Daniel Russell Brown | |
Order: | 43rd |
Office: | Governor of Rhode Island |
Term Start: | May 31, 1892 |
Term End: | May 29, 1895 |
Lieutenant: | Melville Bull Edwin Allen |
Predecessor: | Herbert W. Ladd |
Successor: | Charles W. Lippitt |
Birth Date: | 28 March 1848 |
Birth Place: | Bolton, Connecticut, U.S. |
Nationality: | American |
Profession: | Politician |
Resting Place: | Swan Point Cemetery |
Daniel Russell Brown (March 28, 1848 – February 28, 1919) was an American politician and the 43rd Governor of Rhode Island.
D. Russell Brown was born in Bolton, Connecticut, United States, on March 28, 1848.[1] He was son of Arba Harrison Brown and Harriet M. (Dart) Brown.[2] He went to public schools and worked his way up to head salesman at a hardware store in Hartford, then moved to Providence, Rhode Island, where he became partner in a mill supply store.[3] He married Isabel Barrows October 14, 1874.[2] They had three children, Milton Barrows Brown, Isabel Russell Brown (later Brunschwig), and Hope Caroline Brown (later Chapin). Hope was honeymooning on the British ocean liner RMS Carpathia in April 1912, when this vessel took on the survivors of the RMS Titanic.
Brown was a Presidential Elector for Rhode Island in 1888.[2] He was a member of the Providence City Council for four years before he ran for governor. He won the first election by popular vote, was then reelected by the General Assembly the next year, when no candidate reached the required majority, and won the popular vote again in his third gubernatorial election. He held the governor's office from May 31, 1892, to May 29, 1895. In his last term, he played a key role in the adoption of a constitutional amendment that permitted election by a plurality rather than a majority vote. He was suggested as vice presidential candidate at the Republican National Convention of 1896, having the support of New England, but was not selected.[3]
He was an active member of the Freemasons.[4] In 1891, he became a member of the Rhode Island Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
He died on February 28, 1919, and was buried at Swan Point Cemetery in Providence.[2]