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Thankyou for viewing tennishistory.com.au. We try to keep the information as accurate as we understand. Please email us with any feedback, extra information, photos, stories etc. Please email us at [email protected] . We look forward to sharing your history on the site !!| Arriving in Queensland |
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While we have been searching for information on the history of tennis arriving in Australia via some official sporting association whether cricket or croquet, this wonderful story from the 1888 Courier Mail has opened up the simple possibility that a visiting family, tourist or commissioned officer may well have brought a private tennis set with them for the entertainment of close friends and family. This article implies the level of fun and interest that this new game of Tennis must have generated for a tennis club to be formed only some months later. Reading below we have a record of the first tennis game arriving to Queensland in August 1876, by visiting Brisbane Grammar Schoolmaster, Mr R.H.Roe. By comparison, in Tasmania, our earliest reference is January 1876 via a retail store ad, so sometime prior, what happened in Queensland may have equally occurred in Tasmania. The retail sporting goods trade soon flourished and under the racquet retailing section you will see two Queensland tennis advertisements from late 1877. Over the next decade various clubs were developed and eventually a state Lawn Tennis Association was formed from which Inter-colonial matches began leading to the Australian Championships. Please read below all the amazing history about the first clubs, courts, location, membership numbers etc. Note that the reference to the net being particularly high and the early scoring to 15 points supports the view that this was a very early “Sphairistike” set designed by Major Wingfield. Many of the articles on our website come from the National Library’s Newspaper Beta Program which allows online keyword searching. This is a fabulous online service which allows this sort of material to be found, without spending hours (more likely years) in the libraries.
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