Robinson was born in
Hull, son of George Eyre Robinson, secretary of the Hull Savings Bank, and his wife Mary Ann; she was the daughter of George Cookman, a businessman and politician. He moved to Natal with his parents in 1850. Coming to a colony which was only seven years old, where there were as yet no secondary schools, he had little chance of education, apart from the stimulus of "cultured parents". Entering the office of the
Natal Mercury, which his father started, he cherished leanings towards the life of a missionary, and then towards the law; but he finally accepted the career of journalism. In March 1860 he took over the active management of the paper from his father, whose health had failed. In September 1860 he entered into partnership with Richard Vause, afterwards a prominent mayor of
Durban, but himself remained editor. Arranging for the conduct of the
Mercury during his absence, in 1861 he journeyed to England, by the east coast of Africa,
Mauritius and the Red Sea, then passing through Egypt and the Middle East; he stayed some five months. He studied the
1862 International Exhibition, and lectured on the colony; he also visited part of the Continent before setting out for Natal again. Six months after his return in 1863 he was elected to the council for Durban, thus becoming one of the twelve elected members of the legislative council; as a reporter, he had become familiar with its work. But Robinson devoted himself chiefly to his newspaper and literary work. The
Natal Mercury passed from a weekly paper to three issues a week, and then to a daily paper. He contributed to the neighbouring press at
Cape Town, and to home journals such as
the Cornhill Magazine, where his first article, "A South African Watering Place", appeared in 1868. He also found time to write a novel,
George Linton (1876). He maintained a reputation as a lecturer, but this work became gradually merged in the more absorbing claims of the political platform. ==Politician==