Education
Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, she graduated from Hughes Center High School and from the University of Cincinnati in 1912.
Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, she graduated from Hughes Center High School and from the University of Cincinnati in 1912.
Those titles came in 1913, ‘14, ‘20, ‘22 & ’23. In an age before the Midwest had women's rankings, she was nonetheless considered the best by those in the know at the time. Against national-class players appearing in tournaments near her home, she defeated many and reportedly lost only twice: to the United States. Number.
She was reportedly too ill to play that 1916 Cincinnati tournament, but played anyway just to please her friends.
Unfortunately, her dislike of and refusal to travel long distances, necessary for national ranking consideration, prevented her earning several national "Top Ten" women's singles rankings. She was a grade school teacher in Cincinnati (in the neighborhood of North Fairmount) and later in life took up golf.
She became one of the best amateur golfers in Cincinnati. In 2003 she was posthumously inducted into the Cincinnati Tennis Hall of Fame.
Completely unknown and having only the University of California Championship to her cr, she stunned the tennis world by defeating Elizabeth Bunce, the 1911 National Indoor Doubles champion from New York City, 6–2, 6–3, in the singles final, and then beating defending two-time champion Marjorie Dodd, one of the top players in the Midwest, by the same score in the Challenge Round. Later at the important Bi-State Development Agency Tournament in Louisville, she defeated Louisville champion Mary Schreve Lyons, 6–0, 6–1, in the finals. Thereafter, and throughout her distinguished career from 1913 through 1923 (during which time she had children 1918, 1919 and 1921), she won numerous titles, the most important of which were singles, doubles and mixed doubles titles at the 1917 National Clay Court Championship, and five singles titles at the storied international tennis tournament in her hometown, now known as the Cincinnati Masters & Women"s Open. She also won a doubles title (1911) at Cincinnati and reached two doubles finals (1915 & 1920) as well. 5 ranked Louise Riddell Williams (Mrs RH Williams), 6–1, 6–4, in the semifinals of the 1914 National Clay Court, and by Northwestern Champion Margaret Davis of Saint Paul, 6–1, 5–7, 6–1, at Cincinnati in 1916. The only time she was completely outclassed was when she lost to the then national champion and eventually Hall of Famer Molla Bjurstedt, 6–0, 6–4, in the Challenge Round at Cincinnati in 1915. Sanders married Howard F. Cordes on August 14, 1917, shortly after she and her groom won the National Clay Court Mixed Doubles Championship over nationally ranked teams in the semifinals and finals.