A fine example of the early game
Over one hundred club members and their guests watched the finals match of the mixed doubles paddle-tennis tournament at the Fox Meadow Tennis Club.
Mrs. Rufus Brent and Clifford Couch defeated Mrs. Rolin Sawyer and Rufus Brent 9-7, 6-1, 6-8, 6-7, 6-4.
All four participants were excellent tennis players and the match was one of the finest examples of the game seen at that time.
Source: Scarsdale Inquirer April 21, 1933
Fox Meadow’s “do-it-yourself” tradition is born
FMTC’s do-it-yourself spirit was never more in evidence than during the heyday of ice-skating, which began at FMTC in the 1930s.
Mole Ware recalled: “In the thirties and forties, for many young people and for two transplanted Bostonians—Fess Blanchard and Jimmy Cogswell—an important part of the Club’s appeal in winter lay in action on the skating rink. In the thirties, the rink skirted the portable paddle courts. Later, in the forties, the skating area was expanded and the large Victrola brought down from the porch to stand on the ice by the tennis backstop. Strains of Viennese waltzes and German polkas wafted over the paddle courts while my father and Mr. Cogswell taught ice dancing to anyone brave enough to try.”
Before the prevalence of indoor rinks with their ice-making equipment, readying an outdoor rink for skating was a labor of love, seemingly always done in the frigid cold of the night. At Fox Meadow, numerous people undertook this chilling task. Marian Van Norden Frohlicher recalls that her late husband John Van Norden and Henry Eaton got up at 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. to freeze the courts. Do Cogswell Deland tells of the times her father stood at the courts, hose in hand, drenching not only the tennis court but himself as well. When he had finished, both the court and his face were covered with ice.
Source: Diana Reische, Fox Meadow Tennis Club – The First Hundred Years, 1983
An early notice from the Paddle Committee. Hyson lived next door to the club at 15 Wayside Lane.

Source: Diana Reische, Fox Meadow Tennis Club – The First Hundred Years,1983
James N. Hynson elected FMTC President (1933-1935): open house and exhibition matches planned, new summer membership offered
James N. Hyson was a Princeton tennis star and squash ace and captain of his college’s 1920s championship basketball team.He was an excellent tennis player, winning two consecutive National Championships (1937-1938), and was instrumental in the construction of the first court at Fox Meadow in 1931.
Hynson won the club’s Men’s Singles six times – 1926-1929, 1933-1934, and 1936
During his tenure as President he helped oversee the addition of courts, and the building of a vibrant paddle community that lead to the club becoming known as “the home of platform tennis” and provided the momentum to expand the popularity of the game. For this later service he was among the first group of individuals inducted into the Platform Tennis Hall of Fame in 1965 (see Hynson)
Court construction plans help the game to expand
Both clubs and private estate owners usually built the first courts in accordance with plans and specifications provided by Cogswell and Blanchard—at first for nothing and later for a nominal fee.
Professor Eliot Dunlap Smith of Yale University assisted in early court improvements with Cogswell and Blanchard. Along with his personal experience playing, he consulted the Yale Department of Forestry for advice. In later years, Scarsdale architect Richard H. Tatlow also served as an advisor and worked in the American Paddle Tennis Association, the forerunner of the present day American Platform Tennis Association (APTA).
Source: Adapted from Fessenden S. Blanchard, Paddle Tennis, 1944, and Platform Paddle Tennis, 1959



