Hall of Fame

Hall of Fame Profile: John Fry

John Fry has played an unprecedented role in transforming squash in America. Like many in the game, he first started playing squash in his thirties. A fellow administrator at the University of Pennsylvania suggested he...

Hall of Fame Profile: Gail Ramsay

Gail Ramsay grew up at the Cynwyd Club outside Philadelphia (she is the fifteenth Cynwyd member to be inducted into the Hall of Fame). She was a legendary junior player, with a giant asterisk....

Hall of Fame Profile: Nancy Gengler-Saint

Nancy Gengler-Saint grew up on Long Island in a famous family of five tennis-playing children (two of her sisters captained the women’s tennis team at Princeton and one, Margie, played in the US Open...

Hall of Fame Profile: Tom Page

Tom Page was one of the most electrifying and talented squash players in American history. He was the greatest of prodigies. In the winter of 1977 at age nineteen, he upset Peter Briggs and...

Page, Fry, Ramsay and Gengler-Saint to be Inducted into U.S. Squash Hall of Fame

Four pioneers have been chosen for the highest honor in American squash: induction into the United States Squash Hall of Fame. The inductees are Tom Page, John Fry, Gail Ramsay and Nancy Gengler-Saint. The induction...

Peggy & Leo Pierce U.S. Squash Hall of Fame to Open April 2

US Squash is proud to announce that the grand opening of the Peggy & Leo Pierce U.S. Squash Hall of Fame will be held in conjunction with the 2022 U.S. Masters Squash Championships, April...

Charles M. P. Brinton

(1919-2011) The top player in the 1940s, Charlie Brinton was an early pupil of Bill White at Merion Cricket Club. His junior and senior years at Princeton he won both the intercollegiates and the nationals,...

Elizabeth Howe Constable

(1924- ) The dominant squash player of the 1950s, Betty Constable was a central force behind the growth of women’s squash in the U.S. Her mother won the nationals three times and her twin sister...

Germain Green Glidden

(1913-1999) Germain Glidden, the last great Harvard champion coached by Harry Cowles, was a record-breaking player. An illustrious player while in college, the southpaw won the intercollegiates in 1935 and 1936, as well as the...

Anne Page Homer

(1909-1985) The first dominant woman player in the U.S., Anne Page played at Merion Cricket Club. A four-time All-American in field hockey, she was the first secre­tary of the USSRA’s women association and a contributor...