The Ben Robertson Papers include biographical information prepared by Charles H. Busha, M. D. Klaas, and others, as well as a wide assortment of Robertson's personal papers. A clippings file contains newspaper and magazine articles written by Ben Robertson during his tenure with the Charleston News and Courier, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, the Adelaide News, the New York Herald Tribune, the Chicago Sun, PM, the Anderson Independent, and othe national and local publications. Included among the clippings are articles about Robertson and reviews of Traveler's Rest, I Saw England, and Red Hills and Cotton. A chronological correspondence file includes Robertson's carbon copies of his own letters in addition to correspondence from personal friends, journalists, and authors. Internal evidence reflects relationships with a diverse group of people such as Edward R. Murrow, Lady Astor, Edgar Snow, Tom Waring, Governor of South Carolina Burnet R. Maybank, staff at foreign embassies, and Roger Peace. Single items exist from Thomas Wolfe, George Washington Carver, and Margaret Mitchell. A number of original and photocopied notebooks contain Robertson's handwritten and typed journal entries, as well as pasted-in letters and clippings. These personal records date from 1923 to one month before his death in 1943.
Ben Robertson was a nationally recognized journalist, war correspondent and author from Clemson, South Carolina.
6 Cubic Feet (11.5 document boxes, 1 oversize box, 2 oversize folders)
English
Robertson's manuscripts are arranged chronologically and include typed and annotated drafts of stories, articles, cables, and novels. There are also articles printed in magazines, galleys and proofs from publishers, and undated, unidentified notes and drafts. Mrs. Longley has annotated some of her brother's writings with questionable dates and information. A miscellaneous file contains various items evidently saved by Robertson himself and of uncertain significance. Information gathered by Robertson for his work in Guam, India, Java, and Russia exists in a research file. A posthumous file contains accounts of the crash of the Yankee Clipper, a number of honors and tributes to the memory of Ben Robertson, a 1943 Taps containing a memorial page, information on the launching of the S. S. Ben Robertson, copies of the ship's logs, and 1965 reviews of The Pilgrim, a book by Mary Robertson Longley based upon Ben's writings. The collection includes oversize holdings and a photograph collection.
The Robertson Papers were given to Clemson University by his sisters, Mary Bowen Robertson Longley and Mrs. Frederick Wagener. Additional materials were loaned by the Pickens County Historical Society and copied for inclusion in the Clemson collection. This collection was formerly cataloged as 48-1, 66-7, 68-2, 75-2, and 77-3.
In 2009, the finding aid was updated and entered into Archivists' Toolkit by staff archivist Jen Bingham and student assistant Kristi Roberts.
Part of the Clemson University Libraries Special Collections and Archives Repository