George Thomas Robinson FSA (c.1827 - 6 May 1897) was an English architect who started in Wolverhampton, moved to Manchester, Leamington Spa and later to London.
[1] He was a pupil of John R. Hamilton and James Medland.
He was appointed architect of the Coventry Archidiaconal Church Extension Society.
He was also a journalist and art critic for the Manchester Guardian.
He was in Metz during the siege of the city in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, and attempted to send messages to his editor by attaching them to balloons.