Early life Bertrand Leslie Shurtleff was born August 3, 1897, in
Adamsville, Rhode Island, to Eugene Kossuth Shurtleff (1856 - 1942) and Hattie Elma Cook (1898 - 1943). He was the seventh of their ten children. At age 14 Shurtleff set out on his own and became self-supporting. At age 18, he went back to school, attending
East Greenwich Academy and preparing for college in three years. At the start of
World War I, he enlisted in the
U.S. Naval Reserve Force. He stayed in school for a time then spent the summer working in a powder factory in
New Jersey. Going into the active service, he trained at
Newport, Rhode Island and served at State Pier in
New London, Connecticut until he was sent to
Brown University to study for a commission. When the war ended, he stayed at Brown, where he participated in wrestling and football. Shurtleff wrestled four years at Brown and won the New England Intercollegiate lightweight wrestling title in 1919–20. He paid his way through college working at odd jobs at everything from construction to crewing on a fruit boat to
Costa Rica. Shurtleff was a member of the fraternity
Lambda Chi Alpha and graduated with the Class of 1922.
Career Shurtleff wrote a little book of original verse while still a student at
Brown University and sold 2,000 copies in 1922–23. His first novel, ''Carey's Carnival
was published in London by Hurst and Blackett. Charleston Bound'', a novel about Rhode Islanders in the
American Revolution, was also published by Hurst and Blackett under the pen name, S. B. Leslie. In addition to teaching and coaching, Shurtleff lectured widely at high schools, civic clubs and other groups on the fakery in professional wrestling. He also attempted to break into the movies. He was considered a possibility to replace the late
Louis Wolheim. He made several trips to
Hollywood, getting only bit parts and writing scenarios. • Jeane (1923 – 1981 ) • Faith (1928 – 1997) • David (1930 – ) Shurtleff married second Margaret D. Dorgan on Aug. 3, 1946.
Death Bertrand Shurtleff died on February 15, 1967, in
Orange County, California. ==Published works==