Robinson’s grandfather Robert Robinson was a modest Yorkshire gentleman; his father, who had been a fellow of Magdalen, held the living of Albury for 42 years. He himself was intended for the church, but preferred the law. He had, it seems, no start in life beyond his father’s library and £20 in cash
In 1818 Robinson was returned after a contest on Lord Clinton’s interest for Callington, as a supporter of administration. He made four speeches during the two years he was in Parliament—he was no orator. On 19 Feb. 1819 he explained how difficult it was to find lawyers prepared to act as commissioners for the execution of the recent slave trade abolition treaties with Portugal, Spain and the Netherlands. On 26 Apr. he objected strongly to Dr Phillimore’s Marriage Act amendment bill and was teller for the minority who voted against it. He again objected to the sweeping nature of the measure on its third reading, 21 May. He gave his ‘cordial support’ to the foreign enlistment bill, 3 June 1819, defending its ‘strict neutrality’ from legal history. Unseated after his re-election in 1820, Robinson did not return to Parliament, but realized his professional ambitions by becoming an Admiralty judge. He died 21 Apr. 1833.
