Chuck Garland

Chuck Garland

Class of 1969

Master Player

Career Achievements

Top Ranking
U.S. No. 8 (1918-1920)

Grand Slam Results
One major championship

Davis Cup
Captain of the 1927 US Davis Cup team

Contributions to Tennis
USNLTA Committee Member
Davis Cup Committee Member

Citizenship: USA Born: October 28, 1898 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Died: January 28, 1971 Played: Right-handed

It’s rare that a Yalie and Harvardian agree on anything – the competition between those esteemed Ivy League schools has fiery intensity. But Yale’s Charles Stedman Garland and Harvard’s Richard N. Williams II put the rivalry aside long enough to become the first Americans to win the Wimbledon Gentlemen’s Doubles Championship in 1920.

Garland won the 1919 Intercollegiate Singles and Doubles Championship playing for Yale, and his game propelled him to the Wimbledon singles semifinals in both 1919 and 1920. In 1919 he lost to homegrown Algernon Kingscote in five excruciating sets, 6-1, 6-4, 2-6, 5-7, 6-4. In 1920, Bill Tilden doused Garland 6-4, 8-6, 6-2.

Garland was ranked No. 8 in the U.S. for three straight years (1918-1920) and then turned his attention to executive matters in tennis. He was a prominent member of several United States National Lawn Tennis Association Committees, and was mainstay on the Davis Cup Committee. Garland served the game honorably after his playing days were over, becoming Vice President of the USLTA. He captained the 1927 Davis Cup team that lost to France, 3-2.

Grand Slam

Grand Slam Best Results

Titles

1 Doubles

Singles
Wimbledon: SF 1919, 1920
US Open: QF 1917

Doubles
Wimbledon: W 1920