Welcome to the International Club of Canada
"Hands across the net, friendship across the ocean "

Welcome to the International Club of Canada

Aims of the International Lawn Tennis Club of Canada

To promote friendship and sportsmanship in tennis between Canada and other countries by hosting tennis events with other IC countries and supporting tennis development in Canada by providing mentorship for young tennis players.

The first meeting of Active Members of the International Lawn Tennis Club of Canada was held at the Albany Club in Toronto on Wednesday, August 11, 1965, at 12.30 p.m. Laird Watt, the first president of the Club, was unable to attend and Gilbert Nunns chaired the meeting. In addition to Gilbert those attending the meeting in person or by proxy were familiar names in Canadian tennis history: Peter Barnard, John Bassett, Bob Barnard, François Godbout, Bruce Harrison, Sydney Hermant, Jim Macken, Harry Marpole and Walter Martin. Don Fontana, captain of the Club, agreed to approach the I.C. of the USA for a match in 1966. There were discussions of a black tie dinner, a match against a touring team from England and plans to participate in I.C. matches in Holland. The Canadian I.C. was up and operating. It had officially received “International Club” recognition just six weeks before, at the annual meeting of the Council of I.C.’s held each year during the fortnight of Wimbledon. It joined thirteen other nations with International Clubs, all existing with a common interest in the game of tennis.

The annual match with the USA Club has been the main regular event of the Club since that time, with matches alternating each year between the Donalda Club and various locations in the USA. The Piping Rock Club on Long Island, The Merion Cricket Club in Philadelphia, The West Side Tennis Club on Long Island. In 1971 the matches were divided in an open event competing for the Proctor Cup and a seniors event for the new Lawrence Baker Trophy. Women’s matches were included in the late 90’s and starting in the year 2000 teams will play for the Carole Graebner Trophy. 

There is no doubt that tournaments for the Windmill, Christiane Mercelis, and Columbus Trophies represent the highlights of the I.C. Movement. On these occasions many of the now 42 International Clubs meet in team competition. In these tournaments old friendships across the net and across the nations are renewed, and new ones made. Equally enjoyable are the I.C. Tours where teams of I.C. players tour other countries at the invitation of their I.C.’s, or host visiting teams.

This brief review of the Club’s history would not be complete without an expression of gratitude to the spirit behind the creation of the I.C. Club of Canada, the Late Bruce Harrison and those who have served on the Club’s executive, particularly its presidents: Laird Watt, Walter Martin, John Proctor, Jim Skelton, Frank Mott-Trille, Brian Flood and David Dimmer.

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IC Council News

November 2024
Tribute to Christiane Mercelis, 1931-2024

Tribute to Christiane Mercelis, 1931-2024

There is a good reason why the trophy of the Women’s Event in our IC Weeks was named in 1997 after Christiane Mercelis who died in June of this year.  

The very elegant but modest Christiane was the incarnation of the spirit of the International Club. As a player and a person her conduct on and off court was impeccable.  Fair-play was in her nature.

Christiane was probably in the top 15 or 20 in the world. She won the Junior event at Wimbledon in 1949 having never played on grass before and after half an hour’s practice before her first round.  She went on to win the indoor championships in France, Germany and the then Soviet Union (in Moscow).  She also won in Rome on clay in 1960.  She won countless Belgian singles, doubles and mixed national titles.

She was always popular with juniors, she listened and helped.  Perhaps because she herself could remember the days in which she’d waited patiently to get on courts at her local club while adults and then older children had priority. 

Her elegance on and off court belied a sense of humour.  She admitted that sometimes she needed half a glass of good Belgian beer to calm nerves (which she never seemed to show) before a match. She once half-joked that the allowance she’d been given to cover expenses the first time she’d played at Roland-Garros were fine – provided one didn’t get past the first round! She got through her first round; and she reached the quarter-finals there in 1957. Eventually she gave up tennis when her doctor suggested that at her age (she was in her 80s) she might now have to let a few balls go past her.

She was President of the IC of Belgium from 2002 to 2010.  

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