A conscientious objector, during the World War II he worked in an epileptic colony because he was a nurse by training. He also took part in a medical experiment living on a diet which caused scurvy, but in fact he earned a good part of his living as a book trader.[2] And his purchase of the tenancy linked to Albert Meltzer’s Wooden Shoe Press was the premise of the long dispute between Meltzer and Vernon Richards.[3]
He worked alongside Lilian Wolfe and Mary Canipa in the Freedom Bookshop. Robinson contributed articles to Freedom and Anarchy, sometimes anonymously, during the 1970s. He also contributed under the name Jon Quixote.[4] Though he is thought to have had a hand in editorial group through the 60's.[5] At the request of Canipa his work was reproduced in Freedom: A Hundred Years put together by Donald Rooum, because by its publication date he had already died.
Robinson enjoyed active stints, alongside Rooum in the Colne and Nelson Anarchist Group and was a noted non-smoker, a teetotaler and a vegetarian.[6][2] Robinson died 20 March 1983, following a stroke two months earlier.[2]