Dwight F. Davis (born July 5, 1879, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.—died Nov. 28, 1945, Washington, D.C.) was a tennis player best known as the donor of the Davis Cup (properly the International Lawn Tennis Challenge Trophy) for competition among teams representing various nations. He later became a United States cabinet member.
For three consecutive years (1899–1901) Davis won the U.S. men’s doubles championship (with his Harvard teammate Holcombe Ward). Early in 1900 he offered a silver bowl to the winner of the international team tournament that he envisioned. He played on the U.S. teams that won the first two competitions (1900, 1902) and served as captain of the first U.S. team.
A lawyer, he did not practice but was active as a public official in St. Louis. In his term as that city’s public park commissioner (1911–15), he expanded athletic facilities, including the first municipal tennis courts in the United States. He served under President Calvin Coolidge as assistant secretary of war (1923–25) and secretary of war (1925–29) and under President Herbert Hoover as U.S. governor-general of the Philippines (1929–32).