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No. 1 U.S. Tennis Star Served in the Navy During World War II

Men in athletic attire shake hands while seated on the ground. Several men in business attire stand behind them, and a large crowd is in the background.
Match Point
Joe Hunt, right, on the ground, shakes hands with Jack Kramer after match point of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships in New York City, Sept. 6, 1943.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 430906-O-D0439-001
A man in business attire hands a man wearing athletic attire and holding tennis rackets a trophy. Another man wearing athletic attire and holding tennis rackets looks on.
Championship Award
Joe Hunt, right, earns the U.S. men’s championship award, beating Jack Kramer, left, at the U.S. Open Tennis Championships in New York City, Sept. 6, 1943.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 430906-O-D0439-002
Navy Lt. Joe Hunt won the 1943 U.S. Open Tennis Championships in New York City while on leave from the Navy in early September of that year.

He is the only man in history to win the U.S. national boys' (then 15-and-under), juniors' (18-and-under), collegiate and U.S. men's singles titles. 

Hunt also played football at the U.S. Naval Academy, winning a game ball in the 1941 Army-Navy game after beating Army 14-6 in Philadelphia, Nov. 29, 1941. Eight days later, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

A man in a football uniform takes a knee while holding a football.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is in his football uniform at the U.S. Naval Academy, Sept. 22, 1940.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 400922-O-D0439-002M

Due to wartime needs, Hunt's class graduated early on Dec. 19, 1941, instead of in the spring of 1942. Upon graduation, he was assigned to the destroyer USS Rathburne, an antisubmarine warfare training ship homeported in San Diego. 

At the end of September 1943, Hunt was assigned to the destroyer USS Kearny, which escorted a merchant convoy to Casablanca, Morocco. However, he wanted to fly and was eager for combat duty, according to his grand-nephew Joe Hunt, a Seattle attorney named for his great uncle. 

Hunt requested a transfer to aviation, and it was granted. His training began at Naval Air Station Dallas on Dec. 30, 1943. In May 1944, he received advanced aviation training at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida. He wanted to defend his tennis title that year, but his leave request was denied.

A sailor in a military uniform accepts an award from a man in business attire.
Sportsman of the Year
Navy Lt. Joe Hunt, right, accepts the Los Angeles Times Sportsman of the Year award from actor and comedian Bob Hope, Dec. 27, 1943.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 431227-O-D0439-001
A sailor in a military uniform accepts an award from a man in business attire.
Sportsman of the Year
Navy Lt. Joe Hunt, right, accepts the Los Angeles Times Sportsman of the Year award from actor and comedian Bob Hope, Dec. 27, 1943.
A man in athletic attire hits a tennis ball.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is the 1943 Southern California Tennis champion.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 431222-O-D0439-002
A man in athletic attire hits a tennis ball.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is the 1943 Southern California Tennis champion.
A tennis player poses for a photo.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is at the Davis Cup tennis event in Sept. 1939.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 390922-O-D0439-002
A tennis player poses for a photo.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is at the Davis Cup tennis event in Sept. 1939.
A tennis player poses for a photo.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is the 1938 Southern California Tennis champion.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 380922-O-D0439-002M
A tennis player poses for a photo.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is the 1938 Southern California Tennis champion.
A young man holds tennis rackets and a pair of shoes.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt leaves the court after he defeated a Japanese tennis player in the Men’s National Singles Tennis Championships in New York City, Sept. 7, 1937.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 370907-O-D0439-001M
A young man holds tennis rackets and a pair of shoes.
Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt leaves the court after he defeated a Japanese tennis player in the Men’s National Singles Tennis Championships in New York City, Sept. 7, 1937.

On Feb. 2, 1945, Hunt's F6F Hellcat fighter aircraft crashed into the Atlantic Ocean east of Daytona Beach, Florida, during a training flight. Hunt and his aircraft were never recovered.

Hunt left behind a wife, Jacque Virgil Hunt, who he married in 1942. 

Hunt was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1966.

A man in a military uniform is shown in an aircraft cockpit with goggles on his head.
Joe Hunt
Navy Lt. Joe Hunt in an F6F Hellcat fighter aircraft in early 1945.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 450107-O-D0439-001

On Sept. 1, 2014, Hunt was honored on center court at Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York during the U.S. Open, an event he won 71 years earlier. 

Every year since 2019, the U.S. Open has celebrated his service and honored service members and veterans on "Lt. Joe Hunt Military Appreciation Day."

A plaque that reads “The Joseph R. Hunt Court” is shown outside in front of a fence.
Joe Hunt
A plaque honoring Navy Lt. Joe Hunt at the tennis courts at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
Credit: Navy
VIRIN: 231222-O-D0439-002

Present at the 2019 honor was Hunt's grand-nephew, Joe Hunt, who said, "I always really love watching the tennis at the U.S. Open, but what I really look forward to more than anything is being with the veterans and their families and watching them enjoy the day, meeting new people, and having an opportunity to thank them. That's the most important thing for me."  

Joe Hunt's profile page on the International Tennis Hall of Fame website states, "Hunt's heroism that fortnight brought him considerable acclaim. The tribute on Labor Day was a long-overdue homage to a life tragically cut short."

A large electronic billboard displays pictures of a man in a military uniform on the left and a man in athletic attire holding a trophy on the right. The sign reads “Welcome to Lt. Joe Hunt U.S. Open Military Appreciation Day.” An entrance to a stadium is shown.
Honoring Joe Hunt
Joe Hunt is honored at Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York during the U.S. Open in 2019.
Credit: Courtesy of Joe Hunt
VIRIN: 190901-O-D0439-001

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