Early American History of the Browns
<p>The Progenitor of the Brown family in America; <strong><em>Reverend Chad Brown</em></strong> <strong>(or <em>Chaddus Browne</em>)</strong> arrived at Boston in the <strong><em>Massachusetts Bay Colony</em></strong> in July of <strong><em>1638</em></strong> aboard the ship <strong>"<em>Martin</em>"</strong> with his wife <strong><em>Elizabeth</em></strong> and young son <strong><em>John</em></strong>. Chaddus Browne was <strong><em>born</em></strong> in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England around <strong><em>1600</em></strong>. He married <strong><em>Elizabeth Sharparowe</em></strong> of <strong><em>Melbourne</em></strong>, <strong><em>Bedfordshire, England </em></strong>on <strong><em>September 11, 1626</em></strong>. Chad Brown and his family moved to Providence, Rhode Island shortly after arriving in Boston, where along with Roger Williams and others he was a <strong><em>signer</em></strong> of the <strong><em>Rhode Island Compact</em></strong> which denied religious interference in civil affairs. </p><p>In <strong><em>1642</em></strong> Chad Brown was <strong><em>ordained</em></strong> as <strong><em>pastor</em></strong> of the <strong><em>First Baptist Church</em></strong> of Providence. There has been some controversy as to whether Chad or Roger Williams was the first pastor of the church, however Reverend Brown was most certainly the first ordained minister of the church. The oldest authority available;<strong> "<em>The History of the Baptists in America</em>"</strong> published in <strong><em>1772</em></strong> by Morgan Edwards states,<strong> </strong><strong>"<em>Williams was pastor from the establishment of the church until he left the colony for England in 1643, and he then resigned it to Messers. Brown and Wickenden. Mr. Chad Brown died between 1660 and 1665 leaving the church in charge of his colleague.</em>" </strong> </p><p>Chad Brown's home was located at the corner of <strong><em>Market Square</em></strong> and <strong><em>College Street</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>Brown University now occupies a portion of this property</em>)</strong>. He was originally buried on his own property and his remains were later relocated to the North Burial Ground in 1792. The inscription on his tombstone reads as follows: </p><p><strong>"<em>In Memory of Chad Brown Elder of the Baptist Church in this town. He was one of the original Proprietors of the Providence Purchase Having been exiled from Massachusetts for Conscience Sake. He had five sons John, James, Jeremiah, Chad and Daniel who have left a numerous Posterity. He died about A. D. 1665. This Monument was erected by the Town of Providence</em>."</strong> </p><p>Chad's oldest son <strong><em>John</em></strong>, who was born in England and made the voyage on the Martin to Boston with his family was <strong><em>born in 1630</em></strong>. He married <strong><em>Mary Holmes</em></strong> of Lancashire, England in <strong><em>1654</em></strong> in Providence, Rhode Island. Their son, <strong><em>James Browne</em>,<em> </em>(<em>Elder</em>)</strong> was born <strong><em>May 18, 1662</em></strong> in Providence, Rhode Island. He married <strong><em>Mary Harris</em></strong> and their son <strong><em>Captain James Brown, Jr.</em></strong> was born on <strong><em>March 22, 1698</em></strong> in Providence, Rhode Island. </p><p><strong><em>Captain James Brown</em></strong> and his brother <strong><em>Obadiah</em></strong> <strong><em>established</em></strong> the basis of the family <strong><em>fortune</em></strong>. James was the first Brown to enter the <strong><em>slave trade</em></strong> in <strong><em>1736</em></strong> with his sloop <strong>"<em>Mary</em>"</strong> under the command of <strong><em>Captain John Godfrey</em></strong> with his younger brother <strong><em>Obadiah</em></strong> acting as the <strong><em>Supercargo</em></strong>. Obadiah raised the four sons of his brother <strong><em>James</em></strong> after he <strong><em>died</em></strong> suddenly in <strong><em>1739</em></strong>. Those four sons later became known as the famous <strong>"<em>Four Brothers</em>" </strong>of Providence. They were <strong><em>Nicholas</em></strong> <strong>(<em>Sr.</em>)</strong>, <strong><em>Joseph</em></strong>, <strong><em>John</em></strong>, and <strong><em>Moses</em></strong>. Obadiah established the firm of <strong>Obadiah Brown & Co.</strong> with Moses Brown in <strong><em>1750</em></strong>. Nicholas, John and Joseph joined the firm later on. After Obadiah died in <strong><em>1762</em></strong>, Nicholas and his three brothers continued in business as <strong><em>Nicholas Brown & Co.</em></strong>, which became <strong><em>Brown and Benson</em></strong> when George Benson joined the firm in <em><strong>1783</strong></em>; then <strong><em>Brown, Benson and Ives</em></strong> in <strong><em>1792</em></strong> and under his son Nicholas Jr.; <strong><em>Brown and Ives </em></strong>in <strong><em>1796</em></strong>. </p><p><strong>The Four Brothers</strong> </p><p><strong>Nicholas Brown, Sr.</strong><strong><em>Nicholas Brown </em></strong>was the son of <strong><em>Captain James Brown</em></strong> and <em><strong>Hope Power Brown</strong></em>. He was <strong><em>born</em></strong> in Providence, Rhode Island on <strong><em>July 28, 1729</em></strong>. Nicholas <strong><em>founded</em></strong> the firm of <strong><em>Nicholas Brown & Company</em></strong> in <strong><em>1762 </em></strong>in partnership with his three brothers. The firm was engaged in every aspect of maritime trade, including sugar cane, rum, tea, silk, and initially in the slave trade. Nicholas and his brothers dispatched their ships to every corner of the globe from China to the coast of Africa. Nicholas along with Joseph and Moses had given up the slave trade by <strong><em>1767</em></strong>, however brother <strong><em>John</em></strong> <strong><em>remained</em></strong> involved <strong><em>in the trade</em></strong> until his death in <strong><em>1803</em></strong>. After <strong><em>1765</em></strong>, Nicholas Brown & Co. began to diversify into other industries, including <strong><em>pig iron</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>Hope Furnace</em>)</strong> and <strong><em>spermaceti candles</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>United Company of Spermaceti Manufacturers</em>)</strong>. Nicholas married <strong><em>Rhoda Jenckes</em></strong>, the daughter of <strong><em>Judge Daniel Jenckes </em></strong>in <strong><em>1762</em></strong> and they had <strong><em>ten children</em></strong>. After the death of his first wife Nicholas married <strong><em>Avis Binney</em></strong>, the daughter of <strong><em>Captain Barnabas Binney</em></strong>. By <strong><em>1779</em></strong> his three brothers had mostly withdrawn from the firm and in <strong><em>1783</em></strong> Nicholas formed a <strong><em>partnership</em></strong> with <strong><em>George Benson </em></strong>who began as a <strong><em>clerk</em></strong> with the firm in <strong><em>1767</em></strong>. Nicholas Brown, Sr. <strong><em>died</em></strong> in Providence on <strong><em>May 29, 1791</em></strong>. </p><p><strong>Joseph Brown</strong><strong><em>Joseph Brown</em></strong> was an early partner in the family business, but <strong><em>left</em></strong> the firm in <strong><em>1784</em></strong>. He was <strong><em>born</em></strong> in Providence on <strong><em>December 3, 1733</em></strong>. He <strong><em>married</em></strong> his cousin <strong><em>Elizabeth Power</em></strong> in <strong><em>1759</em></strong>. Joseph was the most <strong><em>active politically</em></strong> of all the Brown brothers; serving in the <strong><em>Legislature</em></strong> and on the <strong><em>Committee of Inspection</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>Revolutionary War</em>)</strong>. Joseph was a <strong><em>noted architect</em></strong> and is credited with designing the <strong><em>Joseph Brown House</em></strong>, the <strong><em>John Brown House</em></strong>, <strong><em>University Hall </em></strong>at Brown University, and the <strong><em>First Baptist Meeting House</em></strong> built in 1774. Joseph Brown <strong><em>died</em></strong> on <strong><em>December 3, 1785</em></strong>. </p><p><strong>John Brown</strong><strong><em>John Brown</em></strong> was born <strong><em>January 27, 1736</em></strong> in Providence, Rhode Island. Although a partner with his three brothers in the firm of Nicholas Brown & Co., he was involved in a great many enterprises on his own. He was the primary <strong><em>owner</em></strong> of several <strong><em>slave ships</em></strong> and was a <strong><em>co-owner</em></strong> or <strong><em>financier</em></strong> on many other <strong><em>slave trading ventures</em></strong>. He <strong><em>owned</em></strong> a large <strong><em>plantation in Surinam</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>South America</em>)</strong>. He was also engaged in the smelting of iron and in several other local businesses. John continued to be active in the slave trade long after his brothers had given it up. John Brown was an active <strong><em>participant</em></strong> in the <strong><em>Gaspee Affair</em></strong>, in fact actually <strong><em>supplying</em></strong> the <strong><em>boats</em></strong> used to board the British revenue vessel. There is some <strong><em>evidence</em></strong> that he actually <strong><em>participated</em></strong> in the raid. John remained in the <strong><em>slave trade</em></strong> until his death in <strong><em>1803</em></strong>. In <strong><em>1794</em></strong> one of his ships was seized by the government for illegally engaging in the slave trade. The court case held in <strong><em>1797</em></strong> pitted his brother <strong><em>Moses Brown</em></strong>, a member of the <strong>"<em>Providence Abolition Society</em>"</strong> <strong><em>against John</em></strong>. Although the ship was condemned, the court awarded John damages for the lose of his ship; a bitter pill for Moses and the abolitionists to swallow. John also played a part in the <strong><em>kidnapping of Samuel Bosworth</em></strong> in the case of the DeWolf <strong><em>slaver</em></strong> <strong>"<em>Lucy's</em>"</strong> <strong><em>condemnation</em></strong>.</p><p>John Brown was the <strong><em>first Rhode Islander</em></strong> to become engaged in the<strong> "<em>China Trade</em>."</strong> His ship <strong>"<em>General Washington</em>"</strong> departed from Rhode Island bound for the <strong>"<em>Far East</em>"</strong> on <strong><em>December 27, 1787</em></strong> arriving in <strong><em>Whampoa, China</em></strong> on <strong><em>October 27, 1788</em></strong>. The firm of <strong><em>Brown, Benson and Ives</em></strong> had helped finance John's Far Eastern ventures and after noting the vast profits to be made, <strong><em>entered</em></strong> the China <strong><em>trade</em></strong> on their own in <strong><em>1792</em></strong> with their ship <strong>"<em>Rising Sun</em>."</strong> John married <strong><em>Sarah Smith</em></strong> on <strong><em>November 27, 1760</em></strong> and <strong><em>died</em></strong> in Providence on <strong><em>September 20, 1803</em></strong>. </p><p><strong>Moses Brown</strong><strong><em>Moses Brown</em></strong> was born in Providence on <strong><em>September 12, 1738</em></strong>. He <strong><em>apprenticed</em></strong> to his Uncle Obadiah in as a clerk in <strong><em>1751</em></strong> and joined<strong> </strong><em><strong>Nicholas Brown & Co</strong>. </em>in <strong><em>1762</em></strong>. He <strong><em>married</em></strong> his first cousin, <strong><em>Anna Brown </em></strong><strong>(<em>daughter of Obadiah</em>)</strong> on <strong><em>January 1, 1764</em></strong>. After the death of his wife, Moses became a <strong><em>Quaker</em></strong>. Moses married <strong><em>Mary Olney</em></strong> after his first wife died and after she also died, he married again to <strong><em>Phoebe Lockwood</em></strong>. After his conversion to the Quaker faith, Moses <strong><em>became</em></strong> an <strong><em>Abolitionist</em></strong>; taking an active part in the Rhode Island antislavery movement, freeing his own slaves and helping other slaves to escape.</p><p>Moses was an early participant in the textile industry. He formed a company with his son in law, <strong><em>William Almy</em></strong>, <strong>(<em>Almy & Brown</em>)</strong> in <strong><em>1789</em></strong> for the manufacture of <strong><em>cotton cloth</em></strong>. He became interested in the advanced techniques employed in England by the <strong><em>Arkwright Mills</em></strong> and paid the passage for <strong><em>Samuel Slater</em></strong> to come to America and build one of the new style mills for Almy & Brown. This mill built in <strong><em>Pawtucket, RI</em></strong> was the<strong><em> first water-powered mill</em></strong> in America. Moses also helped to found the <strong><em>Providence Bank</em></strong> in <strong><em>1791</em></strong>.</p><p>In <strong><em>1770</em></strong> Moses helped to bring <strong><em>Rhode Island College</em> (<em>Brown University</em>)</strong> to Providence. He also worked diligently to establish a <strong><em>Quaker school </em></strong>and in <strong><em>1819</em></strong>, the <strong>"<em>New England Yearly Meeting Boarding School</em>,"</strong> <strong>(<em>renamed Moses Brown School in 1904</em>)</strong> was established.</p>
When Moses Brown was born on September 12, 1738, in Providence, Rhode Island, his father, James, was 40 and his mother, Hope, was 36. He was married three times and had four sons. He died on September 6, 1836, in his hometown at the impressive age of 97.
Contributed by Leslie Jacox