Born August 25, 1927 in Silver, SC, A right-hander, grew
up in Harlem. Her family
was poor, but she was fortunate
in coming to the attention of Dr. Walter Johnson,
a
Lynchburg VA physician who was active in the black
tennis community. He became
her patron as he would later
for Arthur Ashe, the black champion at Forest Hills
(1968) and Wimbledon (1975). Through Dr. Johnson, Gibson
received better instruction
and competition, and
contacts were set up with the USTA to inject her into
the
recognized tennis scene.
A
trailblazing athlete who become the first African
American to win championships at Grand Slam tournaments
such as Wimbledon, the French Open, the Australian
Doubles and the United States Open in the late 1950s.
Gibson had a scintillating amateur career in spite of
segregated offerings earlier in the decade.
She won 56 singles and
doubles titles during her amateur career in the 1950s
before gaining international and national acclaim for
her athletic prowess on the professional level in
tennis.
Gibson won 11 major
titles in the late 1950s, including singles titles at
the French Open (1956), Wimbledon (1957, 1958) and the
U. S. Open (1957, 1958), as well as three straight
doubles crowns at the French Open (1956, 1957, 1958).
In 1957, she was the
first black to be voted by the Associated Press as it
Female Athlete of the Year. She won the honor again in
1958. After winning her second U.S. Championship, she
turned professional. One year she earned a reported
$100,000 in conjunction with playing a series of matches
before Harlem Globetrotter basketball games.
There was no professional
tennis tour in those days, so Gibson turned to the pro
golf tour for a few years, but she didn't distinguish
herself. She tried playing a few events after open
tennis started in 1968, but she was in here 40's and too
old to beat her younger opponents. She worked as a
tennis teaching pro after she stopped competing.
She became New Jersey
State Commissioner of Athletics in 1975, a post she held
for 10 years. She then served on the State's Athletics
Control Board until 1988 and the Governor's Council on
Physical Fitness until 1992. On September 28, 2003 at
the age of 76, Althea Gibson died in East Orange General
Hospital.
The title of her
autobiography, written in 1958, is "I Always Wanted
to Be Somebody." To tennis fans, she always will be
somebody very special. Though she didn't go looking for
the role of pioneer, she was one. "If it hadn't
been for her," says Billie Jean King, winner of 12
Grand Slam singles titles, "it wouldn't have been
so easy for Arthur (Ashe) or the ones who
followed."
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