the start by the Eastern Lawn Tennis Association, the tournament was open to ELTA registered Juniors from Westchester and nearby counties. The first winner lived in Brooklyn. As the entries grew, the Compton tournament had to be limited to Westchester boys under eighteen.

“This tournament thus became the first and only privately endowed USTA-sanctioned tournament in the country,” says Paul Sullivan, the permanent chairman.

Doubles matches were added to the competition in its fifth year, and a total of sixty singles competitors and twenty-one doubles teams entered. The competition has grown virtually every year and in 1976 broke all previous records, with ninety-eight singles entrants and fifty-three doubles teams. Over the years it has included such players as Bailey Brown, Buddy Gallagher, and Andrew Kohlberg, who is currently a tennis professional ranked in the top one hundred in the world. This event is Fox Meadow’s major contribution to Junior tennis development.

The June 1983 Compton tournament will be the thirty-eighth held. As it has each year, the program will carry these words:

“A Memorial Tournament in Memory of John Parker Compton, Pfc, 88th Regiment, 10th Mountain Division. A boy who loved tennis ..”

Source: Diana Reische, Fox Meadow Tennis Club – The First Hundred Years, 1983

Tennis matches draw large crowd to Fox Meadow

Five California tennis stars took over the exhibition court and gave expert performances before an enthusiastic gallery.

The Village recreational department was instrumental in bringing Edward Moylan, Clarence Carter, Helen Pastall, Louise Snow and Beverly Baker, all of whom held honored places in the tennis world, to the club.

Barbara Koegel with Zan Carver (Honor Award, 1970).

Alexander H (Zan) Carver, Jr.

Carver (1919-1982) was the number one tennis player at the University of North Carolina and from there went on the tennis circuit as an amateur. He played at the premier United States Tournament, the Nationals at Forest Hills, six times in 1940, 1944, 1946-1948, and 1952. In 1944, he played his way to the quarterfinals, disposing the eighth seed in the round of 16 to get there. He emerged from Forest Hills that year ranked 11 nationally.

Carver served as a Major in the US Army Air Forces and had a brilliant career as a bomber pilot

In tennis Zan won the club Singles eight times – 1952-1956 and 1963-1965, the Doubles seven time – 1954, 1958, 1961, 1964, 1969, and 1970-1971, and the Mixed once in 1958

In platform tennis he won the clubs’ Men’s ten times – 1959, 1965-1966, and 1968-1974, and the Mixed six times – 1959, and 1961-1965.

Zan also amassed an enviable APTA National Championship record; his win with Barbara Koegel in the Mixed in 1964 was one of the sweetest as Barbara was battling terminal cancer at the time.

Carver was inducted into the Platform Tennis Hall of Fame in 1970 (see Carver>)