Grass courts, Pimm's and strawberries and cream.
Just three of the things that the leafy London suburb of Wimbledon has become synonymous with over the past century.
The Wimbledon Championships first took place in 1877 and has since cemented itself as perhaps the most iconic Grand Slam in tennis.
Every year, thousands flock to Henman Hill and over the decades, plenty of Team GB Olympians have conquered the green grass of SW19.
With the Championships back underway for another year, we're looking back at Wimbledon's British Olympic history.
Sir Andy Murray
Everybody remembers where they were when Andy Murray won his first Wimbledon title.
The first British champion since Fred Perry in 1936, Murray became a household name in the world of British sport when he won the Championships in 2013.
But Murray, of course, had already won at Wimbledon before winning Wimbledon itself.
The Scot enjoyed an incredible breakthrough as he defeated Roger Federer at the London 2012 Olympic Games, which took place on the grass at SW19.
Murray had reached the final of Wimbledon for the first time of his career earlier that summer but lost out to the Swiss supestar, before turning the tables at his home Olympics and taking the title.
A year later, he landed the Wimbledon men's title he and the nation craved, defeating Novak Djokovic in straight sets during a three-hour long final.
In 2016, Murray earned Olympic and Wimbledon glory once more, winning his second Wimbledon title before successfully defending his Olympic title at Rio 2016.
Murray is still the only men’s player in Olympic history to win two singles gold medals.
Kitty McKane
With a bronze in the singles, a silver in the mixed doubles and a gold in the women’s doubles, Kitty McKane acquired a full set of medals at the 1920 Olympic Games.
Her bronze medal in the 1920 singles was won in unique circumstances. As she wished to be at her best to partner Winifred McNair in the doubles, she conceded a walkover in the semi-final of the singles. But she still qualified to play in the match which she duly won against Sigrid Fick of Sweden to take the bronze medal.
She won two more medals at the 1924 Games in Paris, taking her Olympic total to five medals, and holds the title of the third most decorated female British Olympian, level with Katherine Grainger.
By 1924 she had established herself as a world class player and confirmed her status by beating the great Helen Wills in the Wightman Cup, repeating the feat at Wimbledon a few days later.
In a classic Wimbledon final, McKane lost the first set and trailed 1-4 in the second but came back to hand Wills her only defeat in a singles match in nine appearances at Wimbledon.
In 1926, she also won her second Wimbledon singles title and reached the final of the women’s doubles for the third time, the first time having been in 1922 when she was partnered by her sister, Margaret Stocks.
Charlotte Cooper
Charlotte Cooper holds the unique distinction of being the first-ever woman to become an Olympic champion.
Cooper won the women's singles title at the Paris 1900 Olympic Games, defeating the French champion, Hélène Prévost in straight sets before winning a second gold medal in the mixed doubles with Reggie Doherty as her partner.
Away from the Olympic scene, Cooper was also a trailblazer on home soil.
Over an eight-year period between 1895 and 1908, Cooper featured in eight consecutive Wimbledon finals and won the title five times, a milestone that wasn’t broken until Martina Navratilova’s run between 1982-1990.
Notably, her victory in 1908 also saw her become the oldest woman in history to do so at the age of 37. A record that still remains today.
And her first Wimbledon victory is recounted in incredible style by her nephew Bob Beausire: "She biked home from Wimbledon and found her brother at home pruning the roses. When he asked what she'd been doing she replied, 'I've just won the Championship', at which point he said nothing, turned and went back to pruning his roses."
Laurence Doherty
The younger brother of Reggie Doherty, Laurence was one half of the most iconic British tennis duo of the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Known as "Little Do", Laurence won Wimbledon five consecutive times in singles and eight times in doubles with his brother.
However, his first major singles title came at the Paris 1900 Olympic Games, clinching the men's singles title as well as the doubles title alongside his older brother.
It began an incredible run for Laurence, who dominated the grass in his home town of Wimbledon between 1902 and 1906, winning every outing at SW19.
Laurence retired from tennis in 1906 after his final Wimbledon title and began a successful career in golf.
Reginald Doherty
The other half of the Doherty partnership, Reginald, or Reggie, led the way for his younger brother's Wimbledon success.
The three-time Olympic champion won his first Wimbledon title in 1897 and went on to win three more.
Add that to his eight Wimbledon doubles title alongside little brother Laurence and the Wimbledon born and bred tennis player was a force to be reckoned with in the late 1800s.
On the Olympic stage, Reggie claimed men's and mixed doubles gold at Paris 1900, alongside bronze in the men's singles.
And the Brit returned eight years later to reclaim his men's doubles title and third Olympic gold, this time alongside George Hillyard.
Jamie Murray
A Wimbledon winner in his own right, Jamie Murray won his first Wimbledon title six years before his brother.
In 2007, the elder Murray clinched his first trophy at SW19 in the mixed doubles with Jelena Jankovic, before adding a second a decade later alongside Martina Hingis in 2017.
The former world No.1 in mixed doubles became a four-time Olympian during his career on the court.
Heather Watson
Former British No.1 Heather Watson finally achieved her dream in 2016 as she stormed to mixed doubles Wimbledon glory.
Teaming up with Henri Kontinen, defeating Robert Farah and Anna-Lie Gronefeld in the final.
Watson became a four-time Olympian at Paris 2024.
Neal Skupski
Neal Skupski is a three-time Wimbledon winner and two-time Olympian.
He was crowned Wimbledon men's doubles champion alongside Dutchman Wesley Koolhof in 2023 having earned world No.1 status in 2022.
It came off the back of two mixed doubles victories in 2021 and 2022 alongside Desirae Krawczyk.
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