Background
Robinson was born on 20 May 1893 in Comet, Queensland, to Philip Robinson, a school teacher, and his wife Lucy (née Mann).
Robinson was born on 20 May 1893 in Comet, Queensland, to Philip Robinson, a school teacher, and his wife Lucy (née Mann).
He was educated at Comet State School and subsequently taught as a pupil-teacher.
As a youth he played rugby league for Toowoomba and Ipswich. By 1915, he was working as a railway porter in Toowoomba. He enlisted in the First Australian Imperial Force on 27 August 1915 as a Private, embarking for active service in Egypt on 31 January 1916 aboard Thomas Stearns Wandilla and transferring to the 2nd Pioneer Battalion where he saw service in both Egypt and France.
He was wounded in action in May 1917, and was out of the war for much of 1918 due to illness.
In April 1919 he joined the AIF Education Service where he worked as a Duty Librarian. He returned to Brisbane in July 1919 and was discharged there with the rank of Sergeant on 27 August 1919.
Robinson worked variously in the railways of Queensland for much of his life. He was a porter in Wyreema, Maryborough and Gympie over 1919–1920, and a shunter in Ipswich and Bundamba until 1925.
From 1925 until 1942, Robinson was employed as a guard on the Kingaroy line, and then became a first-class guard at Shorncliffe in 1942, and moved his family to nearby Sandgate.
As a railway employee, Robinson had become involved with the Australian Railways Union and was elected to its executive. He joined the Australian Labor Party and was an active worker in the Nanango and Sandgate branches. At the 1950 state election, as an ALP candidate, he unsuccessfully contested the seat of Sandgate against the Liberal incumbent, Eric Decker.
He held the seat in 1956 election.
On 24 April 1957, Queensland Premier Vince Gair was expelled from the Labor Party, and a number of mostly Catholic Labor MPs joined him in forming a new Queensland Labor Party, with Robinson joining on 26 April 1957. Robinson lost at the subsequent state election on 3 August 1957 to Liberal candidate Thomas Ahearn.
After his defeat, he worked as a railways clerk in Brisbane until his retirement in 1959. He died on 3 June 1969 in Greenslopes at the Repatriation Hospital, and was buried in the Nudgee Catholic Cemetery.