John Robertson (iv)
| Born | 27 January 1878, Lerwick |
|---|---|
| Died | 16 July 1958, Lerwick |
| Convener | Zetland County Council 1918–1923 |
| Elections | 15 (12 won) |
| Bayanne | Genealogy page |
John William Robertson was one of Shetland's most daring entrepreneurs and a Lerwick Town Councillor
Biography
Robertson was the son of Thomas Murray Robertson and Grace Pottinger. He began his working life as a clerk in the North of Scotland shipping Company's office in Lerwick, and later became purser on the Earl of Zetland. Eventually he became a commission agent. He was the secretary of a group who acquired the steamer Norseman to ply between the mainland and Shetland, as part of an unsuccessful scheme to compete against the North of Scotland's company's monopoly in the islands.
Soon afterwards he bought a coal hulk, and built up a successful business supplying steam drifters. He then bought the property of the Malakoff company to do repair and carpentry work. After the First World War he established the slipway and an engineering shop there. During the war he was a salvage contractor: he salvaged the sunken steam drifter Foxglove, renaming her Fitful Head. He ploughed back the profits he made with her into the purchase of more drifters. As a result he formed a herring salesman's business as well, and eventually had curing stations at Lerwick and Collafirth. The drifters were requisitioned during the war, and at that point Robertson branched into marine repairs and the servicing of naval ships.
After the war he bought extensive property at Garthspool, with a view to establishing a shipyard capable of accommodating trawlers. He also formed the Scapa Flow Salvage Company, Ltd, and successfully raised four of the German destroyers which had been scuttled there. By 1927, like many others, he was in financial difficulties. The Scapa company survived, however, and was eventually renamed Robertsons (Lerwick) Ltd, coal merchants, drifter owners and salvage contractors.
Robertson became a member of the County Council in 1907, and he was convener from 1917-23. In later years he was member for North Unst, retiring in 1949. Before the second world war he was a town councillor. He was a staunch Conservative, unlike his equally brilliant brother James Robertson.
He died in Lerwick on 16 July 1958.
In 1906 he became the first leader of the Up Helly-Aa fire festival to use the title 'Guizer Jarl'. Previously, the title had been 'Chief Worthy Guizer'.
His son, Lindsay, was also a councillor for Unst North from 1955 until 1958.
He unsuccessfully contested the Northmavine North seat in the 1929 County Council election, the Unst North in the 1949 County Council election and the 1937 Lerwick Town Council election.