Osborn started skating, aged 2½, at Wembley Ice Rink. She was taught by Arnold Gerschwiler,[1] who was her only coach during her entire amateur career. At age 5, Osborn won her first competition for "Under Sixes".[citation needed] During the Second World War, the Wembley rink was closed to save electricity.[citation needed] She moved to the Richmond Ice Rink, the only rink left open during the war.[citation needed] At 9½ years she passed the NSA gold medal at Richmond Ice Rink on 6 June 1944 (D-Day).[citation needed] She was the youngest skater to pass her Gold and continues to hold the record.[citation needed]
Osborn continued skating at Richmond during and after the war.[citation needed] She became the British national champion in 1952 and was selected for the 1952 Winter Olympics, where she finished 11th.[2] In 1953, Osborn won her second national title and went on to win gold at the European Championships in Dortmund.[3] After her victory in Germany, she was awarded the Harry E. Radix skating pin. Osborn remains the last British skater to win the European title in ladies' singles. Later in 1953, she won the bronze medal at the World Championships in Davos, Switzerland.
Osborn turned professional in 1953.[citation needed] She starred in Tom Arnold's Ice Circus in Brighton and Tom Arnold's Robinson Crusoe on Ice in the winter of 1953 at the Grand Theatre, Leeds.[citation needed] Osborn then turned to coaching ice skaters in Manchester, Whitley Bay, Brighton and finally in Richmond.[citation needed] When Richmond Ice Rink closed down and the property was redeveloped, she retired.[citation needed]
Personal life
After turning professional in 1953, Osborn resided in Brighton, Whitley Bay, Manchester and Feltham. Following the end of her performing career, she travelled around Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. She spent thirteen years in Northern Cyprus and then settled in Rustington, West Sussex, on the English south coast.
Osborn died in Horsham, West Sussex on 28 December 2022, at the age of 88.[4]