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James Robertson

 
US Military Dictionary: James Robertson

Robertson, James (1742-1814) soldier and pioneer. The son of a Virginia planter, Robertson was an early settler in what became Tennessee. He arrived in 1771 near what is now Johnson City and became a leader in the “Watauga Association, ” which assumed executive, legislative, and judicial functions for the community. In 1779 he moved 200 miles further east, recruiting others to help him establish a community on the Cumberland River, at “Fort Nashborough, ” and again establishing a form of frontier government for the settlement. In 1783 North Carolina recognized the community as Davidson County and accepted Robertson into the House of Commons as its representative. Robertson was a member of the army during Tennessee's territorial period, reaching the rank of brigadier general. He served in the Tennessee Constitutional Convention (1796) and in the state senate (1798-99).

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Art Encyclopedia: James Robertson
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(b England, ?c. 1810; d ?India, ?after 1881). English photographer and medallist. He was active from about 1850 in Malta, where he met the BEATO brothers, whose sister, Maria Matilde, became Robertson's wife. Together with the Beato brothers, Robertson travelled to Athens in 1852, and then c. 1853 to Constantinople, where he was appointed chief engraver of the Imperial Mint of Turkey. With the help of the Beatos, whom he had probably taught, Robertson took a series of photographs of Constantinople in 1853 (e.g. Eastern Scene, see Lucie-Smith, pl. 66). This was followed, in September 1855, by a series of the battlefields of the Crimea, in which he continued the work begun by Roger Fenton of documenting the war. Many of the photographs of this period bear the signature Robertson & Beato, and this is found on other photographs up until 1862.

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Photography Encyclopedia: James Robertson
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Robertson, James (1813-82?), British photographer. Robertson was chief engraver and superintendent of the Imperial Mint in Constantinople, where his earliest dated photographs (1854) were made. In 1856 he photographed the Crimean War. He attracted notice when his photographs were exhibited in London with those of Roger Fenton. In 1857 he was appointed official photographer to the British army in India and travelled with Felice, and perhaps Antonio, Beato to photograph the aftermath of the Indian Rebellion. They photographed in Egypt and Palestine en route to India (confusion regarding which brothers participated is due to signatures on photographs which include ‘Robertson and Beato’ and ‘Robertson Beato et cie.’). Initially, in Constantinople and the Crimea, Robertson worked with the paper-negative system, but later mastered the wet-plate process to produce highly detailed albumen prints from large glass negatives.

— Kathleen Howe

Bibliography

  • Perez, N. N., Focus East: Early Photography in the Near East, 1839-1885 (1988)
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: James Robertson
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Robertson, James, 1742-1814, American frontiersman, a founder of Tennessee, b. Brunswick co., Va. He was reared in North Carolina. After the failure of the Regulator movement, he led (1771) a group of settlers from Orange co., N.C., to Tennessee, where he became a leader of the Watauga Association. In 1779, Robertson explored the Cumberland River country for Richard Henderson and his Transylvania Company and in 1780 began the settlement of Nashborough, later renamed Nashville. Under the Cumberland Compact he became the chief civil and military officer of the community, and his wise leadership was largely responsible for its survival. When the state of Tennessee was organized in 1796, Robertson was prominent in drafting its first constitution. In his later years he served in the state senate (1798) and as agent to the Chickasaw.

Bibliography

See biography by A. W. Putnam (1859, repr. 1971).

Psychoanalysis: James Robertson
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1911-1988

A psychoanalyst, filmmaker, and influential researcher at the Tavistock Clinic on the impact of early separation on child development, James Robertson was born in Rutherglen, Scotland, on March 22, 1911, and died in London on December 31, 1988.

Robertson was the eldest child of five in a working-class Scottish family, and left education at 14 to work in a Glasgow steelworks. From 19 to 27 years of age he attended various part-time Glasgow University Extension Courses on literature, history, economics, and philosophy, and in 1939 spent a year at Fircroft College for the Higher Education of Working Men in Birmingham, studying the humanities. From 1941 to 1945 he studied for the External Diploma in Social Studies at London University. In 1946-47 he completed the Mental Health Certificate at the London School of Economics. He trained in the British Psychoanalytical Society, attaining associate membership in 1952, and full membership in 1970. Robertson met his future wife and colleague, Joyce, while studying in Birmingham. A Quaker, he registered as a conscientious objector during the war, and joined his wife to work with Anna Freud as the only male social worker at the Hampstead War Nurseries. He was accepted for psychoanalytic training on the recommendation of Anna Freud, being analyzed by Barbara Lantos.

In 1948 he joined John Bowlby at the Tavistock Clinic to do research on the effects on separation from the mother in early childhood. This research was conducted in children's hospital wards at the time when national policy was weekly visits. He could not forget the unnecessary unhappiness of the children and was concerned at the time that harm was being done. He and his wife made a series of important films illustrating these effects vividly, and actively campaigned for change. Later films, about institutionalization, foster care and substitute mothering, were influential in promoting the use of fostering rather than children's homes.

Robertson's untiring campaigning over 30 years was critically important in changing the United Kingdom National Policy on recognizing and meeting the emotional needs of children in hospital. Parents are now expected to stay with their young children in hospital. The vivid illustration on film of increasing disturbance in young children separated from their families initially shocked many pediatricians and nurses, and Robertson came under attack, but finally, following the first two films, the Platt Report in 1959 recommended that practice should change. In the 1960s, the National Association for the Welfare of Children in Hospital was formed, with the help and support of both Robertson and his wife. Robertson's pioneering use of film has been developed using video, particularly by those in the field of attachment, and in recent studies of infant and child development.

Bibliography

Robertson, James. (1953). A two-year-old goes to hospital. London: Robertson Centre and Ipswich, Concord Films Council.

——. (1958). Going to hospital with mother. London: Robertson Centre and Ipswich, Concord Films Council.

——. (1958). Young children in hospital. London: Tavistock Publications.

——. (1976). Young children in brief separation, series of five. London, Robertson Centre and Ipswich, Concord Films Council.

——. (1989). Separation and the very young. London: Free Association Books.

—JENNIFER JOHNS

Wikipedia: James Robertson
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James Robertson, Jim Robertson, Jimmy Robertson and Jamie Robertson is a name shared by the following individuals:

Contents

Public officials

Sports personalities

Music industry artists

  • James Robertson (guitarist), Canadian musician for BOY
  • Jamie Robertson (born 1981), English composer of film scores who is also a music producer and sound designer
  • Texas Jim Robertson (1909-1966), country singer from Texas

Others

  • James Robertson (explorer) (1742–1814), American explorer; with Daniel Boone in 1759; general under George Washington 1790–96
  • James Robertson (botanist), Scottish botanist, from Edinburgh who, on 17 August 1771, completed the first recorded ascent of Ben Nevis
  • James Robertson (monk) (1758–1820), Scottish Benedictine monk who, in 1808, served as British secret agent against Napoleon
  • James Burton Robertson (1800–1877), British historian
  • James Robertson (photographer) (1813–1888), English pioneering photographer; documented the Crimean War and Ottoman Empire
  • James Robertson (grocer), Scottish grocer who, in 1864, originated Golden Shred Marmalade; firm is leading producer of jam/marmalade
  • James A. Robertson (1873–1939), American academic historian, librarian and archivist; noted historiographer of the Philippines and Latin America
  • James Peter Robertson (1883–1917), Canadian soldier, a private, who posthumously received the Victoria Cross for heroism in World War I
  • James Robertson (psychoanalyst) (1911–1988), Scottish psychiatric social worker and researcher; at London's Tavistock Clinic (1948–76)
  • James Robertson (Trotskyist) (born 1928), American radical leader; Communist/Trotskyist activist since 1946
  • James Robertson (activist) (born 1928), British writer/speaker; independent theorist of economic structures within social/spiritual values
  • James I. Robertson, Jr. (born 1930), American Civil War scholar and Virginia Tech history professor
  • James Robertson (novelist) (born 1958), Scottish novelist whose The Testament of Gideon Mack was proposed for 2006 Man Booker Prize

See also



 
 

 

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US Military Dictionary. The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Psychoanalysis. International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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