The following collection of letters to and from Henry Crabb Robinson (1775-1867) were transcribed by Dr. Timothy Whelan as part of a project to locate and transcribe all the letters of Robinson not currently held by Dr. Williams's Library, London. The originals of the letters below belong to numerous libraries and archives in England and America, including the Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle, New York Public Library; Wordsworth Trust and Museum, Grasmere; Clarkson Papers, British Library; various collections, Bodleian Library, Oxford; various Add. MSS., British Library, London; Special Collections, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge; Special Collections, University College University of London; Special Collections, Royal Holloway University of London; Special Collections, McGill University, Montreal; National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh; Turner Papers, Trinity College, Cambridge University; Gratz Collection, Pennsylvania Historical Library, Philadelphia; Senate House Library, University of London; Archives, Royal College of Physicians, London; Rolleston Collection, Wellcome Library, London; Symington Papers, West Yorkshire Record Office, Leeds; Trevelyan Family Papers, Special Collections, University of Newcastle; Fairfax Murray Collection, John Rylands University Library of Manchester; and a few are from the Crabb Robinson Archive, Dr. Williams's Library, London. Among some of the largest sets of letters published here are those that passed between Robinson and a group of prominent women with whom he had close friendships that, in some cases, lasted for decades. Among the women correspondents are Mary Wordsworth, Mary Hays, Maria Denman, Elizabeth Jesser Reid, Lady Byron, and Burdett Coutts. The archival locations and shelfmarks are affixed to each letter. Locating, imaging, and transcribing these letters was made possible by a Franklin Travel Grant, American Philosophical Library, Philadelphia, in 2013. My thanks as well to Dr. James Vigus, Senior Lecturer in English, Queen Mary University of London, who assisted in the transcription of several of these letters and whose knowledge of German and Italian was essential in transcribing many additional letters. Click on the links below provided for each letter.