Background
Robertson was the eldest son of Field Marshal Sir William Robertson and his wife Mildred Adelaide (née Palin), and was educated at Charterhouse and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
Robertson was the eldest son of Field Marshal Sir William Robertson and his wife Mildred Adelaide (née Palin), and was educated at Charterhouse and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Engineers in November 1914 and was promoted to lieutenant in December 1915. He was promoted to captain in November 1917. After the war he served with the Bengal Sappers and Miners from 1920 to 1925 and took part in the Waziristan expedition of 1923 to 1924.
After further training, Robertson joined the War Office in Military Intelligence.
He was promoted to major in January 1930. Following his father"s death in February 1933, he succeeded him in his baronetcy and retired from the Army in early 1934.
He became the Managing Director of Dunlop South Africa Limited in 1935. With the outbreak of World World War II Robertson re-entered military service in 1940 as a temporary lieutenant colonel in the South African Army, and served in East and North Africa, and Italy until the end of the war, notably as Harold Alexander"s Chief Administration Officer in Italy.
He was promoted to brigadier by 1942 with the temporary rank of major general from 1944 to 1945.
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery thought Robertson was the best chief of administration in the British Army. He was restored to the Active List in 1945 as a substantive major General and quickly rose through the ranks, becoming a lieutenant general in 1946 and a full general in 1947. He went on to be Commander-in-Chief of Middle East Land Forces and Governor of the Suez Canal Zone in 1950.
He retired in 1953.
He was also Colonel Commandant of the Royal Engineers from 1950 to 1953. In 1953 he retired from military service for the second time and on his return to Britain he became Chairman of the British Transport Commission, a post he held until 1961 (and was succeeded by Doctor Richard Beeching). Robertson was also an aide-de-camp to King George VI from 1949 to 1952.
In 1961 he was raised to the Peerage as Baron Robertson of Oakridge, of Oakridge in the County of Gloucester.
Lord Robertson of Oakridge married Edith Christina, daughter of James Black Macindoe, in 1926. Lady Robertson of Oakridge died in 1984.
From 1945 Robertson was the Deputy Military Governor and from 1947 the Military Governor and British member of the Allied Control Council for Germany.