The President’s Box, which sits at the south end of Arthur Ashe Stadium, is where America’s version of tennis royalty gather to watch their country’s national championship. While it’s not as picturesque as its counterpart at Wimbledon, the Royal Box, it does come with a dining room and a lounge and the best seats in a house full of so-so ones.
As of a few years ago, at least, it also came with a little bit of American history. The last time I was in the lounge there, its walls were adorned with vintage black-and-white photos of past U.S. tennis greats—Sidney Wood, Tony Trabert, Bill Tilden, and others float through the air, each dressed in immaculate whites.
But none of these legends looked quite as immaculate as the four players, none of them famous, who appeared in another shot, from 1930. It was taken at an American Tennis Association doubles tournament, and the four players, like most members of the ATA, were African-American.
In the picture, they pose, smiling, at the side of a court. They sport collared white shirts, khaki pants, and canvas shoes, and each carries a stack of wooden racquets. Like their better-known white contemporaries, each exudes the easy grace of the amateur sportsman. A small sign nearby said that their names were Eyre Saitch, Sylvester Smith, John McGriff, and Elwood Downing.
On the night I saw the photo, eight decades after it was taken, their images were hanging inside a tennis stadium—the world’s largest—named after an African-American player, Arthur Ashe. Playing on the court a few feet away was the United States’ most famous player, an African-American named Serena Williams. All of this may have been a little hard for the four men in the photo to believe, considering that at the time it was taken, they weren’t allowed on the courts at the nation’s most prominent tennis clubs, or to enter its national championships at Forest Hills.
How did American tennis, specifically African-American, get from the ghostly gentleman in that photo, each lost the game’s official history, to a world-famous figure like Serena Williams? The answer is simple: By way of a one-person bridge who spanned two thoroughly separated worlds. Sixty-five years ago, Althea Gibson cracked the sport’s color barrier. In 1950, the child of sharecroppers and roamer of the New York City streets became the first African-American player to enter the U.S. Championships.
That once-amateur event is now called the U.S. Open, in a nod to its open-door policy toward professionals. But while its name always began with “U.S.,” it wasn’t until Gibson made her debut, 69 years after it had first been held, that the tournament could claim the right to the those initials in full.