Ossie Bertram Explained

Ossie Bertram
Fullname:Oswald Milne Bertram
Birth Date:17 April 1909
Birth Place:Upper Sturt, South Australia
Death Place:Mentone, Victoria
Originalteam:West Torrens (SANFL)
Height:175 cm
Weight:76 kg
Statsend:1936
Years1:1933–1934
Club1:South Melbourne
Games Goals1:23 (43)
Years2:1935–1936
Club2:St Kilda
Games Goals2:15 (17)
Games Goalstotal:38 (60)

Oswald Milne Bertram (17 April 1909 – 5 May 1983) was an Australian rules footballer who played with South Melbourne and St Kilda in the VFL during the 1930s.

Family

The son of Frank Ernest Bertram, and Agnes Bertram, née Milne, he was born at Upper Sturt on 17 April 1909.[1] He married Grace Mary Orme (1907-1994) in 1940.[2] [3] [4]

Football

Bertram was a rover and was recruited from South Australian National Football League club West Torrens, where he was a leading player, and had twice represented South Australia at interstate level.[5] He joined South Melbourne for the 1933 season and helped them to win the premiership, kicking 28 goals for the year.[6]

Bertram, who had been unemployed for three years,[7] was one of a number of interstate footballers who joined South Melbourne in the early 1930s, including Jack Wade and Wilbur Harris, also South Australians, with the promise of immediate, long-term, secure, paid employment outside of football within the (137 store) grocery empire of the South Melbourne president, South Melbourne Lord Mayor, and Member of the Victorian Legislative Council, Archie Crofts.[8] The collection of players recruited from interstate became known as South Melbourne's "Foreign Legion".[9]

After playing in a losing Grand Final the following season he moved to St Kilda in 1935, spending two seasons there.

Military service

He enlisted in the Second AIF on 15 July 1940, eventually retiring from the armed services, with the rank of Major in the Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps, on 18 April 1959.[10] [11] [12]

Death

He died at Mentone, Victoria on 5 May 1983.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/88289970 Births: Bertram, The (Adelaide) Chronicle, (Saturday, 24 April 1909), p.33
  2. Births Deaths and Marriages Victoria Births Registration no.20612/19070.
  3. Births Deaths and Marriages Victoria Marriages Registration no.13044/1940.
  4. Births Deaths and Marriages Victoria Deaths Registration no.2534/1994.
  5. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/129136346 In footsteps of Father, The (Adelaide) News, (Thursday, 23 May 1929), p.13.
  6. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/164500703 "Ossie" Bertram Reviews South Footballers, The (Emerald Hill) Record, (Friday 29 February 1952), p.8.
  7. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/129060217 McKee, S., "Qualification Rule: How it will affect Bertram", The (Adelaide) News, (Friday, 9 September 1932), p.3.
  8. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75624158 Faul Championed, The (Perth) Mirror, (Saturday, 9 April 1932), p.5
  9. The caricature at the foot of page 10 of Table Talk (22 June 1933) was created by Richard "Dick" Ovenden (1897-1972). From left to right those represented are: Jack Bisset, the team’s captain; Dick Mullaly, the club’s secretary; Brighton Diggins, from Subiaco (WAFL); Bert Beard, from South Fremantle (WAFL); Bill Faul, from Subiaco (WAFL); Joe O'Meara, from East Perth (WAFL); Frank Davies, from City (NTFA); Laurie Nash, from City (NTFA); John Bowe, from Subiaco (WAFL); Jack Wade, from Port Adelaide (SANFL); Ossie Bertram, from West Torrens (SANFL); and Wilbur Harris, from West Torrens (SANFL).
  10. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/240009585 Wandering Watch, Smith's Weekly, (Saturday, 5 January 1946), p3.
  11. http://nominal-rolls.dva.gov.au/veteran?id=789885&c=WW2#R World War II Nominal Roll: Bertram, Oswald Milne (340032 (VX46785)).
  12. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/page/25981132 Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps, Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, no.34, (Thursday, 11 June 1959) p.2083.
  13. Deaths: Bertram, The Age, (Friday, 6 May 1983), p. 14.