General Aurél
Von Kelemen
Male
Hungary
1888-04-20
Budapest, Hungary
1968-11-10
Budapest, Hungary


About

He was a member of Magyar Atlétikai Club of Budapest between 1907 and 1944. He was a five-time national doubles champion.[3] In 1920 he finished third at the Slovakia International Championships at Kassa.[6] He represented Hungary in one Davis Cup tie, playing doubles alongside Béla von Kehrling and subsequently lost to Jean Borotra and René Lacoste in 1925. In 1927 he was drafted into the international team challenge between Hungary and Austria and won the doubles tie partnering Pál Aschner against the pair of Herbert Kinzl-Mayer.[7]
Aurél von Kelemen graduated at the k.u.k. Cadet School in Traiskirchen as a horse artillery First Lieutenant. In 1909 he was the first member of the newly established aviator class of the Magyar Atlétikai Club. He flew with a Gnome powered Farman plane.[8] In 1922 he was appointed the Chief operating officer of the same Club. An year later he was elected the vice-president of the Hungarian Tennis Association. In 1926 he organized the first ever Hungarian nationwide youth tennis programme. In 1927 he was one of the founders of the first Hungarian Tungsram covered court at the Városliget. In 1927 he introduced the usage of red clay in Hungary. Up to 1944 he was a master course lecturer at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sport Sciences of the Semmelweis University.[3] In 1925 he published his own tennis guide entitled A modern Lawn Tennis sport.[9] His profession was poultry farming and being an animal husbandry expert.[5] He was awarded the title of Oberregierungsrat (a senior administrative position) by Hungarian Governor Miklós Horthy in 1930 for his sport merits.[10]
In June 1930 Kelemen and his associate and co-owner of their conglomerate Duray és Kelemen Terménykereskedelmi Részvénytársaság were accused of embezzlement and as a result were arrested. The case, better-known as the Equine nutrition-panama, was a military concession affair, where Kelemen's firm supplied the army with horse nutrition and allegedly bribed logistics officers to bypass the shipment regulations.[11] Overall 29 quartermaster officers and 11 paymasters were arrested.[12] Testimonies of these officers, many of whom received loans from Kelemen's company, cleared up his role and it was proven that he didn't gain any advantages in exchange for the loans. Kelemen was released on probation shortly after.[13] The case was closed in December 1930, all charges against Kelemen and his business partner were dismissed, although many high-ranked military officers were sentenced to several years in prison.[14]



Media


Archive statistics 1912 - 1929
1
9
2


Tournament wins 1922 - Krakow (Amateur)


Tournaments German International Championships - 1929 Hungarian International Championships - 1929 Budapest Championships - 1925 Austrian International Championships - 1924 Olympics, Olympic Games - 1924 Curt-von –Wessely-Memorial Trophy - 1924 Olympics, Olympic Games - 1912

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