Robertson, T. C.

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Robertson, T. C.
Date of birth
1907-09-15
Date of death
1989-01-11
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 42420094
Wikidata: Q7788310
Library of congress: no 98132786
OCoLC: oca04886602
Sources of Information
  • LCCN79-303744: South African mosaic, 1978(hdg.: Robertson, T. C.; usage: T.C. Robertson)
  • LC database, Dec. 10, 1998(hdg.: Robertson, T. C.)
Wikipedia description:

Dr. Thomas Chalmers Robertson (15 September 1907 – 11 January 1989) was a writer, ecologist and conservationist from South Africa. He was also a war correspondent, and Jan Smuts's anti-Nazi propagandist during World War II. He was driven by three things: his mission to save the soil (and grasses) of Southern Africa, his insatiable quest for knowledge (being regarded by some as a genius), and his equally insatiable hedonism. The T.C.Robertson Nature Reserve situated on the outskirts of the town of Scottburgh, KwaZulu-Natal is named after him, and he played a role in the development of Ilanda Wilds (a nature reserve in Amanzimtoti to the north of Scottburgh). According to Dictionary.com, Robertson coined the term "white nationalism" in his 1948 essay titled Racism Comes to Power in South Africa: The Threat of White Nationalism. However, Merriam-Webster has noted usage of the two-word phrase as early as 1925.

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