1914 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Doubles

Dora Boothby and Winifred McNair were the defending champions, but Boothby did not participate. McNair partnered with Mabel Parton but they lost in the second round to Edith Hannam and Ethel Larcombe.

Women's Doubles
1914 Wimbledon Championships
Champions Agnes Morton
Elizabeth Ryan
Runners-up Edith Hannam
Ethel Larcombe
Final score6–1, 6–3
Draw20
Seeds

Agnes Morton and Elizabeth Ryan defeated Hannam and Larcombe in the final, 6–1, 6–3 to win the Ladies' Doubles tennis title at the 1914 Wimbledon Championships.[1][2]

Draw

Key

Finals

Semifinals Final
          
Marguerite Broquedis
Violet Pinckney
2 0
Edith Hannam
Ethel Larcombe
6 6
Edith Hannam
Ethel Larcombe
1 3
Agnes Morton
Elizabeth Ryan
6 6
Agnes Morton
Elizabeth Ryan
6 6
Dorothea Lambert Chambers
Charlotte Sterry
4 1

Top half

First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals
Mrs Barclay
Dorothy Greenhough-Smith
1 2
Marguerite Broquedis
Violet Pinckney
6 6
M Broquedis
V Pinckney
6 6
Mrs Nesham
Mrs F Schmidt
1 2
Mrs GC Hampton
Mrs HV Parbury
6 3 1r
Mrs Nesham
Mrs F Schmidt
4 6 2
M Broquedis
V Pinckney
2 0
E Hannam
E Larcombe
6 6
WEM Hill
Mrs A Mitchell
7 3 2
Mrs Armstrong
Hazel Hogarth
5 6 6
Mrs Armstrong
H Hogarth
3 2
Winifred McNair
Mabel Parton
6 6 E Hannam
E Larcombe
6 6
Edith Johnson
Beryl Tulloch
2 2 W McNair
M Parton
6 4 3
Mrs AL Baker
CM Douglass
1 2 E Hannam
E Larcombe
2 6 6
Edith Hannam
Ethel Larcombe
6 6

Bottom half

First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals
Mabel Davy
Mrs RWF Harding
6 4
ML Fison
E Nash
8 6 ML Fison
E Nash
2 4
Hilda Lane
Madeline O'Neill
6 6 1 Miss Baldwin
P Satterthwaite
6 6
Miss Baldwin
Phyllis Satterthwaite
3 8 6 Miss Baldwin
P Satterthwaite
5 1
A Morton
E Ryan
7 6
Helen Aitchison
Agnes Tuckey
4 2
Agnes Morton
Elizabeth Ryan
6 6
A Morton
E Ryan
6 6
D Lambert Chambers
C Sterry
4 1
Winifred Beamish
BMS Lee
4 5
Aurea Edgington
Dorothy Holman
6 7
A Edgington
D Holman
3 2
D Lambert Chambers
C Sterry
6 6
Jessie Greene
Eleanor Rose
0 2
Dorothea Lambert Chambers
Charlotte Sterry
6 6
gollark: Your thought is generally irrelevant, however, and will become muons.
gollark: I'm sure you'd like to think so.
gollark: No. You will be caused to undergo conversion into a manifold in beespace.
gollark: Anyway, apparently the tendency to try and tightly manage children is a more modern thing.
gollark: Except a lot of them will be used to constant surveillance by parents, and also by that point governments and corporations.

References

  1. 100 Years of Wimbledon by Lance Tingay, Guinness Superlatives Ltd. 1977
  2. Barrett, John (2014). Wimbledon: The Official History (4th ed.). Vision Sports Publishing. ISBN 9-781909-534230.
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