Samuel Browne (other)
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Samuel Browne (other)
Samuel Browne may refer to: * Samuel Browne (cricketer) (born 1844), Barbadian cricketer * Samuel Browne (divine) (c. 1575–1632), English minister of religion *Samuel Browne (judge) (1598–1668), English lawyer, MP for Totnes and Bedford, knight * Samuel Browne (MP for Rutland) (c. 1634–1691), his nephew, English militia commissioner and MP for Rutland *Samuel Browne (surgeon) (died 1698), English botanist See also * Sam Browne (other) * Samuel Brown (other) *Sam Brown (other) Sam Brown may refer to: Historical figures * Sam Brown (frontiersman) (1845–1925), American frontiersman, educator, civic leader, advocate for Native Americans, and historian * Sam Brown (outlaw) (1831–1861), American gunfighter in the Wild We ...
{{hndis, Browne, Samuel ...
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Samuel Browne (cricketer)
Samuel Browne (born 3 August 1844, date of death unknown) was a Barbadian cricket Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between two teams of eleven players on a field at the centre of which is a pitch with a wicket at each end, each comprising two bails balanced on three stumps. The batting side scores runs by striki ...er. He played in three first-class matches for the Barbados cricket team from 1864 to 1872. See also * List of Barbadian representative cricketers References External links * 1844 births Year of death missing Barbadian cricketers Barbados cricketers 19th-century Barbadian people Cricketers from Saint Philip, Barbados {{Barbados-cricket-bio-stub ...
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Samuel Browne (divine)
Samuel Browne (1575?–buried 6 May 1632) was a British divine. Life Browne was born at or near Shrewsbury, Shropshire. He was a clerk of All Souls College, Oxford, in 1594, at the age of nineteen, graduated B.A. on 3 November 1601, and M.A. on 3 July 1605, and took orders. In 1618, he was appointed minister of St. Mary's Church, Shrewsbury, "where he was much resorted to by precise people for his edifying and frequent preaching" ( Anthony Wood). In spite, however, of this notice of his ministry in the ''Athenae Oxonienses'', Browne can scarcely have been a puritan, for in the curious little book entitled 'The Looking-glasse of Schisme, wherein by a briefe and true Narration of the execrable Murders done by Enoch ap Evan, a downe-right Nonconformist . . . the Disobedience of that Sect . . . is plainly set forth' (1635), the author, Peter Studley, minister of St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury speaks of him with great respect, and says that during the thirteen years of his ministry he ...
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Samuel Browne (judge)
Samuel Browne (c. 1598–1668), of Arlesey, Bedfordshire, was Member of Parliament during the English Civil War and the First Commonwealth who supported the Parliamentary cause. However he refused to support the trial and execution of Charles I and, along with five of his colleagues, resigned his seat on the bench. At the Restoration of 1660 this was noted and he was made a judge of the Common Pleas. He was called to bar at Lincoln's Inn, 1623; M.P. for Clifton-Dartmouth-Hardness, 1640; an active member of the Commons committee for the impeachment of Archbishop Laud, 1644; one of the commissioners to treat with Charles I in the Isle of Wight, 1648; serjeant-at-law, 1648. M.P. for Bedford in 1659 and in 1660 M.P. for Bedfordshire. He was justice of the Common Pleas and knighted, 1660. Biography Early life Samuel Browne, was born about the year 1598 and was the eldest son of a vicar, Nicholas Browne of Polebrook in Northamptonshire, and Frances, daughter of Thomas St. John, of ...
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Samuel Browne (MP For Rutland)
Samuel Browne (c. 1634–1691) was an English landowner and MP. Biography Samuel Browne was the son of John Brown of Stocken Hall, Stretton in the county of Rutland and a nephew of Samuel Browne (d. 1668). He was admitted to Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1650, and he succeeded his father c. 1639. He was appointed a militia commissioner by the Rump Parliament in 1659, and was M.P. for Rutland Rutland () is a ceremonial county and unitary authority in the East Midlands, England. The county is bounded to the west and north by Leicestershire, to the northeast by Lincolnshire and the southeast by Northamptonshire. Its greatest len ... in the Convention Parliament of 1660, (his more famous and influential uncle was also a member of that parliament, member for the constituency of Bedfordshire). He served as deputy lieutenant for Rutland from 1671 to 1682 and from 1690 until his death and was appointed Sheriff of Rutland for 1676–77. Family He married Anne (the dau ...
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Samuel Browne (surgeon)
Samuel Browne or Brown (died 21 December 1698) was an English surgeon and botanist. He worked in the English East India Company factory at Fort St. George, Madras. Aside from his work he collected specimens of the local plants, especially grasses, along with vernacular names and made notes on their applications in medicine and other traditional use. He corresponded with several other contemporary naturalists including John Ray, Georg Joseph Kamel (of '' Camellia'' fame) and James Petiver. Life Browne was stationed at the end of the 17th century at Madras, in the English factory at Fort St. George. Elihu Yale was the administrator of Fort St. George during this period. Browne had previously served aboard a ship, the ''Dragon'', and was locally posted on 7 May 1688 after the death of Dr John Heathfield. The official surgeon appointed by the Company was Edward Bulkley who arrived only in 1692 and even after he did Browne continued to receive pay. Browne took an interest in the lo ...
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Sam Browne (other)
Sam Browne may refer to: * Sam Browne (1824–1901), British Indian Army general ** Sam Browne belt, item of clothing named for Sir Sam Browne * Sam Browne (musician) (1898–1972), British dance band singer See also *Samuel Browne (other) *Sam Brown (other) *Samuel Brown (other) Samuel Brown may refer to: * Samuel Brown (Royal Navy officer) (1776–1852), English pioneer suspension bridge engineer and inventor * Samuel Brown (engineer) (died 1849), English inventor of early internal combustion engine * Samuel Brown (Wisc ...
{{hndis, name = Browne, Sam ...
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Samuel Brown (other)
Samuel Brown may refer to: * Samuel Brown (Royal Navy officer) (1776–1852), English pioneer suspension bridge engineer and inventor * Samuel Brown (engineer) (died 1849), English inventor of early internal combustion engine * Samuel Brown (Wisconsin politician) (1804–1874), American pioneer and politician in Milwaukee, Wisconsin * Samuel Robbins Brown (1810–1880), American missionary to China * Samuel Gilman Brown (1813–1885), American educator * Samuel Morison Brown (1817–1856), Scottish chemist, poet and essayist * Samuel S. Brown (1842–1905), American businessman, racehorse owner/breeder, racetrack owner * Samuel Brown (mayor) (1845–1909), mayor of Wellington, New Zealand * Samuel McConnell Brown (1865–1923), Australian politician * Samuel Brown (Alberta politician) (1872–1962), provincial politician from Alberta, Canada * Samuel Ashley Brown (1923–2011), English professor at the University of South Carolina * Samuel Brown (Oregon politician) (1821–1886), ...
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