
William Augustus Larned (December 30, 1872 – December 16, 1926) was an American
tennis player who was active at the beginning of the 20th century. He won seven singles titles at the
U.S. National Championships.
Biography
Larned was born and raised in Summit, New Jersey on the estate of his father, William Zebedee Larned, a wealthy lawyer and a major landowner in Summit. Stoneover, the manor house in which he grew up, today houses the administrative and faculty offices of the
Oak Knoll School
Oak Knoll School of the Holy Child is a Catholic private school in Summit, in Union County, New Jersey, United States. It is coeducational from pre-kindergarten to grade 6 and all-girls for seventh grade to twelfth grade. The school operat ...
. Larned Road in Summit honors both father and son; Brayton School in Summit was named in honor of his younger brother Brayton, who died at age 15. He came from a family that could trace its American roots to shortly after the arrival of the Mayflower. In 1890 he came to Cornell University to study mechanical engineering. He first gained fame in his junior year, when he became the first (and to this day, the only) Cornellian to win the intercollegiate tennis championship.
An all-around athlete, Larned captained the
St. Nicholas Hockey Club
The St. Nicholas Hockey Club is an ice hockey club from Manhattan, New York City. St. Nicholas Hockey Club played in the American Amateur Hockey League between 1896–1903 and 1905–1918 and won three championship titles, in 1907, 1914 and 1915. ...
in 1896–97 and was also a horseman, golfer, and rifle shot. He invented the steel-framed racquet in 1922 and founded a company to manufacture it.
Larned won the title seven times, as did
Richard Sears before him and
Bill Tilden after. Larned was a member of the U.S. Davis Cup Team in 1902–03, 1905, 1908–09 and 1911–12. Larned achieved a career-high U.S. ranking of No. 1. He twice participated in the
Wimbledon Championships, in 1896 and 1905, but could not match his success at home, losing on both occasions in the quarterfinals.
Larned also won other tournaments multiple times including the
Middle States Championships
The Middle States Championships also known as the Middle States Sectional Championships or Championship of the Middle States was regional level tournament held at various locations from 1885 to 1968.
History
The spring Championship of the Middle ...
four times (1894–95, 1897, 1907), and the
Longwood Challenge Bowl Longwood may refer to:
Australia
* Longwood, Victoria
India
* Longwood, Shimla
New Zealand
* Longwood, New Zealand
Republic of Ireland
* Longwood, County Meath
United Kingdom
* Longwood, West Yorkshire, England
* Longwood, Saint Helena, locati ...
five times (1894, 1897, 1903–1907).
He was inducted in the
International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1956.
Larned in 1898 had served in the
Spanish–American War as one of Theodore Roosevelt's
Rough Riders. While serving in the war, Larned caught rheumatism in Cuba;
rheumatoid arthritis later deteriorated his health forcing him to retire from tennis after losing the Davis Cup challenge round in early 1912. Partially paralyzed by
spinal meningitis, he was unable to do any of the activities he loved most, and became depressed. On the evening of December 15, 1926, inside the private chambers of the exclusive
Knickerbocker Club in Manhattan, the 53-year-old Larned committed suicide by shooting himself.
Playing style
In their book ''R.F. and H.L. Doherty - On Lawn Tennis (1903)'' multiple Wimbledon champions Reginald and Laurence Doherty described Larned's playing style:
''On Lawn Tennis'' - 1903
Grand Slam finals
Singles: 9 (7 titles, 2 runners-up)
Performance timeline
Events with a challenge round: (WC) won; (CR) lost the challenge round; (FA) all comers' finalist
References
External links
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Spanish–American War Military Service RecordRough Rider - Cornell Magazine (Jul/Aug 1998) Biography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Larned, William
1872 births
1926 deaths
19th-century American people
19th-century male tennis players
American male tennis players
Cornell Big Red men's tennis players
Sportspeople from Summit, New Jersey
International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees
Tennis people from New Jersey
United States Army soldiers
United States National champions (tennis)
Grand Slam (tennis) champions in men's singles
1926 suicides