Singles—Women

Updated August 28, 2020 | Infoplease Staff
NATIONAL
1887 Ellen F. Hansel
1888–89 Bertha Townsend
1890 Ellen C. Roosevelt
1891–92 Mabel E. Cahill
1893 Aline M. Terry
1894 Helen R. Helwig
1895 Juliette P. Atkinson
1896 Elisabeth H. Moore
1897–98 Juliette P. Atkinson
1899 Marion Jones
1900 Myrtle McAteer
1901 Elisabeth H. Moore
1902 Marion Jones
1903 Elisabeth H. Moore
1904 May Sutton
1905 Elisabeth H. Moore
1906 Helen Homans
1907 Evelyn Sears
1908 Maud Bargar-Wallach
1909–11 Hazel V. Hotchkiss
1912–14 Mary K. Browne
1915–18 Molla Bjurstedt
1919 Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman
1920–22 Molla Bjurstedt Mallory
1923–25 Helen N. Wills
1926 Molla B. Mallory
1927–29 Helen N. Wills
1930 Betty Nuthall
1931 Helen Wills Moody
1932–35 Helen Jacobs
1936 Alice Marble
1937 Anita Lizana
1938–40 Alice Marble
1941 Sarah Palfrey Cooke
1942–44 Pauline Betz
1945 Sarah Cooke
1946 Pauline Betz
1947 Louise Brough
1948–50 Margaret Osborne duPont
1951–53 Maureen Connolly
1954–55 Doris Hart
1956 Shirley Fry
1957–58 Althea Gibson
1959 Maria Bueno
1960–61 Darlene Hard
1962 Margaret Smith
1963–64 Maria Bueno
1965 Margaret Smith
1966 Maria Bueno
1967 Billie Jean King
1968–69 Margaret Smith Court1
OPEN
1968 Virginia Wade
1969–70 Margaret Court
1971–72 Billie Jean King
1973 Margaret Court
1974 Billie Jean King
1975–78 Chris Evert
1979 Tracy Austin
1980 Chris Evert-Lloyd
1981 Tracy Austin
1982 Chris Evert-Lloyd
1983–84 Martina Navratilova
1985 Hana Mandlikova
1986–87 Martina Navratilova
1988–89 Steffi Graf
1990 Gabriela Sabatini
1991–92 Monica Seles
1993 Steffi Graf
1994 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
1995–96 Steffi Graf
1997 Martina Hingis
1998 Lindsay Davenport
1999 Serena Williams
2000–01 Venus Williams
2002 Serena Williams
2003 Justine Henin-Hardenne
2004 Svetlana Kuznetsova
2005 Kim Clijsters
2006 Maria Sharapova
2007 Justine Henin
2008 Serena Williams
1. With the inaugural of the Open Tournament in 1968, the United States Lawn Tennis Association held a championship at Longwood, Chestnut Hill, Mass., which barred contract professionals in 1968 and 1969.

Singles—Men U.S. National and Open Champions Doubles—Men
U.S. National and Open Champions
Sources +