US Ambassador to Poland, Walter Stoessel, imports Platform Tennis to Warsaw

Ambassador Walter Stoessel, a keen player and lover of the game, introduced the game to Warsaw when he was appointed US Ambassador there in 1968.

They had been initiated in the game at the Chevy Chase Club in Washington, D.C. and while they were far from expert they loved the game and thought it would be ideal in the long Polish winters.

Using plans Supplied by APTA, they built a wooden court at the American Embassy in Warsaw. It worked, although it was quite a hybrid. The wood was obtained locally, the wire came from West Germany, and the lights were regular Warsaw street lights.

The game caught on rapidly and was played enthusiastically by members of the American community in Warsaw and their friends in the foreign community.

In 1970 he sent a letter to Paul Molloy, APTA President, enclosing a picture taken on February 20, 1970 before the inaugural game on the Warsaw Embassy Platform Tennis court.

Some years later (1974) when he moved to Moscow he had a court constructed there and annual contests between the two Embassies ensued.

Source: Paddle World, Vol 1 No 2 Mid-Winter 1976

Koegel Award Recipients

Barbara Koegel (1921-1968) and the Koegel Award

Although she won twenty club titles in tennis and paddle, as well as two APTA titles, one in Women’s Doubles and one in Mixed Doubles, and was inducted into The Platform Tennis Hall of Fame in 1966, Barbara Koegel is remembered best at Fox Meadow for the help and encouragement she gave to other players, as opposed to her own play. As coach of the Paddle Pals at FMTC in the 1950s and 1960s, she made it fun to work hard at improving one’s game.

Barbara’s husband, William F. Koegel, served as President of FMTC from 1973-1975.

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

Several ladies chairmen gave credit for team play in the late 1950s and the 1960s to Koegel. When Barbara coached Paddle Pals, says Delsa Wilson, she instilled a competitive spirit by constantly telling the players, “You have to want the ball to come to you.” Dotsie Erskine added, “It was fun to improve our paddle because our mentor Bobbie Koegel engendered such spirit and sportsmanship and camaraderie.”

During her tenure as ladies chairman, Clare Kingsbury and her committee proposed that the Club create a suitable memorial for Barbara Koegel, who died in 1968. The award reads, “given in memory of a champion who gave her time and talents to develop paddle tennis among women of our Club.” Presented to women Club members for achievement and sportsmanship, the Koegel award winners are listed on a plaque created in the form of a huge paddle by Scott Wood.

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

Barbara Bixler was born October 11, 1921 in Jersey City, New Jersey. She and her younger sister, Joan, were the only children of Donald and Dora Bixler. At an early age, Barbara and her family moved to Forest Hills, New York, where they joined the West Side Tennis Club, which was then the foremost tennis club in the area and the site of the men’s and women’s National tournaments. She took up tennis as a young girl at her father’s urging, under the tutelage of the club pro, George Agutter. He held the job at West Side for 46 years, was described by Al Laney as “the country’s No. 1 tennis professional,” and was much loved and respected. He developed in his pupils a sweeping style of backhand that was very graceful and very effective, and such a trademark that his pupils could often be identified in later years.

Barbara’s tennis developed very rapidly and she became the club’s women’s singles champion while still in high school. The family moved to Garden City, Long Island, in the late thirties, but kept the West Side membership. In 1940, Barbara played in the Nationals (then on grass) and in the first round defeated the French girl’s champion. According to the newspaper account: “A sunny blonde, enjoying her first attempt in the big tournament, made the home club people very happy – to say nothing of her mother and father who watched joyously as she made a sensational battle out of a losing fight and scored a coveted victory. (0-6, 6-1, 6-1).”

Barbara went on to Smith College, where she graduated in 1943. She was captain of the tennis and squash teams and won the college championships in both sports. After marrying William F. Koegel in 1946, she and her husband lived in Charlottesville VA where he attended University of Virginia Law School. There, she continued to play tennis while she also began to raise a family. She won the Albemarle County (Charlottesville) ladies’ singles championship and played squash, non-competitively.

In 1949 she moved to Hartsdale and in 1952 to Walworth Avenue in Scarsdale. She played at County Tennis Cub until 1955 and was the ladies’ tennis champion. In that year she and her husband joined Fox Meadow Tennis Club and her attachment to paddle tennis began. In ten years, until she gave up competitive play in 1965 for health related reasons, she won twenty club titles in tennis and paddle and won the APTA National Women’s Doubles in 1956 (with Mrs. Peyton [Sally] Auxford) and the National Mixed Doubles title (with Zan Carver) in 1962.

Fessenden Blanchard, in his book Platform Paddle Tennis, had these comments about Barbara Koegel: “Mrs. William F. (Barbara) Koegel is another first-class player, who has come to the top in recent years. She is a sister-in-law of the highly rated Frank Guernsey. In the semi-finals of the national mixed doubles at the Wee Burn Club in February 1959, she played as fine a game as I have ever seen any woman play. Though she and her partner, Herman Schaefer, lost to George Lowman and Sally Auxford in a very close, exciting match, Barbara’s steadiness and poise in returning difficult shots off the wires, her low volleying, her backhands and her all-around play were outstanding. And she continued her fine play in reaching the finals of the 43-team national women’s doubles championship in 1959, with my daughter, Mrs. Frederick B. (Ruthie) Walker, as her partner. As Kitty Fuller put it, she is ‘what the men call a real clutch player’.” And, as one of her partners put it, ‘she’s a spectator’s joy and a partner’s dream’.”

In the late 50’s and early 60’s, she served as captain and coach of the Westchester Junior Wightman Cup team. The Wightman cup was donated by the Queen Mother of tennis, Mrs. Hazel Wightman, who was herself a winner of forty-one national championships. The annual competition was, and still is, between English and American teams. Play would alternate between Wimbledon and Forest Hills. To encourage interest in the younger girls (up to 18), teams were formed from Westchester/Connecticut, Long Island and New Jersey. Barbara, who knew Mrs. Wightman well from Forest Hills days, agreed to captain the Westchester/Connecticut group of about two dozen girls, including several from Fox Meadow. She devoted a great deal of time to the practices and the matches and got great satisfaction from the experience.

Barbara died on October 16, 1968, after a four-year bout with colon cancer, at the age of 47.

Sally Barnes Bondurant

Sally Barnes Bondurant was another of the second-generation paddle players to emerge in winners’ lists in the 1960s. With her mother, Helen Barnes, Bondurant took the Club Women’s Doubles title in 1968.

Paired with Spencer Brent, son of Old Army Athlete Rufus Brent, she collected the Mixed Doubles championship.

Bondurant paired with various partners to win most of the Club’s member and invitational tournaments in 1968.

Bondurant, along with her sister, Lucie Bel, had an impressive tennis career as a junior (see The Barnes Sisters and ended up compiling an even better record on the tennis courts winning the Singles title four times – 1965 and 1967-1969 and the Doubles three times – 1965-1967, the last two with her mother.

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

Bob and Clare Kingsbury

Robert R Kingsbury, multiple winner in tennis and paddle and APTA President

Bob Kingsbury, the son of FMTC President Ollie Kingsbury (1965-1966) captured an enviable number of club tennis and platform tennis crowns.

In tennis he won the Singles five times – 1966-1967, 1969-1970 and 1975, and the same number in Doubles – 1962 (with his brother) and 1969-1971 (with Zan Carver). In Mixed Doubles he won six championships all with his wife, Clare – 1968, 1970-1973, and 1975-1976.

Teamed with Zan Carver, Kingsbury won the club Men’s platform tennis title five years running, from 1968 to 1972, and the Mixed Doubles six times, again all with Clare – 1970-1974 and 1976.

In APTA National championships, he and partner John Mangan of Manursing Island Club were Men’s Doubles runners-up in 1970 and 1971 before clinching the title in 1972 at Fox Meadow, and again in 1973 in Cleveland.

Kingsbury served as APTA President from 1978-80 and was inducted into the Platform Tennis Hall of Fame in 2003.

Bob Kingsbury making one of his great "gets" Bob Kingsbury making one of his trade-mark “gets”

Oscar F. Moore

APTA Honor Award: Oscar Moore

Oscar F. Moore served as President of the APTA from 1946-1948, which proved to be important growth years. He was credited with developing the mixed Scrambles or Jamboree, a format that gave the game much of its social overtones and proved to be very popular. Few people gave so much of their time and energy, or were so dedicated to platform tennis. (Fox Meadow Tennis Club).

Peggy Stanton (left) and long-time partner Charlotte Lee.

National Championships

1968 - Rev 1

Gordon Gray and Jesse Sammis fell short again and were defeated by Bradley Drowne and William Scarlett.

Charlotte Lee and Peggy Stanton1 repeated in the Women’s, as did Gordon Gray and Anne Symmers in the Mixed, and George Lowman and Bill Pardoe in the Men’s 50+.

Cogswell’s daughter, Do Deland, was a finalist in the Women’s and his grandson, Rawle Deland, Jr., was the Junior Boy’s finalist

Source: Oliver H. Durrell The Official Guide to Platform Tennis, 1967; and APTA Platform Paddle Tennis 1963-1973: Rules and Records, 1973

Note 1: Margaret G. (“Peggy”) Stanton was a major contributor to the advancement of women’s platform tennis and a distinguished player. Besides winning the Women’s Nationals with Lee from 1967 through 1970, she went on to win two Senior Women’s Nationals in 1974 and 1977. She was the first female on the Board of Directors of the APTA

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