Fox Meadow Tennis Club installs a new court that includes the Evan’s backstop, the improved deck surface and lights. The club now had four platform tennis courts

The Scarsdale Inquirer of October 10, 1936 carried the story:

“Last Saturday a new paddle tennis court of the latest design, constructed to give a perfect bounce was used for the first time. The other three courts have been repainted and sanded, making a surface which can be played on immediately after rain or dew has fallen. Many members are taking advantage of the artificially lighted court where the game may be played after dark with perfect vision.”

Madge Beck and daughter, Susan Beck Wasch (Honor Award 1976).

The Childress tennis and paddle dynasty

The first of this racquet dynasty at the Club were Avent and Madeline Childress. Mrs. Childress taught all four of her daughters to play tennis, and three of them loved the game. When the girls were introduced to paddle, they took to the game like a trio of naturals. All three became national champions: Sally Childress Auxford, Madge Childress Beck, and Maizie Childress Moore.

For decades, the family’s daughters and grandchildren formed a nearly unbeatable paddle dynasty, with a string of APTA National Championships stretching from 1936 to 1974. Sally Childress, a frequent women’s tennis champ at the Club, took her first national paddle tournament in 1937. Her partner was her sister Maizie. Nearly twenty years later Sally Childress Auxford captured a second Women’s Doubles title, with partner Barbara Koegel, and in 1959 she won the Mixed Doubles crown.

Although each of the Childress women was formidable on the court, the unfailing powerhouse was Madge Beck, who won an incredible seventeen national championships: twelve Women’s Doubles, four Mixed Doubles, and one Women’s Singles. Most consider her to be the game’s all-time best female player, and her record has never been duplicated. Famed for her terrifying backhand and aggressive play, she might have won even more tournaments had they not been canceled during World War II. For her first national championship, Madge Beck teamed with Club member Marie Walker, but in 1949, she began playing with her sister Maizie Moore, and the pair did not lose a single set for several years. Top-seeded nationally year after year, the sisters won the Women’s Doubles title five times between 1949 and 1954, and thirteen times with other partners.

Both Madge and Maizie were inducted into the Platform Tennis Hall of Fame in 1965 and 1970 respectively.

In club platform tennis championships Madge won five Women’s – 1952-1953, and 1956-1958, twice with Maizie and three times with Sally. In Mixed she won seven straight titles – 1943-1950, five of them with her husband. Sally won eight Women’s titles from 1954 through 1971 and one Mixed in 1966 with her husband Peyton. Maizie won three straight Women’s – 1952-1954.

In club tennis championships Sally won eight Singles titles during the period 1952-1972, seven Doubles titles from 1953-1973, and one Mixed Doubles in 1956. Maizie won one Singles in 1954, one Doubles in 1949, and two Mixed in 1942 and 1953, both with her husband. Madge won five Doubles titles- 1950-1952, 1954, and 1959.{Note: Astonishingly the first documented Women’s Singles and Doubles championships was in 1948 although the Scarsdale Inquirer mentions women who won tournaments in the 1923-1931 time-frame]

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

Tea after paddle at Fox Meadow

This tradition began when the Cogswells arrived at FMTC with the Old Army Athletes in the 1930s.

Families took turns serving tea, cinnamon toast, and cookies. In 1936, fifteen cents entitled a member to “unlimited tea, toast, and condiments.” (see sidebar article)

So popular were the Saturday teas that they were extended to Sundays, and iced tea was served during tennis season.

It was not until the 1970s that the Sunday teas were discontinued.

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

Arrangements regarding the 1936 Nationals. The entry fee was one dollar per person.

APTA membership growing

By the end of 1936, the APTA consisted of eight clubs: FMTC, Tremont Place Tennis Club, Manursing Island Tennis Club, Field Club of Greenwich, Ardsley Country Club, Bronxville Field Club, American Yacht Club, and the Amackassin Tennis Club. The Association began organizing exhibitions at various clubs: Orange Lawn Tennis Club, Wee Burn Club, Hartford Golf Club, Short Hills Club, and others.

Source: Fessenden S. Blanchard, Platform Paddle Tennis, 1959

1936 Men’s Nationals drawsheet

National Championships – an epic Men’s final that remains the longest in APTA National Championships based on number of games played

1936

Harold D. Holmes and Richard G. Newell from Tremont Place Platform Tennis Club in New Jersey won the Men’s Championship in an epic match against the Fox Meadow Tennis Club team of Fessenden S. Blanchard and Earle Gatchell.Blanchard was devastated that a non-Scarsdale team had won a National title!

Blanchard recalled the match in his 1944 book:

“The Men’s final match still holds the APTA record for length and closeness. Both teams had already played in the quarters and semi-finals that same day. The referee made the finals the best of five sets, as opposed to the standard best of three. For the first time, a Platform Paddle Tennis championship went outside of Scarsdale, with Holmes and Newell winning the epic match: 3-6, 8-6, 4-6, 9-7, 15-13, a 77 game final, over Blanchard and Gatchell. Holmes and Newell had 13 match points before winning.”

Historical Factoid: One of the finalist in the Women’s Doubles event, Dorothy Walker Bush, was the mother of George Herbert Walker Bush the 41st President of the United States.

Source: Fessenden S. Blanchard, Paddle Tennis, 1944