Jump to content

Richard Bertram

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 06:02, 3 May 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Richard Bertram
Richard Bertram at helm of sailboat, FINISTERRE, during Bermuda Race
Born(1916-02-04)4 February 1916
Died28 April 2000(2000-04-28) (aged 84)
Occupation(s)Sailor, boat builder and yacht broker
Spouse(s)
Katherine Ivins Bertram
(m. 1946⁠–⁠1951)

Pauline Meagher Bertram
(m. 1952⁠–⁠1967)

(m. 1972⁠–⁠1987)

Francesca Morales Bertram
(m. 1994)
ChildrenCharlotte Bertram
Gretchen Bertram Whalen
Kim Bertram
Scott Bertram
Anne Bertram Endler
Caroline Bertram
Morgan Bertram
Colin Bertram
Digby Bertram
Madelaine Bertram Osborne
RelativesKatharine Whalen(granddaughter)
John Holzman (stepson)

Richard Howard "Dick" Bertram (4 February 1916 – 28 April 2000) was a champion sailor on powerboats and racing yachts and a leading boat builder and broker.[1] Born in East Orange, New Jersey, Bertram learned to sail at a young age with his parents on the waters of Barnegat Bay. He owned his first boat at age 8, sailed in his first race at age 10 and was skipper of intercollegiate championship boats while attending Cornell University.[2] After college, Bertram continued competing in numerous races throughout the world and was notably referred to by Sports Illustrated as "one of the finest ocean racers anywhere".[3] In 1947, Bertram relocated to Miami, FL, where he opened Richard Bertram & Company, a successful yacht brokerage firm.[4] Among his clients were Aristotle Onassis, the Aga Khan, King Hussein of Jordan and Prince Bertil of Sweden.[5] With his yacht brokerage business successful, Bertram continued racing and set standards in the World Offshore Powerboat circuit.[6] Often, he raced in his own 31' Bertram Lucky Moppie.[7] He founded Bertram Yacht, a Miami-based manufacturer of production pleasure boats, in 1960. Bertram Yacht began the first large production runs of boats with C. Raymond Hunt's revolutionary deep-V hull design.[8] In 1963 Richard Bertram licensed International Marine of Scoresby, Victoria, Australia to manufacture Bertram yachts; however, he left Bertram Yacht in 1964 to focus on his brokerage business, and Bertram Yacht changed ownership several times in the decades after that.[9][10]

Races

  • Lightning World 1948, Champion
  • Lightning World 1949, Champion
  • Southern Ocean Racing Conference 1949, Champion Tiny Teal
  • Southern Ocean Racing Conference 1950, Champion Ticonderoga
  • Southern Ocean Racing Conference 1951, Champion Belle of the West
  • Havana-San Sebastian Transatlantic Race 1951, Champion Malabar XIII
  • Cat Cay Race 1955, Champion Finisterre
  • Newport - Bermuda Race (Bermuda Race) 1956, Champion Finisterre
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1956, Champion Doodles II
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1957, Champion Doodles III
  • Newport - Bermuda Race (Bermuda Race) 1958, Champion Finisterre
  • America’s Cup 1958 Vim
  • Newport - Bermuda Race (Bermuda Race) 1960, Champion Finisterre
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1960 Champion Lucky Moppie
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1961, Champion Lucky Moppie
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1962, Champion Lucky Moppie
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1963, Champion Lucky Moppie
  • Miami-Nassau Race 1964, Second Place Lucky Moppie
  • Cowes Torquay Race 1965
  • Transatlantic Race Malabar VII
  • Transatlantic Race Ondinne

Awards

  • World Champion of Offshore Boat Racing 1965[11]
  • NMMA (National Marine Manufacturers Association) 2007 Hall of Fame Inductee [12][13]
  • Barnegat Bay Sailing Hall of Fame 2008 Inductee [14]

References

Further reading

  • Bertram, Kate and Richard Bertram. Caribbean Cruise. A story of their voyage from New York to the West Indies and their five years in the tropics. W.W. Norton 1948

Hi brody