Advertisement

Col John Mason Brown

Advertisement

Col John Mason Brown

Birth
Frankfort, Franklin County, Kentucky, USA
Death
29 Jan 1890 (aged 52)
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
Burial
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section D, Lot 51, #3
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Mason Brown and Mary Yoder Brown; husband of Mary Owen Preston Brown (married 25 Nov, 1869; dad of Preston, John Mason, Jr, Mary Mason, and Margaret Wickliffe Brown. Served as a Colonol in the Tenth Cavalry Kentucky during the War Between the States.

Obit:

JOHN MASON BROWN, son of the Hon Mason Brown (Yale Coll 1820) and Mary (Yoder) Brown, and half-brother of the Hon B. Gratz Brown (Y. C 1847), was born in Frankfort, Ky.,
April 26, 183 7, and entered this College at the beginning of Junior year.

He returned to Frankfort after graduation, and was engaged
in teaching school and in studying law under Thomas M, Lindsay, Esq., until April, 1860, when he began practice in St Louis. He spent a large part of the years 1861 and 1862 in travel m the Northwestern United States and British America, and among the Blackfeet Indians by whom he had been adopted In October, 1862, he returned to Kentucky and was commissioned Major of the 10th Cavalry. In September, 1863, he was made Colonel and Assistant Inspector-General, and three months later was ordered to the field as Colonel of the 45th Kentucky Mounted Rifles.
Later he was assigned to the command of the Bngade to which
his regiment belonged, and so continued until the expiration of his term of service in December, 1864.

In 1865 he resumed his practice of law in Frankfort, but in
January, 1870, removed to Lexington, Ky., where he formed a
partnership with Madison C. Johnson, Esq. In September, 1873, he removed to Louisville, Ky, where he remained in successful practice until his last illness. He died in Louisville, after twelve days' illness from the influenza and pneumonia, on Januaiy 29, 1890, in his 53d year. His marked ability, upright character, and attractive personal qualities made his sudden death a widely-felt calamity.

He married at Lexington, Ky, November 25, 1869, Miss Mary
O. Preston, eldest daughter of General William Preston, who
survives him with four children—the oldest being a member of the Sophomore Class m this College.

Colonel Brown had prominent literary tastes and gifts, and had just prepared before his death a volume on the Political Beginnings of Kentucky, which is now published by the Filson Club.

http://mssa.library.yale.edu/obituary_record/1859_1924/1889-90.pdf

Obit courtesy of Cheryl Cartwright.
Son of Mason Brown and Mary Yoder Brown; husband of Mary Owen Preston Brown (married 25 Nov, 1869; dad of Preston, John Mason, Jr, Mary Mason, and Margaret Wickliffe Brown. Served as a Colonol in the Tenth Cavalry Kentucky during the War Between the States.

Obit:

JOHN MASON BROWN, son of the Hon Mason Brown (Yale Coll 1820) and Mary (Yoder) Brown, and half-brother of the Hon B. Gratz Brown (Y. C 1847), was born in Frankfort, Ky.,
April 26, 183 7, and entered this College at the beginning of Junior year.

He returned to Frankfort after graduation, and was engaged
in teaching school and in studying law under Thomas M, Lindsay, Esq., until April, 1860, when he began practice in St Louis. He spent a large part of the years 1861 and 1862 in travel m the Northwestern United States and British America, and among the Blackfeet Indians by whom he had been adopted In October, 1862, he returned to Kentucky and was commissioned Major of the 10th Cavalry. In September, 1863, he was made Colonel and Assistant Inspector-General, and three months later was ordered to the field as Colonel of the 45th Kentucky Mounted Rifles.
Later he was assigned to the command of the Bngade to which
his regiment belonged, and so continued until the expiration of his term of service in December, 1864.

In 1865 he resumed his practice of law in Frankfort, but in
January, 1870, removed to Lexington, Ky., where he formed a
partnership with Madison C. Johnson, Esq. In September, 1873, he removed to Louisville, Ky, where he remained in successful practice until his last illness. He died in Louisville, after twelve days' illness from the influenza and pneumonia, on Januaiy 29, 1890, in his 53d year. His marked ability, upright character, and attractive personal qualities made his sudden death a widely-felt calamity.

He married at Lexington, Ky, November 25, 1869, Miss Mary
O. Preston, eldest daughter of General William Preston, who
survives him with four children—the oldest being a member of the Sophomore Class m this College.

Colonel Brown had prominent literary tastes and gifts, and had just prepared before his death a volume on the Political Beginnings of Kentucky, which is now published by the Filson Club.

http://mssa.library.yale.edu/obituary_record/1859_1924/1889-90.pdf

Obit courtesy of Cheryl Cartwright.


Advertisement