Nelly Neppach


Nelly Neppach was a German female tennis player. Neppach was the first German female to establish an international reputation, but was forced out of the sport due to rising anti-semitism in the 1930s. She committed suicide at age 34.

Biography

Neppach was born at Frankfurt am Main in 1898. She began playing tennis in her early youth and won her first title in 1910, aged 12.
After World War I, Neppach married film architect and producer Robert Neppach and moved to Berlin where she joined the sports club Tennis Borussia Berlin.
In 1924 and 1925 Neppach won the singles title at the German Indoor Championships. In 1925 she reached her greatest success by beating Ilse Friedleben in the final of the German Championships at Hamburg in three sets. That year she won eight out of nine possible titles at German championships and was co-ranked No. 1 in Germany with Friedleben. In 1926, she was invited by Suzanne Lenglen to play international tournaments at the French Riviera, at a time German players were still banned from international tournaments as a consequence of World War I. Neppach traveled to France despite a warning from the German tennis federation and played matches against Lenglen as well as U.S. legend Helen Wills. However, when the German tennis federation issued a second warning on her unauthorized trip she cancelled her participation in the Nice tournament and returned to Germany where she was briefly banned from playing tennis.
At her only appearance on a major tournament at the 1927 French Championships, she reached the third round where she lost to Eileen Bennett in three sets. During the following years, Neppach's and Ilse Friedleben's place at the top of German women's tennis was taken over by younger and more successful players like Cilly Aussem and Hilde Krahwinkel. In this period Neppach mainly focused on doubles events but still ranked ninth nationwide in singles in 1932.

End of career

On 11 April 1933, a few months after the Nazi Party had seized power in German in January, Neppach, who was Jewish, quit her membership at Tennis Borussia. Even though the circumstances of this decision are not known in detail, she was almost certainly forced to do so, as most German tennis clubs at that time expelled their Jewish members. In the same month, the German tennis federation announced that Jewish players were no longer allowed to play international tournaments.
Neppach was the first German female tennis player who had gained international appreciation.

Death

In the night of 7/8 May 1933, Neppach, faced with increasing discrimination and persecution of Jewish people in Germany and her isolation from tennis in particular, took her life in her flat at Berlin using Barbital and town gas. Anti-Semitism—soon to be codified as the Nuremberg Laws—had invaded all aspects of life in Germany, and sport was no exception. Neppach's was among a rash of Jewish suicides, which were reported with alarm abroad. "It is impossible to publish a complete list of the suicides brought about by Nazi brutality," wrote the Hebrew Standard of Australasia in mentioning her death.
In October 2015 a stolperstein was placed near her former home in Berlin to commemorate Nelly Neppach and her husband.