1882 History of Linn County, Missouri

 

BIOGRAPHIES

 

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BROWN

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John BROWN                                                                                                         Benton Township, page 759

 

     In passing down the Burlington and Southwestern Railroad, looking over toward the headwaters of Lotus Creek, the traveler can but be impressed with the scope of the county  which is one of the great beauty and surpassing fertility.  Nature has done much for this country, but the effect produced by art, such as used by the enterprising husbandman of the region is most marked.  Among the energetic farmers of this section is one known by the common and unassuming name of John Brown.  He was born in the county, July 23, 1849, and is the son of Henry T. and Susan Brown, both of whom are still living, respected and honored, and the more so as these representatives of pioneer times become fewer and still fewer.  Mr. Brown has confined himself for many hears to the improvement of his farm, and there finds exercise and diversion enough, without seeking either in travel.  Though now in the full tide of manhood, he has but once been outside the boundaries of his native State.  He was married to Miss Fannie Runnels, June 4, 1877.  Have two children.

 

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John Hutchinson BROWN                                                    Brookfield City and Twp., page 531

 

     This gentleman, one of the first mechanics of Brookfield, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 3, 1836.  His parents were John and Elizabeth Brown, and he was reared in the city of his birth, receiving his education in the city schools.  At the age of seventeen he was apprenticed to learn the carpenter’s trade under J. and W. Wilson, of the “Quaker City”, with whom he served four years.  After the expiration of his term he worked as a journeyman in Circleville, Ohio.  He was at that place when the Rebellion broke out, and he enlisted for three months, in Company C, of the Thirteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry.  At the expiration of that term he reenlisted in Company I, Second Regular Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served eighteen months as a musician.  He was mustered out, but again entered the government service and served during the war as a mechanic in the quartermaster’s department of the Army of the Cumberland.  On quitting the army, in the fall of 1865, he returned to Ohio, and the following spring came to Missouri and permanently settled in Brookfield, this county.  Mr. Brown has done much to help build up the town, and has, as a contractor, built some twenty or more of business houses, besides over one hundred and twenty-five dwelling houses and barns in this and Chariton counties.

     Mr. Brown was married on August 7, 1867, to Miss Minnie Bullard, of Brookfield, by whom he has two children, named, respectively, Lorin and Leonora, both of whom were born in Brookfield.  He is now a member of the school-board, and formerly served on the town-board.  He is a member of Brookfield Lodge number 86, of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, and of Linn Chapter number 41, Royal Arch Masons; he also belongs to the Cour de Leon Commandery number 14, of the Knights Templar.  He is a member of Brookfield Lodge number 161, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and of the Linn Encampment of the same order. 

 

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Wm. G. BROWN (DECEASED)                                                          Parsons Creek Township, page 715

 

     The subject of this sketch was born in Rahway, New Jersey, July 20, 1810.  His ancestors were English Quakers and came to this country and settled in company with what is known in history as the “Penn Colony”.  From them he inherited an unblemished reputation and a vigorous constitution.  At an early age he removed to Florida and went into a drug store as a clerk, serving his employer faithfully and learning rapidly, so that in 1842, he removed to Macon, Georgia, and opened a drug store of his own.  Depending entirely upon his own resources, he commenced business under difficulties, but with skill, energy, and agreeable manners, he soon built up an extensive trade.  Mr. Brown was also lieutenant of the “Macon Volunteers”, a company organized for the protection of the inhabitants against a threatened insurrection of the negroes, they at that time outnumbering the whites.  He afterwards served in the same capacity in the “Bibb County Cavalry”.  Mr. Brown was married to Frances Jennette Jones, an orphaned sister of the late John L. Jones, one of the most extensive dry goods merchants in Macon.  Five sons and three daughters blessed this union, seven of whom are now living, and an honor to their parents.  From Macon Mr. Brown removed to New York and settled on the banks of Lake Ontario, where the town of Fair Haven now stands, and which owes much of its prosperity to the early enterprise and public spirit of Mr. Brown.  In 1864 he removed to Red Creek and was there commissioned revenue assessor of the District of New York, which position he filled with honor and efficiency for two years, when he decided to make Missouri his future home.  Locating at Bottsville (now Meadville) he was appointed land agent for the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, where he sold many thousand acres of the then wild land.  Mr. Brown was a firm believer in Christianity, and frequently, in the absence of the minister, preached from the pulpit himself.  During the war three of his sons went to the field and fought gallantly for their country, and returned home safely.  Mr. Brown was a man of uncommon ability, his intellectual faculties far above the ordinary, and even to the time of his death, which occurred March 25, 1882, and when he was aged seventy years he was nearly as vigorous physically and as clear mentally as in his manhood’s prime.  When he died the light of a useful, generous, noble life went out, but the memory of it all remains.

 

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Transcribed, in total, by kkfitch © 2009.  All Rights Reserved.