Fessenden Blanchard Scrapbook (1928-1940)

Blanchard kept two valuable scrapbooks covering the development of the game in the early years. This one covered the years through 1940. The second one covered 1928 – 1963 (the year of his death).

There is some considerable overlap in material between the two and this one has a number of historical photographs that have been “borrowed” by others in writing about the sport and have been lost.

Nevertheless, there is a fascinating tale being told in both books for those interested in the very early days of the game.
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Winter play at Fox Meadow in late 1930s

Paddle so popular at FMTC that there now is a waiting list

By 1940, more than a dozen people were on the waiting list for membership. World War II, however, put most Club activities on hold. Because gas rationing made tournaments all but impossible, most were suspended for the duration of the war. By the dozens, members and their offspring left for the war. Dues for those on active duty were cut to $25.

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

A. Keith Eaton, FMTC President (1940-1942)

A. Keith Eaton elected FMTC President (1940-1942)

A Keith Eaton (1891-1975) was a graduate of Bowdoin College and retired from Shell in 1949 as assistant manager for national sales.

He had served in WWI as a flight instructor and as a colonel in the Army Corps of Engineers in WWII where he was in charge of the manufacture of the “Pluto” pipe lines that ran from England to France to supply the Allied armies with oil.

Final of Men's National Championship 1940, Fox Meadow Tennis Club, Scarsdale, NY

National Championships

1940

The Scarsdale Inquirer reported:

Local Team Loses in Paddle Tennis. Paul Hicks and Witherby Black of Manursing are the national paddle tennis champions in men’s doubles. They won the title by defeating Edward Grafmueller and James Landauer of Scarsdale last Sunday at the Fox Meadow Tennis Club. A large, interested and enthusiastic gallery watched the play.”

Tea was served to a large number of guests and visitors later in the afternoon, following the tournament.”

Fox Meadow teams dominate the two other events, with Madge Beck and Marie Walker winning their third straight Women’s title and the O’Hearns their fourth Mixed title.

Source: Fessenden S. Blanchard, Paddle Tennis, 1944
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Scarsdale Inquirer February 2, 1940

Platform Tennis in Life Magazine

Kenneth Ward arranged for a piece to run in Life Magazine, and he appeared in several of the pictures that ran with it. In one of the shots, his expression was so contorted that Life felt impelled to caption it: “Up the wire, like a monkey, goes Ken Ward, President of the American Paddle Tennis Association. In spite of his strange antics, Ward is a good-looking New York broker.”

(Note: The pictures were taken by the Albanian-American photographer Gjon Mili who, along with Harold Edgerton of MIT, was a pioneer in the use of stroboscopic instruments to capture a sequence of actions in one photograph)

The Life article brought some amusing reactions.

One was a letter from a man who objected to calling O’Hearn the “game’s greatest player.” He said O’Hearn had never played against him.

Another man’s letter made the revolutionary idea of taking balls off the backstop seem tame:

“Your article on paddle tennis as played by a group in New York State is most interesting to us here in New Jersey, but I would like to tell you about our game. We play in a garage, about 30 by 60 feet in Morristown, using the ceiling as a play surface. This, of course, eliminates any advantage in playing the net position, as the ball can be struck against the ceiling making it strike the opponent. Along the center of the ceiling runs a beam the full length of the court and balls played off this introduce strange angle shots. No walls offer any hazards but one rear wall, and that is a trickster’s delight. Here is an old hot air furnace with its pipes reaching out like arms to change the direction of the ball or destroy it for one attempting its return. In a match last week the ball struck against the ceiling, bounced up from the floor into the maze of pipes and has not been found yet. For all I know it has now been shoveled out with the ashes. On winter weekends it is a toss-up whether this game or hockey prevails, but we old men have a preference for our game of paddle tennis.”

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

Number of courts skyrockets

The APTA Annual Report of October 25th estimated 500 courts to be in use.

They based the estimate on a list of 229 platforms built by the Gates Company and a partial list of plans distributed by James K. Cogswell.

First book covering Platform Tennis published

The book was published by A. S. Barnes. John Roberts Tunis (December 7, 1889 – February 4, 1975), was an American writer and broadcaster and “the ‘inventor’ of the modern sports story.” Known for his juvenile sports novels, Tunis also wrote short stories and non-fiction, including a weekly sports column for the The New Yorker magazine. As a commentator Tunis was part of the first trans-Atlantic sports cast and the first broadcast of the Wimbledon Tennis Tournament to the United States.

Letter from Chuvakhin to Blanchard thanking him for sending details on court construction and playing the game.

Paddle in Russia

In the spring of 1940, the APTA received a request for information on the sport from the “Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics” in Washington, D.C. The Russian Commissar of Sports, Mr. Dm. Chuvakhin, wanted to learn more about platform tennis.