The Robinson and later Pope-Robinson was part of the Pope automobile group of companies founded by Colonel Albert Pope manufacturing Veteran and Brass Era automobiles in Hyde Park, Massachusetts.[1]
History
The company could trace its roots back to Bramwell-Robinson who started as paper box machinery makers going on to make some single-cylinder 3-wheeled cars between 1899 and 1901. The two founders split up in 1900 to each make their own models under their own names, the Bramwell, which continued until 1904 and the Robinson which originally appeared in 1900. The Robinsons were originally made by John T. Robinson and Company becoming the Robinson Motor Vehicle Company in 1902 before joining the Pope group later that year.[2][1]
A new factory was constructed in 1902 and the Robinson automobile became the Pope-Robinson for 1903. John T. Robinson died in 1904 and late in the year Buick Motor Company bought the company in order to secure Pope-Robinson's A.L.A.M. license.[1]