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Did You Know?

If you are a fan of the game of tennis, you are very aware that we are in the middle of the biggest match of the year, Wimbledon.

“Why”, you might well ask, “are there British military personnel serving at Wimbledon?”

For 75 years, active-duty members of the British military have served as stewards at Wimbledon, the annual tennis “Championships” held at the storied All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club.

Since 1946, uniformed men and women from the Royal Army, Air Force and Navy have volunteered at the two-week summer event by taking tickets, directing visitors to their seats, and bringing water to overheated fans. 

The friendly military presence at Wimbledon is a reminder of much scarier times during World War II. In preparation for Germany’s infamous “Blitz” bombing attack on London, the grounds of the 150-year-old British tennis club were transformed into a Civil Defence camp and Wimbledon’s historic Centre Court even took a direct hit from a 500-pound German bomb. 

The entire nation rallied behind the war effort and the All England Club was no different, says sports journalist Richard Evans, author of The History of Tennis and a former play-by-play commentator at Wimbledon for BBC Radio.

“The whole country was completely on a war footing,” says Evans. “Wimbledon had this amazing complex of space and facilities, and people took for granted that it would be used for the war.”

The ARP (Air Raid Precautions) moved in swiftly to transform the grounds of Wimbledon into a working farm to provide wartime rations for civilians and soldiers. One of the club’s expansive parking lots was plowed under to plant rows of vegetables, and another was loaded with wooden pens housing pigs, horses, chickens, geese, ducks and rabbits. 

Nora Cleather visits a farm set up to produce food for the war effort, Wimbledon, London, 1st April 1942. The site was formerly the spectators' car park at the the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
One of Wimbledon’s expansive car parks was loaded with wooden pens housing pigs, horses, chickens, geese, ducks and rabbits, as shown here in April 1942.John Eggit/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

“The courts were left alone,” says Evans, referring to Wimbledon’s manicured grass tennis courts. “No one grew anything on the courts, but the carparks were turned into miniature farmland.”

Young troops from the London Welsh Regiment and the London Irish Regiment commandeered the grassy concourse outside Centre Court for marching and parade exercises. 

On the night of October 11, 1940, five massive bombs landed on the grounds of the All England Club. Incredibly, no one was killed or injured. Two of the 500-pound projectiles exploded on the club’s golf course, one crashed into an entrance and another ripped apart a toolshed. 

But the fifth and final bomb made a direct hit on the fabled Centre Court, home of the Wimbledon finals, destroying a section of the roof and leaving a crater where 1,200 seats used to be. 

“They didn’t have the money or the time to repair it, so they patched it up,” says Evans. “It wasn’t until 1949 that Centre Court was pristine and back to what it should have been.” 

British tennis player D. W. Butler in action on June 24, 1946 against D. Scharenguivel on Centre Court during the first Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships since the end of World War II.
British tennis player D. W. Butler in action on June 24, 1946 against D. Scharenguivel on Centre Court during the first Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships following the end of World War II.J. A. Hampton/Topical Press Agency/Getty Images

In June of 1945, only a month after Germany’s surrender to the Allied Forces, the very first tennis competition since 1939 was held at the All England Club. It wasn’t the official Championships—those resumed in 1946—but it was a sign that Great Britain, and its beloved sporting tradition, had survived. 

The players for that 1945 tournament were plucked from the armed forces and included Dan Maskell, the very first tennis pro employed by the All England Club and a squadron leader in the Royal Air Force. Five thousand spectators came to take in the action, despite the damaged grandstand. 

Evans adds that after his pro career, Dan Maskell became a famous Wimbledon commentator for the BBC, saying he was “known as ‘the voice of Wimbledon.’” 

Many thanks Dave Roos for all of this information. It was a part of what he wrote for History.com.

Tennis, anyone?

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2 Comments
  1. Richard Jay Horner #

    No thank you on the tennis offer but this is most fascinating. I love this kind of info. As is typical, you always educate me.

    July 8, 2021
    • Two Chums #

      So glad that you found it interesting.

      July 13, 2021

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