Born in
Bournemouth, Sharp began training as a skater at the age of 13 at a rink owned by his father in Bournemouth. At the age of 15 he competed for the first time in the
British Figure Skating Championships (BFSC), winning silver in 1933. He competed in the BFSC eight more times, winning gold each time in 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1946, and 1948. On the international stage he won consecutive silver medals at the
World Championships and the
European Championships from 1936 through 1938, and took home gold in both events in 1939. Writing in 1938,
T. D. Richardson (author of
Modern Figure Skating and
Ice Rink Skating) said "Graham Sharp is by far the best male School Skater of the day. He has an ease and accuracy that is a joy to those with real knowledge and appreciation of the fine points of the School Figures." It was predicted that he would have won gold in the winter Olympic Games in 1940, but the events of
World War II prevented those games from occurring and otherwise significantly interrupted his career when he was at his peak as an athlete. Sharp was a captain in the
Royal Army Service Corps during WWII. He was at the
Battle of France and was part of the
Dunkirk evacuation in May and June 1940. He was later part of military campaigns in North Africa and Italy during the war. After the war, he continued his skating career, and while he won gold at the BFSC twice, he did not medal at the Winter Olympic Games and World Championships in 1948. He carried the British flag in the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics. Sharp's father died in 1948, and he took over the management of the family's Bournemouth skating rink where he also taught lessons through 1964. He then relocated to the United States where he worked as a teacher. He died on 2 January 1995 at the age of 77. ==Results==