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Robinsons, Newfoundland and Labrador CanadaPlan a Robinsons visit with Bay St. George South context, Robinsons River, Route 404, coastal roads and practical western Newfoundland notes before you go./newfoundland-labrador/robinsons/newfoundland-labrador/robinsonscommunity

Robinsons, Newfoundland and Labrador: History, Things to Do and Travel Guide

Robinsons is an unincorporated community in Newfoundland and Labrador’s Western region, in the Bay St. George South area along Route 404. It is a coastal-road and river community rather than a formal town, with travel shaped by Robinsons River, nearby coves and the local-service-district landscape.

Visitors should treat Robinsons as a quiet western Newfoundland stop: come for the road, river, coast and local geography, then plan services carefully.

How Robinsons Started

The official Canadian geographical names record identifies Robinsons as an official unincorporated place in the St. George’s area, with a decision date in 1984. The community is also part of Bay St. George South, which the provincial local-service-district regulation describes as including Heatherton, Robinson’s, Cartyville, McKay’s, Jeffrey’s, St. David’s, St. Fintan’s, Lock Leven and Highlands.

That structure helps explain Robinsons. It is not a municipality with a separate town office; it is one community within a larger south-shore district. Older local accounts distinguish the coastal Robinson’s Head area, the former railway-station area and the road-junction settlement, but the present travel experience is best understood through the Route 404 corridor and the river crossing.

What Robinsons Is Like Today

Robinsons is counted within Bay St. George South for many public data purposes. The Community Accounts table describes Bay St. George South as a local service district that includes Robinsons and recorded a 2021 total of 1,170 people across the district.

The place itself is small, spread out and road-oriented. Travellers will find a rural coastal setting, river views, access to Route 404 and a quieter pace than the larger service centres in western Newfoundland. It is the kind of stop where landscape, weather and road conditions matter more than attraction hours.

Things to Do and Places Nearby

Drive Route 404 with time to stop safely where views open toward the water, fields or Robinsons River. The route links several Bay St. George South communities, so it works best as a slow local drive rather than a quick shortcut.

Look for the Robinsons River area, coastal viewpoints, small beaches or shoreline pull-offs where access is legal and conditions are safe. Newfoundland and Labrador Tourism’s traveller guide lists Robinsons on Route 404, which confirms its role as a recognized travel point even without a municipal visitor centre.

For a fuller day, connect Robinsons with other Bay St. George South stops, but keep expectations modest. The appeal is in local roads, river geography, open coastal air and the feeling of a small west-coast community.

Quick Facts

  • Province: Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Region: Western
  • Municipality type: Unincorporated community in the Bay St. George South local service district
  • 2021 census population: included in Bay St. George South local service district, 1,170
  • Official website: https://geogratis.gc.ca/services/geoname/en/geonames/AATME
  • Main travel areas: Route 404, Robinsons River, Bay St. George South coastal roads, nearby coves and local-service-district communities
  • Key routes: Route 404, Trans-Canada Highway connections, local roads toward Heatherton and other Bay St. George South places

Travel Notes

Robinsons requires a car and a flexible plan. Confirm fuel, food and lodging before leaving larger centres, and treat coastal pull-offs with care. Weather can change quickly in western Newfoundland, and winter or storm-season road conditions should be checked before taking Route 404.

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