Jump to content

Hans Bjerrum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Olympic medal record
Men's field hockey
Silver medal – second place 1920 Antwerp Team competition

Hans Adolf Bjerrum (8 September 1899 – 10 May 1979) was a Danish field hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics.

He was a member of the Danish field hockey team, which won the silver medal. He later formed the Danish civil engineering company Bierrum, known for building cooling towers for power stations.[1]

Personal life

[edit]

He married on 21 October 1924. He played hockey for Middlesex in the 1920s.[2]

On 13 May 1928 they had a daughter, Johanne, who married Gerald Murray in 1955.[3]

They lived at Peterborough House, on Grove Hill in Harrow in the 1920s.[4][5] They lived at The Orchard in Sudbury Hill, from the 1930s.[6] In the 1930s he worked with the Anglo-Danish Society[7] and the Danish Club (formed in 1863).[8]

Due to his work, as chairman of the Danish Club, King Frederik IX of Denmark made him a Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog in December 1963.[9]Structural engineer Sir Ove Arup also attended the Danish Club at this time.

His wife Karen Gertrud Caroline Nielsen, born on 15 June 1900, died on 29 August 1979.[10]

His son (Nils) Roger was born on 16 March 1931,[11] who gained a first class degree in Engineering from Merton College, Oxford in 1957.[12] Roger married Emily Doris Williamson in early 61, with children Stephen, Mary, Libby, Hugh and Hans. They would live in Pirton, Hertfordshire, west of Hitchin.[13] Emily died on 12 October 1984, in Chesham. [14] Roger remarried Violet Oliver in late 1986. Roger died on 16 January 2021, aged 89, having lived in Northchurch in Hertfordshire.

Another son Alexander (Sandy) Milne was born 9 March 1944, who married Alison Mackenzie-Wood of Hertfordshire in early 1973.[15] They had children Rona in November 1979, and Serena in early 1981. Sandy died on 1 October 2022.[16]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hans Bjerrum". Olympedia. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  2. ^ Times Thursday December 3 1925, page 6
  3. ^ Times Thursday September 29 1955, page 10
  4. ^ West Middlesex Gazette Saturday 19 May 1928, page 9
  5. ^ Times Tuesday May 15 1928, page 1
  6. ^ Harrow Observer Friday 5 October 1979, page 25
  7. ^ Times Wednesday September 27 1933
  8. ^ Times Friday December 18 1953, page 10
  9. ^ Times Wednesday December 11 1963, page 14
  10. ^ Harrow Observer Friday 26 October 1979, page 26
  11. ^ Times Tuesday March 17 1931, page 1
  12. ^ Times Wednesday July 3 1957, page 6
  13. ^ Times Friday July 4 2003, page 23
  14. ^ Times Tuesday October 16 1984, page 34
  15. ^ Times Wednesday March 7 1973, page 18
  16. ^ Freemasons
[edit]