John R. Moses playing at Fox Meadow Tennis Club

APTA Honor Award: Moses and Wasch

John R. Moses was an exceptional tennis player, earning a number one ranking in Interscholastic doubles, and a number five ranking in singles. He was captain of the Yale tennis team, and was a finalist in the National Men’s at nineteen in 1943.

Four years later, at age twenty-three, he won his first title, and a second followed ten years later, in 1957. John also won the Mixed in 1955.

His record could well have been extended, but he moved to Kansas City where there were no courts. Blanchard thought that, at his best, Moses had few equals with quick hands and remarkable court coverage. (Fox Meadow Tennis Club).

Susan Beck Wasch inherited her mother’s racquet genes and grew up playing both tennis and paddle. She had played Junior Wightman Cup tennis for two years when a serious illness interrupted her racquet career, and there was thought that she might not play again.

Instead, she took up paddle and overcame the odds to win the National Women’s with her mother in 1959.

At the age of twenty-four, she was the youngest woman to win at the time. She won again in 1960, 1962 and 1965, and added a Mixed title in 1972. (Fox Meadow Tennis Club).

Phoebe Creamer in her favorite spot - the Felix McCrea memorial rock.

A woman returns to the FMTC Board of Governors for the first time since early 1900s

Phoebe Creamer became the first woman to serve on the Board since the early 1900’s: “I think they thought that if they had to have a woman on the board they would take an old-time conservative person who wouldn’t rock the boat too much,” she said.

The club’s constitution had been re-written in 1913 and women were excluded from the governance of the club. Prior th the change Hopeton Atterbury had served as President in 1907 and 1909.

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