George Philip Krapp (born Cincinnati 1872, died 1934) was a scholar of English.
In 1897 Krapp joined the faculty of Columbia University, becoming professor of English at Cincinnati (1908-10) before gaining the same title at Columbia (1910-34). His most famous achievement is conceiving and in large part undertaking the Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records edition (begun in 1931, and concluded by Krapp’s collaborator Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie in 1953). Krapp is also noted for his books Modern English: Its Growth and Present Use (1909) and The English Language in America (1925).