William Bromley. J. E. Barre, Representing him engaged in the Grand Match played in the Tennis Court - Lords Cricket Ground, July 3rd, 1849.
William Bromley. J. E. Barre, Representing him engaged in the Grand Match played in the Tennis Court - Lords Cricket Ground, July 3rd, 1849.
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BROMLEY, William (1769-1842).
J. E. Barre, Representing him engaged in the Grand Match played in the Tennis Court - Lords Cricket Ground, July 3rd, 1849.
Mezzotint engraving.
London: J. H. Dark, 1849.
27" x 20" sheet, 39" x 32" framed.
An Exceptionally Rare Print of J. Edmond Barre: The Greatest 19th Century Court Tennis Player.
The Frenchman, J. Edmond Barre, is considered to be the greatest nineteenth-century player of the game of "court tennis." The son of a tennis professional in Grenoble and Paris, he first came to notice as a tennis player in the late 1820's, when the restored French royal court revived the game. Barre was so talented, that he was the World Champion from 1829 to 1862 when he finally succumbed, at the age of 60, to the 36 year old Englishman Edmund Tomkins. The present engraving shows him playing at the court at Lord's Cricket Ground in 1849 at which time he remained undefeated. In 1855, Barre famously re-opened the Versailles court after he became royal paumier (tennis professional) to the Emperor Napoleon III. It was here that the renowned Tiers Etat met on June 20, 1789, and took the celebrated "Oath of the tennis-court," essentially starting the French Revolution. His career was only ended by the Franco Prussian War and the Siege of Paris, leaving him to die impoverished.
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J. E. Barre, Representing him engaged in the Grand Match played in the Tennis Court - Lords Cricket Ground, July 3rd, 1849.
Mezzotint engraving.
London: J. H. Dark, 1849.
27" x 20" sheet, 39" x 32" framed.
An Exceptionally Rare Print of J. Edmond Barre: The Greatest 19th Century Court Tennis Player.
The Frenchman, J. Edmond Barre, is considered to be the greatest nineteenth-century player of the game of "court tennis." The son of a tennis professional in Grenoble and Paris, he first came to notice as a tennis player in the late 1820's, when the restored French royal court revived the game. Barre was so talented, that he was the World Champion from 1829 to 1862 when he finally succumbed, at the age of 60, to the 36 year old Englishman Edmund Tomkins. The present engraving shows him playing at the court at Lord's Cricket Ground in 1849 at which time he remained undefeated. In 1855, Barre famously re-opened the Versailles court after he became royal paumier (tennis professional) to the Emperor Napoleon III. It was here that the renowned Tiers Etat met on June 20, 1789, and took the celebrated "Oath of the tennis-court," essentially starting the French Revolution. His career was only ended by the Franco Prussian War and the Siege of Paris, leaving him to die impoverished.