The son of Thomas Soutar, and Margaret Soutar, née Dunne, Thomas William Soutar was born at Prahran on 16 March 1893.
He married Vera Grace Veale (1896-1988), at Subiaco, on 24 November 1923.[2] They had two children, Douglas William Soutar (b.1924),[3][4] and Mavis Vera Soutar (b.1926).[5]
Athlete
He was a fine middle-distance runner. winning the professional mile handicap at the 1914 Easter Gift Meeting at Stawell; and, during his service with the First AIF, on the basis of having won both the 880 yards and the mile at the Egyptian Expeditionary Force's 1919 Sports in Cairo,[6] he was selected to be part of the team that represented Australia in the Inter-Allied Games, held at the Pershing Stadium, near Paris from 22 June 1919 to 6 July 1919.[7][8][9][10]
"In army sports there is no distinction between amateur and professional ... During the latter part of the war in 27 championship brigade and divisional events over 440 yards, 880 yards and one mile, Soutar was never beaten ..." — The (Perth) Mirror, 16 November 1935.[11]
Football
One of nine new players in the team, Soutar played his only First XVIII match for St Kilda against Carlton, at Princes park, on 29 July 1911. They were required because many of the regular St Kilda First XVIII players were on strike.
His post-war repatriation to Australia was delayed when, as part of the A.I.F. Educational Scheme, he attended a course in bookkeeping at Clark's College, in Chancellery Lane, London in September/October 1919. He returned to Australia on the HT Konigin Luise, leaving England on 19 December 1919,[13] arriving in Fremantle on 20 January 1920, and was discharged from the AIF on 30 March 1920.
Death
He died, in Western Australia, on 14 June 1981, and has a memorial plaque at Karrakatta Cemetery.[14]
Holmesby, Russell; Main, Jim (2014). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers: every AFL/VFL player since 1897 (10th ed.). Seaford, Victoria: BAS Publishing. ISBN978-1-921496-32-5.