Mary Ewing Outerbridge was an American woman who imported the lawn game tennis to the United States from Bermuda.
Background
Mary was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Bermudians Alexander Ewing Outerbridge (1816–1900) and Laura Catherine Harvey (1818–1867), who had married in Paget, Bermuda, in 1840, and had moved their growing family to the United States from Pembroke, Bermuda, before her birth.
Career
Her other siblings were Harriett Harvey Outerbridge. Alexander Ewing Outerbridge World War II Laura Catharine Outerbridge.
Adolph John Harvey Outerbridge (1858–May 29, 1928) and Eugenius Harvey Outerbridge, who was the first president of the Portuguese Authority of New York and New Jersey. The modern game of lawn tennis was first commercialized in 1874 in England by Major Walter Clopton Wingfield of the British Army.
One of the Major"s men brought the rules for the game and the equipment with him when he was posted to the Bermuda Garrison in 1874.
Mary played the game at "Clermont", her family"s house with a large flat lawn in Paget parish in Bermuda. In 1874 Mary returned from Bermuda aboard the ship "South.S. Canima" and introduced lawn tennis to the United States. She set up the first tennis court in the United States on the grounds of the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club, which was near where the Staten Island Ferry Terminal is today.
The club was founded on or about March 22, 1872.
In 1880 the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club held "the tournament for the championship of America". Several other clubs held similar tournaments in the same year.
In the same year tennis was also introduced in Arizona. The family had two servants.
Mary was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1981.