Wimbledon Championships Overview and Detailed Timeline History

The Championships, Wimbledon, is the world’s oldest tennis tournament and widely considered the most prestigious. Founded in 1877 by the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club, it is the only Grand Slam still played on outdoor grass courts. 

Full Overview

  • Location: All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Church Road, Wimbledon, London.
  • Surface: Outdoor Grass (100% rye grass, cut to 8mm).
  • Timeframe: Typically held over two weeks in late June – early July.
  • Key Traditions: All-white dress code for players, serving strawberries and cream, and Royal patronage.
  • Main Events: Gentlemen’s Singles, Ladies’ Singles, Gentlemen’s Doubles, Ladies’ Doubles, and Mixed Doubles.
  • Key Facilities: Centre Court (featuring a retractable roof since 2009) and No. 1 Court. 

Detailed Historic Timeline by Era

The Beginnings & The Amateur Era (1877–1967)

  • 1877: Inaugural championship held. Only Gentlemen’s Singles with 22 participants. Spencer Gore wins.
  • 1884: Ladies’ Singles and Gentlemen’s Doubles introduced. Maud Watson becomes the first female champion.
  • 1905: May Sutton (USA) becomes the first overseas champion.
  • 1915–1918: No tournament held due to World War I.
  • 1922: Tournament moves from Worple Road to the current Church Road venue.
  • 1934–1936: Fred Perry wins three consecutive Gentlemen’s singles titles.
  • 1937: First television broadcast of the tournament.
  • 1940–1945: No tournament held during World War II; Centre Court is bombed in 1940.
  • 1951: First black player, Bertrand Clark, competes.
  • 1957: Althea Gibson becomes the first black American winner.
  • 1967: First live colour television broadcast. 

The Open Era (1968–Present) 

  • 1968: Wimbledon becomes an “Open” tournament, allowing professional players to compete alongside amateurs.
  • 1971: First Wimbledon singles final to end on a tie-break (Evonne Goolagong def. Chris Evert).
  • 1976–1980: Bjorn Borg wins five consecutive Gentlemen’s singles titles.
  • 1977: Centenary Championships. Virginia Wade is the last British woman to win the title.
  • 1985: Boris Becker becomes the youngest ever male champion at age 17.
  • 1990s: Steffi Graf and Pete Sampras dominate the decade.
  • 2001: Goran Ivanišević wins the Gentlemen’s singles as a wildcard.
  • 2003–2007: Roger Federer wins five consecutive titles.
  • 2008: Rafael Nadal defeats Roger Federer in a historic final considered one of the best matches in history.
  • 2009: Retractable roof installed on Centre Court.
  • 2010: Longest match in history: John Isner vs. Nicolas Mahut (11 hours 5 minutes).
  • 2013: Andy Murray becomes the first British male winner in 77 years.
  • 2020: Cancelled for the first time since WWII due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • 2022: All-white clothing rule modified to allow women to wear darker undershorts.
  • 2023/2024: Carlos Alcaraz wins back-to-back Gentlemen’s titles. 

Key Records & Facts

  • Most Titles (Gentlemen’s Singles): Roger Federer (8).
  • Most Titles (Ladies’ Singles): Martina Navratilova (9).
  • Fastest Serve: John Isner (157.2 mph).
  • Oldest Champion: Dorothea Lambert Chambers (1914).
  • Youngest Champion: Lottie Dod (1887). 

Links

Wimbledon Championships Overview and Detailed Timeline History

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Author: Mark Whitfield

Welcome to my site! After graduating in Computing in 1990, I accepted a position as a programmer at a Runcorn based software house specialising in electronic banking software, namely sp/ARCHITECT-BANK on Tandem Computers (now HPE NonStop). This was before the internet became more prevalent and so the notion of enabling desktop access to company accounts for inter-account transfers and book keeping was still quite a cutting edge idea (and smartphones only ever hinted at in Space 1999). The company was called The Software Partnership (which was taken over by Deluxe Data in 1994). I spent 5 years in Runcorn developing code for SP/ARCHITECT for various banks like TSB, Bank of Scotland, Rabobank and Girofon (Denmark) to name but a few. I then moved onto a software house in Salford Quays for further bank facing projects. After a further 23 years in the IT industry and now a Senior IT Project Manager (both Agile and Waterfall delivery), I thought I would echo out my Career Profile in this corner of the internet for quick and easy access.

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