British tennis player
Walter Cecil Crawley FES (29 March 1880 – 11 October 1940) was a British male tennis player[ 3] and entomologist.[ 4] he was active from 1901 to 1927 and won 8 career singles titles.[ 1]
Life
Crawley was born on 29 March 1880 and educated at St John's School, Leatherhead .[ 5] In 1901 he played his first tournament at the Yorkshire Championships where he lost in round three to Ernest Watson.[ 1] he won his first singles title at the North of England Championships in 1907.[ 1] The same year he won the inaugural Dieppe International Championship men's singles title.[ 1] He competed in the singles and doubles at the 1908 Summer Olympics . In the doubles, he reached the quarterfinals with Kenneth Powell in which they lost to compatriots and eventual Olympic champions George Hillyard and Reginald Doherty .[ 6]
His other career singles highlights include winning the Chichester Open (1907),[ 1] the Epsom Open (1908),[ 1] the Sussex Championships (1908),[ 1] Roehampton Autumn Meeting (1922) and the Brockenhurst Open (1922).[ 1] In addition he was also a losing finalist at the Derbyshire Championships (1903),[ 1] the Northumberland Championships (1903),[ 1] the Berkshire Championships (1904),[ 1] the Championships of Pays-d'Enhaut (1906),[ 1] the South of England Championships (1907),[ 1] the Leicestershire County Lawn Tennis Championships (1908), the Championship of Europe (1908),[ 1] Championship of Wales (1909),[ 1] Nottinghamshire Championships (1910), Welsh Covered Court Championships (1921),[ 1] the London Covered Court Championships (1921), the British Covered Court Championships (1921) and the Isle of Wight Championships (1922).[ 1]
He won his final singles title in 1923 at the New Forest Open .[ 1] He played his final tournament at the 1927 Wimbledon Championships .[ 1] He studied ants and was a Fellow of the Entomological Society .[ 4] His brother, Alfred Ernest Crawley was also a tennis player.
References
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Players: Crawley, Walter Cecil" . The Tennis Base . Madrid: Tennismem SL. Retrieved 1 September 2023 .
^ a b Wimbledon Results Archive
^ "Walter Crawley" . Olympedia . Retrieved 12 April 2021 .
^ a b Crawley, W. C. (1912). "Anergates atratulus Schenk, a British ant, and the acceptance of a female by Tetramorium caespitum , L." The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation . 24 : 218. ISSN 0013-8916 .
^ The Quest Goes On, Being a Short History of the First Hundred Years of St John's School, Leatherhead, 1851-1951, by E.M.P. Williams, Leatherhead, 1951, p.50
^ "Olympic Sports – Athletes – Walter Crawley" . sports-reference.com . Archived from the original on 18 April 2020.
External links