Unleashing Potential, One Scholarship at a Time
Eligibility
Before diving into the application process, ensure you're eligible. Here's a refined snapshot of what we look for:
USTA Membership
Must be a current member.
Geographical Criteria
Current resident of a Southern state and must have had residence in a Southern state for a minimum of one school year.
Household Income Cap
- Annual household income of $125K or less.
Tennis Participation
- Played on a high school team for two years OR
- Participated in Junior Team Tennis, NJTL team or program for two years, OR
- Ranked in the top 500 in USTA Southern in the past two years
Application Essentials
Must include a high school transcript, a concise essay, a support letter, and financial documentation. Every section of the application must be completed and all supplemental information uploaded for consideration.
Recipient Responsibilities
Be prepared to actively participate in publicity related to your scholarship, cite the pivotal roles of tennis and education in your journey, and provide a photo and/or video.
Available College Scholarships
Investing in Future Leaders
We're committed to recognizing outstanding potential. The Southern Tennis Foundation increased funding amounts of the ten (10) annual scholarship assistance awards and will offer to two (2) $4000, and eight (8) $1500 awards in 2025.
Opens March 3, 2025
Closes April 18, 2025
View the factsheet
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Beyond the Monetary Value
These scholarships do more than assist with tuition costs. They represent belief, trust, and the promise of potential realized. Through them, we've witnessed the development of extraordinary student-athletes, poised to shape the future.
Current Recipients
Today’s Trailblazers

Allayna Barnett
Allayna Barnett
Brookhaven, Miss.

High School: Enterprise Attendance Center
Honors and Activities
· Class Vice President
· Beta Club
· Student Council
· Yearbook Editor
· Varsity Tennis Captain
College: Copiah-Lincoln Community College
Major Area of Study: Elementary Education
Name of Scholarship: Julie Ditty Qualls Scholarship

Jonathan Bickford
Jonathan Bickford
Hammond, La.

High School: Saint Thomas Aquinas High School
Honors and Activities
· National Honor Society
· Spanish National Honor Society
· Beta Club
· All State Academic: Tennis, Soccer & Golf
· HIS Kids Volunteer
College: Louisiana State University
Major Area of Study: Electrical Engineering
Name of Scholarship: Mike McNulty Scholarship

Leo Nedkov
Leo Nedkov
Bluffton, S.C.

High School: Hilton Head Island High School
Honors and Activities
· Special Olympics Volunteer
· Musical Productions (Beauty & the Beast, Nutcracker)
· Sportsmanship Award
· Outside Foundation Volunteer
· Varsity Tennis Captain
College: Berry College
Major Area of Study: Kinesiology
Name of Scholarship: PTR Foundation/Van Der Meer Scholarship

Kathleen Rohr
Kathleen Rohr
Cookeville, Tenn.

High School: Cookeville High School
Honors and Activities
· Senior Class President
· National Honor Society Secretary
· Health Occupations Students of America
· Habitat for Humanity Officer
· Varsity Tennis Captain
College: University of Tennessee
Major Area of Study: Political Science, Pre-law Track
Name of Scholarship: Todd Crawford Memorial Scholarship

Valeria Rojas

Zander Russell
Zander Russell
Sparta, N.C.

High School: Alleghany High School
Honors and Activities
· Student Government Association President
· National Beta Club Secretary
· Spanish Club
· Future Farmers of America
· Read Across America Volunteer
College: Duke University
Major Area of Study: Biology
Name of Scholarship: J.L. Stacks Scholarship
Past Recipients
Leaving a Legacy
Our alumni have ventured into various fields, carrying the values of discipline, hard work, and perseverance they cultivated on the tennis court and in the classroom. Their successes stand as a testament to the efficacy and impact of our scholarship programs.

Kelly Baker
Wilmington, NC

Kelly Baker
Wilmington, NC
High School: John T. Hoggard High School
Honors and Activities
' National Technical Honors Society
' LifePoint Church Wilmington Childcare
' HS Varsity Tennis - Captain
' Empie Park Tennis Center Coach
' Volunteer at New Hanover County Court House
College: UNC-Wilmington
Major Area of Study: Elementary Education/ Business Marketing
Essay excerpt: Throughout my life, there have been many changes and challenges thrown at me, yet tennis was my constant. I always had a clinic, practice, match or tournament to go to where I got to see my friends and practice the game that I loved. I started playing tennis when I was 5 years old and have stuck with it ever since.
"

Helena Angel Sanders
Memphis, TN

Helena Angel Sanders
Memphis, TN
High School: White Station High School
Honors and Activities
' Regional Tennis Champion, White Station High School
' National Junior Tennis & Learning Essay State Winner
' USTA Junior Team Tennis
' USTA Junior Tournament Player
College: University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Major Area of Study: Nuclear Engineering
Essay excerpt: The longer I play tennis, the more I realize that, in order to develop on the court and in life I have to master the feeling of the inevitable- failure. After losing and winning many battles on the court, I was given great advice from many coaches and mentors on how to handle failure; however, the one that stuck with me the most was the advice I received from my current coach, Arveal Turner. He explained to me that when things do not go as planned, it is reasonable to be disappointed, and though losing may hurt, it is through losing that one is able to develop their skills and become better on and off the court. More explicitly saying that with every failure comes a hidden gem, some knowledge that I can take away to inform my future.
"

Elizabeth Jones
Laurens, SC

Elizabeth Jones
Laurens, SC
High School: Clinton High School
Honors and Activities
' National Honor Society
' Beta Club Secretary
' Palmetto Girls State Delegate
' Varsity Tennis Team MVP
' Principal's Cabinet (9-12)
College: Clemson University
Major Area of Study: Packaging Science
Essay excerpt: Tennis was my escape. I developed confidence, self-esteem, focus and drive. When you are down Love-40 in a game, you have nowhere else to turn but inward to make it through a challenging match. Tennis blessed me with mental toughness, and a drive to never give up in any situation. I began playing on our Highschool Varsity Tennis Team in 8th grade. I was the youngest player on the team. Each match day, we had a bible study breakfast with the team. We ate, prayed, laughed, and supported each other. I will always treasure my team bond. The sport of tennis has enabled me to become the person.
"

Drew Bobey
Daniel Island, SC

Drew Bobey
Daniel Island, SC
High School: Bishop England High School
Honors and Activities
' NJTL State Essay Award Winner
' Equine Therapy for Autism
' JV & Varsity Tennis
' Buddy Walk for Down Syndrome
' USTA Junior Team Tennis Coach
College: Johnson & Wales University
Major Area of Study: Biology
Essay excerpt: I was selected as an Ambassador for the South Carolina Tennis Foundation. I have had the opportunities to interact with many people from all different walks of life through speaking in front of thousands at the Volvo Car Open tennis tournament to talking to local kids on the court. The experience was absolutely amazing and allowed me to see how much work and coordination it takes to put on an event of that size. Sports are a great way to instill important life skills. Tennis and the tennis community have given me so many opportunities to gain and grow my life skills.
"

Caroline Garrido
Province, NC

Caroline Garrido
Province, NC
High School: Gaston Day School
Honors and Activities
' National Honor Society
' Mu Alpha Theta (National Math Honor Society)
' NC 2A Girls Tennis All-State Team
' SoundBall Tennis for the Blind Co-founder
' Junior State of America Chapter President
College: Tufts University
Major Area of Study: Biology & Political Science
Essay excerpt: Working with diverse teammates, coaches and opponents teaches me to cooperate with those around me. Countless loses and recoveries gives me the power to face painful failures. Adapting to the game styles of new opponents makes problem solving a necessity. I decided that every community should have the opportunity to learn from tennis the way I do; for this reason, I founded Soundball Tennis, a non-profit organization dedicated to teaching the blind to play tennis. This organization has given me a platform that allows me to share what tennis has tough me with a deserving community.
"

Nicole Christiansen
Brentwood, TN

Nicole Christiansen
Brentwood, Tenn.
Brentwood High School
Tennis accomplishments: 2016 State Champion; 3rd Place in State Qualifying Championships for Doubles in 2016
GPA: 3.79
Honors and Activities: Varsity Tennis 2016 State Champion; Member of Youth Group at Fellowship Bible Church; Named Athlete of the week in Williamson Co.
College: Belmont University
Major Area of Study: Business Administration
Essay excerpt: Being able to play tennis most of my life has shown me the importance of being consistent. I learned how to push myself and overcome whatever obstacle came my way on and off the court. Tennis showed me how blessed and lucky I am that I am healthy and can have a place to go everyday where I can grow and achieve my dreams.
"

Jacob Marshall
Bristol, TN

Jacob Marshall
Bristol, Tenn.
Tennessee High School
Tennis accomplishments: Tennessee Most Improved Male Player of the Year; TSSAA State Champion Team (2014-16); TSSAA state champion doubles (2014-15); TSWA All-State tennis team 2016; Top 10 Player list 2016 Decoturf Tournament; All-Conference Player (2014-15); All-Conference MVP 2016; Southern Cup State Representative (2014-15); Sportsmanship recognition at JTT Nationals 2015; 4th place finish at JTT Nationals (2015-16)
GPA: 3.33
Honors and Activities: Varsity basketball; varsity tennis; school news anchor; After-school LEAPS program volunteer; Upward Bound basketball coach volunteer
College: University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Major Area of Study: Business
Essay excerpt: During the past eleven years. I have built quite a trophy collection, been disciplined by my parents for those early outbursts on the court and won state championships. My desire to play tennis competitively came several years back when I recognized and began to value the meaning of team as a tennis player. My high school team and the Junior Tennis Team have fueled my passion for contributing to something larger than myself, both on and off the court.
"

Emaleigh Board
Elizabethtown, KY

Emaleigh Board
Elizabethtown, Ky.
Central Hardin High School
Tennis accomplishments: Central Hardin High School Tennis Team Most Effort Award 2015, 2016 conference champions (Girls' doubles), 2016 Region Runner-Up (Girls' doubles)
GPA: 3.98
Honors and Activities: Executive Council Vice-President; Executive Council support staff; Varsity & Earth Club member; Tennis Center at University of Louisville intern; Elizabethtown Tennis Commission Community Summer Camp volunteer; private tennis lessons instructor; Hawesville Church of Christ Ladies Day 2016 speaker; Elizabethtown Rotary Club Student of the Month
College: Freed-Hardeman University
Major Area of Study: Business Administration
Essay excerpt: I want to do something that will make a difference. After working summer tennis camps, giving private lessons and interning under at University of Louisville's Meg Peavy, I discovered my career path. I will work outside of my academics to pursue my pro certifications to teach tennis. One day, I hope to run my own tennis facility.
"

Ellen Blake
Belton, SC

Ellen Blake
Belton, S.C.
Belton Honea Path High School
Tennis accomplishments: 2016 BHP Tennis Coaches Award & 2016 Scholastic Award
GPA: 5.52
Honors and Activities: National Honors Society, Beta Club, Student Council, Belton Tennis Association, Relay for Life, Special Olympics, Meals on Wheels, March of Dimes
College: Wofford College
Major Area of Study: Biological Sciences
Essay excerpt: Through education, I have gained knowledge and confidence. Through tennis, I have learned the value of good sportsmanship, hard work and dedication. I help the Belton Tennis Association during the Palmetto Championships Southern Qualifier and the SPUD tournament. I have also played five years of varsity tennis where I learned the importance of fair competition and teamwork.
Funds and Endowments
Each scholarship is a legacy that changes lives. Once endowed, these funds create a perpetual impact, providing $1,000 annually to a deserving student-athlete over four years. Discover the stories and successes behind each named scholarship and see how they renew hope and opportunity every year.

Mildred F. Southern Endowed Scholarships
Mildred F. Southern Endowed Scholarships

The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF) announced the establishment of the Mildred F. Southern scholarship.
Mildred F. Southern passed away October 2021 in Winston-Salem, N.C. Debbie Southern, Mildred’s daughter, announced that Mildred’s will had earmarked the funding of the awards. Debbie Southern serves on the USTA Southern Junior Competition Committee.
“Our mom was passionate about growing the game of tennis and for every child to learn to play regardless of their race, religion, or economic background. She volunteered countless hours to develop programs where kids could learn to play for free. Mom would have been proud and honored to have her name on the STF’s Academic Excellence Awards to help young folks continue their passion for tennis in college. Our family is thrilled to support the Southern Tennis Foundation in honor of our mother, Mildred F. Southern.”
Southern Tennis Foundation Chairman Paula Hale remarked, “Mildred was a tennis legend in the USTA Southern Section and all of USTA, both as a player and volunteer. It’s wonderful to honor her legacy by naming these scholarships for her.”
Mildred F. Southern led the foundation as chair along with USTA Southern and USTA North Carolina as president. She was inducted into the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame in 1991, the North Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame in 1983 and the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame in 2013. She won five USTA championships as an adult recreational player.
Mildred was a long-time benefactor of North Carolina and Southern tennis. Her contributions helped build the North Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame and funded the Southern Cup, an annual competition of the top adult players in the South. Click here for more information about Mildred F. Southern.

Paul Scarpa Endowed Scholarship
Paul Scarpa Endowed Scholarship Established

NAMED FOR LEGENDARY FURMAN TENNIS COACH
The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF), the charitable affiliate of USTA Southern, is proud to announce the establishment of the Paul Scarpa Endowed Scholarship Fund.
Scarpa was the Furman Men’s Tennis Coach for 45 years and is winningest NCAA Division I tennis coach in history with 853 victories. He was named Southern Conference Coach of the Year nine times.
Scarpa’s accomplishments include:
- Winningest NCAA Division I tennis coach in history with 853 victories
- He has been awarded the Order of the Palmetto, South Carolina’s highest civilian honor
- Starting in 1967 named the Furman Men’s Tennis Coach in 1967 and continued in that position for 45 seasons, making him the longest tenured head coach in any sport in Furman and Southern Conference history
- Furman teams won 17 Southern Conference regular season titles and 14 Southern Conference tournament championships
- Named Southern Conference Coach of the Year nine times
- Inducted into seven Hall of Fames, including the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame
- Coached tennis at Florida State and the United States Naval Academy
- Raised in Charleston, S.C. where he was an outstanding junior player. Junior highlights include: No. 1 in the state and No. 4 in the South, South Carolina high school champion, first 18-and-under singles champion at the Palmetto Championships in Belton, S.C., in 1957, won the Southern Sportsmanship Award as an 18-year-old
- Attended Florida State where he played No. 1 singles and doubles
With more than 20 donors, family members and friends on a surprise video call earlier this month, Scarpa was shocked with the announcement of the scholarships.
“I am super honored. I had no idea,” Scarpa remarked. “I remember everything about tennis and those who have been around me in tennis. All of you are special. Thank y’all for the kind remarks. I’m really touched by this, believe me.”
Rex Maynard, who served as USTA Southern President & CEO and STF Chairman, said, “Paul was a tireless ambassador for Furman, recruiting students and spreading the word about the university wherever he goes. He is best known for developing his players and bringing out the best of them both on and off the court.
Bobby Austell, South Carolina Tennis Patrons Foundation Trustee and former head coach of Christ Church Episcopal School in Greenville, S.C., added, “Always one to promote the game at every opportunity, when I was finishing a 40-year business career, Paul gave me over-the-top encouragement and practical help to begin a high school coaching career that lasted for 13 years.”
USTA Southern Tennis Hall of Fame inductee Nancy Yeargin Furman added, “When I think of Paul Scarpa, I think of all the many lives he has impacted over the years … all ages, from right here in South Carolina to people from all over the world! There are many words to describe Paul … I think of heart, passion and opportunity!”
Furman Athletic Hall of Fame member David Ellison said, “Paul Scarpa is the personification of ‘necessity is the mother of invention.’ He conceived of and sold his idea to the NCAA for the current dual-match scoring system to shorten matches and to assure the relevance of doubles for every match.”
Alabama Tennis Professionals Endowed Scholarship
Endowment Fund Established for Scholarship Honoring Alabama Tennis Professionals
The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF), the charitable affiliate of USTA Southern, is proud to announce the establishment of an endowment fund to support a new Scholarship Honoring Alabama Tennis Professionals. The fund will provide college scholarships to deserving students in Alabama and across the South.
This scholarship fund will enable individuals and groups to honor Alabama professionals who have made a difference in their lives, the lives of their family members and their communities. It gives players and fans an opportunity to celebrate outstanding teaching pros for the years of hard work they have put into making Alabama tennis extraordinary. The state has many notable pros, active and retired, who are highly respected in the tennis world, much loved in their communities, and this is a fitting way to recognize their service.
The scholarship will provide $1,000 per year for up to four years to deserving high school graduates. Selections will be made by the STF’s College Scholarships Committee.

PTR Foundation Scholarship honoring Dennis & Pat Van Der Meer
PTR Foundation Scholarship honoring Dennis & Pat Van Der Meer Established

NAMED FOR FAMED TENNIS TEACHING PRO, PTR FOUNDER & WIFE
The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF) and the Professional Tennis Registry Foundation (PTRF) announced the establishment of a Higher Education Scholarship honoring Dennis & Pat Van der Meer.

Dennis Van der Meer is currently nominated in the International Tennis Hall of Fame’s Contributor Category. The hall described him as a “legendary coach and ‘teacher of teachers,’ who recognized the need and developed a universal manner of teaching tennis in order to grow the sport.” He founded the PTR, a world-wide organization of tennis professionals, in 1976. Dennis was inducted into the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame in 1998, the South Carolina Tennis Hall of Fame in 1987, the PTR Hall of Fame in 2013 and the USPTA Hall of Fame in 2015. He received the Tennis Educational Merit Award from the International Hall of Fame in 1969. He also received an honorary doctorate from the University of London, Greenwich, for his contributions in integrating sports sciences in tennis instruction. Dennis passed away in 2019.
In 1993, Pat earned the PTR’s Coach Jim Verdieck Award for top coaches and in 2002 she received the International Tennis Hall of Fame’s Tennis and Education Merit Award. Pat has been a USTA Area Training Center Head Coach and was named South Carolina Pro of the Year in 1991. She headed up the Van der Meer Tennis Academy for many years, and remains active in running the Van Der Meer Facilities and programs, including VDM Tennis University, the base for tennis teaching instruction.
Southern Tennis Foundation Chairman Paula Hale remarked, “The Southern Tennis Foundation is excited to receive funding from the PTR Foundation that will be used to honor the Van der Meers by providing college scholarships to young men and women from USTA Southern.”
PTR Foundation President Scott Tharp said, “The PTR Foundation is thrilled to be able to provide these scholarships to so many deserving young men and women whose lives have been positively impacted by the sport of tennis. We believe this is a most fitting way to honor the legacy of Dennis Van der Meer for many years to come.”
Paul Pittman, who chairs the STF’s Major Gifts Committee, added, “I’m proud of this new partnership between our Foundation and the PTR Foundation. It’s great to see two of the nation’s finest tennis organizations team up to provide scholarships that will help young people follow their dreams.”

Althea Gibson Endowed Scholarship
Tennis Scholarship named for tennis great Althea Gibson

11-TIME GRAND SLAM CHAMPION BROKE BARRIERS AS FIRST BLACK TO WIN A MAJOR TITLE
The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF), the charitable affiliate of USTA Southern, is proud to announce the establishment of an endowed college scholarship in memory of one of the great female athletes in tennis and any sport, Althea Gibson.
Gibson, a native of Silver, S.C., won five Grand Slam singles titles and six doubles titles, and achieved the world No. 1 ranking in 1958, the first Black to earn that distinction. She was named by Sports Illustrated for Women to its list of the 100 Greatest Female Athletes and was the first Black woman to appear on the covers of Time Magazine and Sports Illustrated. She also became the first Black to play on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour.
- Winner of 11 Grand Slam titles, five in singles and six in doubles
- Captured singles crowns at the French Open in 1956, the U.S National Championships (presently the US Open) in 1957 and 1958 and Wimbledon in 1957 and 1958
- Won the following six Grand Slam doubles titles: women’s doubles at the 1956 French, the 1957 Australian, 1956, 1957 and 1958 Wimbledon, and the 1957 U.S National Championship mixed doubles
- In 1958 was ranked No. 1 in the world when she retired and turned professional
- First Black woman to compete in the U.S. National Championships 1950
- First Black woman to compete on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour
- Inducted into eight Halls of Fame, including the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 1971
- Was the only woman of color to win a Grand Slam championship for
15 years. It took 43 years (Serena Williams at the 1999 US Open) for another Black female to win a major. - The first Black woman to appear on the covers of Time Magazine
(Aug. 26, 1957) and Sports Illustrated (Sept. 2, 1957) - Named by Sports Illustrated for Women to its list of the 100 Greatest Female Athletes
- Gibson captured American Tennis Association (ATA) junior national championships at 17 and 18 years old and, in 1947, won the first of ten straight ATA national women’s titles
- According to the USTA, Gibson won her first international championships at the Caribbean Championships in Montego Bay, Jamaica, in 1951
- Member of the victorious 1957 Wightman Cup team
- Born in Silver, S.C. on Aug. 29, 1927, and passed on Sept. 28, 2003
(From the International Tennis Hall of Fame and other sources)

David Mauritson Memorial Endowed Scholarship
David R. Mauritson Memorial Endowed Scholarship Established


NAMED FOR ALABAMA CARDIOLOGIST, ATTORNEY, PILOT, TENNIS VOLUNTEER; FIRST SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED TO HUNTSVILLE STUDENT
MAY 3, 2021 – The Southern Tennis Foundation (STF), the charitable arm of United States Tennis Association (USTA) Southern Section, announces the establishment of the David R. Mauritson Memorial Endowed Scholarship.
His wife of nearly 43 years, Eleanora, of Fairhope, Ala., donated $30,000 to the foundation to support an annual $1,000 scholarship beginning this year.
DaQuarris Poole, of Huntsville, Ala. and Columbia High School, was selected as the first scholarship recipient and plans to attend Alabama A&M.
Mauritson was an accomplished cardiologist practicing from 1981 until his retirement in 2012. After graduating from Westminster College magna cum laude, with a triple major in Mathematics, Chemistry, and Biology, he attended Harvard Medical School and graduated in 1974. His residency was in Internal Medicine at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, and he went on to complete two fellowships: in Emergency Medicine and Critical Care at the University of California, San Francisco, and in Cardiovascular Disease at Parkland in Dallas. Upon moving to Tuscaloosa, he founded Cardiology Associates of West Alabama, P.C., in 1981. He was also honored with the Kern Wildenthal Research Award in 1981. He volunteered as a cardiologist at the Alabama Free Clinic.
He served as Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine, for the University of Alabama College of Community Health Sciences, from 1981-2000, and in 1986 received the Patrick McCue Award for the best teacher of clinical medicine. He was a Fellow in the American College of Physicians, American College of Cardiology and the American College of Legal Medicine.
He broadened his skills in 2008 when he graduated as salutatorian of the Birmingham (Ala.) School of Law and passed the Alabama State Bar. He was admitted to the Federal District Court in three Alabama districts.
An avid pilot, David began flying in 1965 with his mother, Jan, as his flight instructor. He logged more than 11,000 hours, was certified as a flight instructor in 1989, was a certified airline transport pilot (ATP) and elected as president of the national Flying Physicians Association, 2011-12. He was a volunteer pilot and instructor with the rank of major for the Civil Air Patrol, along with volunteering for Angel Flight Southeast and SouthWings.
He was awarded the SouthWings 2015 Visionary Award, which has since been renamed in his honor as the Mauritson Award. His years of dedicated service earned him Honorary Emeritus status.
Mauritson was on a flight for Angel Flight Southeast when he tragically died in a plane crash in Mobile, Ala, in 2016.
Mauritson was the Missouri College Athletic Union springboard diving champion, 1967-1970. He played on his high school tennis team, beginning a life-long love of the sport. He served as the Fairhope Tennis Association president and was instrumental in getting six hydro clay courts built at the Mike Ford Tennis Center. He became a USTA certified official and planned to expand his officiating career.
Here are remembrances:
Meredith Dowling, the Executive Director of SouthWings:
“David Mauritson’s understated but truly extraordinary dedication as a volunteer pilot remains an inspiration to everyone at our organization. How he did it all, I will never know. His quiet, steadfast commitment to the causes he cared about have left a better world. Even as the years pass, I continue to find new results from the ripples he set in motion with the flights he took as a volunteer for SouthWings.”
Eleanora Mauritson, wife, serves as a foundation trustee and has served for decades as a USTA volunteer on the local, state, sectional and national level. She served as the USTA Awards Committee Chair from 2017-2020, and on the USTA Southern Board as an At-Large Member from 2011-12 and Secretary from 2013-14:
“Dave had an insatiable thirst to learn and was truly a Renaissance man. He played the baritone and trumpet in the Baldwin Pops Band, volunteered as a cardiologist at the Alabama Free Clinic, was an Eagle Scout, a Rhodes Scholar finalist, and particularly loved teaching the Civil Air Patrol glider camp cadets for two weeks every summer for many years. He couldn’t seem to do enough, learn enough, or get enough out of life. He excelled at anything he did. He was brilliant, compassionate, athletic, musical, and had an unquenchable thirst for knowledge. I can’t think of a better way to acknowledge his life-long love of learning and tennis than through this scholarship.”
Eric Mauritson, son, who played high school varsity tennis and is currently playing in his local USTA 3.5 Men’s League in Tampa. He is an instrument rated private pilot; his father was his flight instructor:
“Dad was a consummate educator. For as much as he loved learning, I think he might have enjoyed sharing his knowledge even more. He made a difference in so many people’s lives that trying to sum up his contributions in a few sentences will never be adequate. I’m so proud of my dad and I miss him tremendously. Continuing Dad’s legacy as a patient, kind, and prodigious educator is what this scholarship will mean to me.”
Amy Mauritson, daughter, a MD is a third-generation physician and practices internal medicine. Her father was also her flight instructor, classmate in SCUBA certification, and role model for being a physician:
“His accomplishments were diverse and numerous, but the last person you would hear it from was my father. He would quietly help others, volunteer time, donate money. There are likely many things he did for others that no one will ever know. This scholarship is another way to carry on that legacy, but we aren’t going to let him get away with being anonymous, this time. One of the most special times I had with him was when he served as my attending physician during residency for an international elective in Maseno, Kenya. We worked side by side as volunteer physicians in a rural hospital. It is time I will always cherish, teaching and learning together.”
Alice Henderson, Executive Vice-President, Flying Physicians Association, Inc.:
“Dr. David Mauritson distinguished himself among his fellow physician-pilots, always surprising them! His father was among the first members of the Flying Physicians Association, and Dave was always known as one of the best pilots. Dave Mauritson was not a boisterous person, so when other FPA members learned that he had also earned a law degree, they were congratulatory and surprised that someone with his experience as a successful cardiologist would return to school! He was also among the most active in supporting charitable work, using his plane selflessly to serve patients needing treatments in other locations and flying countless environmental survey missions to protect the rivers and estuaries, and joining his daughter on an extended mission in Africa. David Mauritson brought people together, and that was not a small feat among the physicians, ranging from free-thinking progressives to the most conservative. He instinctively knew that everyone could find common ground, and his own open, accepting friendship with everyone nurtured fellowship and camaraderie among these men and women that instilled that confidence in everyone. It speaks volumes when one person brings people from polar opposites together, to laugh good-naturedly about their differences and to admire and treat each other with respect. That was David Mauritson.”
Mike McNulty, USTA Chairman of the Board and President:
“Dave was a Renaissance Man who possessed so many talents and areas of knowledge. He led and excelled in everything he did. Doctor, lawyer, educator, pilot, musician, husband and father. Dave loved life and lived his life helping and improving the lives of others, not only in his professions, but his broad charitable work where he impacted so many people in need. As a pilot and doctor, Dave piloted his plane to transport patients in need of treatments throughout the country and was on an “angel flight” at the time of his tragic crash. Dave was loved and admired by all and left his mark by making the world better.”
Collin Rust, local tennis player:
“We had only moved to Fairhope a few months before the accident, but in that period, I worked with him in organizing events for the Fairhope Tennis Association. I really enjoyed playing doubles with him and against him. David liked to play but I could tell he liked the camaraderie and fellowship even more. He was always quick to give credit to his partner and to compliment his opponents.“
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In Their Own Words

Cassie C.
2023 Scholarship Awardee