June 13, 1890 – An American won the US National Championship Women’s Tennis at the Philadelphia Cricket Club. Ellen Crosby Roosevelt defeated the defending champion Bertha Townsend 6-2, 6-2. Miss Roosevelt was the daughter of John Aspinwall Roosevelt, an estate proprietor, and Ellen Murray Crosby.
She started playing tennis with her sister Grace eleven years earlier when her father installed a tennis court at their mansion ‘Rosedale’. She also won the doubles title with her sister Grace in 1890. They were the first pair of sisters to win the U.S.
Championships and remained the only pair to do so until the Williams sisters, Venus and Serena matched their achievement in 1999. She won the mixed doubles title at the 1893 U.S. Championships, partnering with Oliver Campbell. Ellen Roosevelt was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1975.
Ellen Crosby was the first cousin of the future President of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. FDR was about 8 years old when Ellen won this US Tennis Title.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

(1968 Baltimore Colts) A Case For the Best Super Bowl Loser
January 12, 1969. The scoreboard read, “NY Jets 16, Baltimore Colts 7.” The Jets had

NFL Games Against Strange Opponents!
Each year, when we learn of our favorite NFL team’s schedule, we can be

(Scottie Graham) Former NFL RB Scratches His Itch to Get Back on the Field
This week Scottie Graham rides shotgun with me in the DeLorean to head back

1962 Green Bay Packers (One of the Greatest NFL Teams of All-Time)
Nearly six decades ago, the Green Bay Packers had one of the greatest seasons

Running to Win Super Bowl 6 (Dallas Cowboys vs. Miami Dolphins)
Prior to 1978, pro football was regarded as primarily a running game. The objective

Vasily Alekseyev (One of the Greatest Weightlifters of All-Time)
In 1975, the cover of Sports Illustrated identified Soviet weightlifter Vasily Alekseyev as “The World’s Strongest

Looking Back: First College All-Star Football Game
Every year about this time, from 1934 through 1976, an enormous football extravaganza took

Joe Kapp (A Quarterback in a League of His Own)
Fifty years after he retired, Joe Kapp is still the only QB in history