Elisha Smith Robinson


Elisha Smith Robinson was an English businessman and politician.

Early life and business career

Robinson was born in 1817 in Overbury, on the Worcestershire/Gloucestershire borders where his father Edward Robinson, a paper maker, lived in Silver Rill House. He was apprenticed to his maternal grandfather, Rev. Elisha Smith, a grocer and Baptist Minister in Blockley and Chipping Camden.
In 1840, his father threatened to replace him within the family business with a Londoner, so he ventured to Bristol with a small loan. He founded his own printing and packaging business, E. S. & A. Robinson, in 1844. Within 20 years, his firm was the largest buyer of paper in the British Empire.

Family

In 1845 he married Elizabeth Ring, with whom he had eight children; she died in 1871. Soon after he married Louisa Thomas, who died in 1875.

Political career

Robinson became mayor of Bristol in 1866. He was elected as a Liberal Member of Parliament for Bristol in 1870, but was unseated on a technicality. He stood again as an independent in 1880. He had a belligerent attitude to politics; he published his pledges in his own broadsheet, The Redcliffe Review, and was satirized in local cartoons.
He served as a Justice of the Peace, as well as chairman of the Bristol Port Railway and Pier, and president of the Grateful Society in 1880.
He was also the president of the Anchor Society in Bristol in 1859.

Death and memorials

He died in 1885 at Ivy Towers, Sneyd Park, a house he designed. Sermon by Reverend Richard Glover published. He was memorialized in several locations. The foundation stone on the front Chipping Campden Baptist Church reads "This stone was laid by Elisha Smith Robinson Esq - of Bristol on the 19th June 1872" There is relief at Colston Hall, of which he was a founder a benefactor. There is also a monument at Arnos Vale Cemetery.

His family and cricket

Robinson's interest in cricket was inspired by two of his brothers:-
In 1878 Charles Parnell of West Town Cricket Club near Bristol proposed to Alfred Robinson, John's son, that he assemble a team to play on the August Bank Holiday. Alfred responded with a team made up entirely of Robinsons. From that day until 1964 Robinsons fielded a cricket XI on that bank holiday against various teams including one made up entirely of Graces in 1891.
Robinson first class cricketers descended from Elisha include:-
Other notable descendants include:-
Edward Robinson 1853-1935 was the third son of Elisha Smith Robinson; Lord Mayor of Bristol in 1908. Chairman & managing director E. S. & A. Robinson, Vice chairman of the Bristol Chamber of Commerce, President of the Anchor Society in 1887, appointed a magistrate in 1889, Vice chairman of the Bristol South Liberal Association.
Arnold Wathen Robinson an English stained-glass artist, grandson.
Thomas Robinson an English corn merchant and Liberal politician, cousin.