Thomas Brown (Australian Politician)
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Thomas Brown (Australian Politician)
Thomas Brown may refer to: Arts and literature *Thomas Brown (satirist) (1662–1704), English satirist *Thomas Brown (philosopher) (1778–1820), Scottish poet and philosopher *''Thomas Brown'', pen name of Thomas Moore (1779–1852) *Thomas Brown (architect) (1781–1850), Scottish architect *Thomas Brown (prison architect) (1806–1872), Scottish architect *Thomas Edward Brown (1830–1897), Manx poet, scholar, and divine * T. Allston Brown (Thomas Allston Brown, 1836–1918), American theater critic and historian *Thomas Wilson Brown (born 1972), American actor Business and industry *Thomas Brown (businessman) (1738–1797), American husbandman, businessman, and land speculator * Thomas Brown (engineer) (1772–1850), English surveyor, engineer, businessman, and landowner * Thomas Forster Brown (1835–1907), English civil and mining engineer Politics and law Australia *Thomas Brown (settler) (1803–1863), Australian pastoralist and politician *Thomas Brown (New South Wales c ...
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Thomas Brown (satirist)
Thomas Brown (1662 – 18 June 1704), also known as Tom Brown, was an English translator and satire, satirist, largely forgotten today save for a four-line gibe that he wrote concerning John Fell (bishop), John Fell. Biography Early life Brown was born at either Shifnal or Newport, Shropshire, England, Newport in Shropshire; he is identified with the Thomas Brown, son of William and Dorothy Brown, who was recorded christened on 1 January 1663 at Newport. His father, a farmer and tanner, died when Thomas was eight years old. He took advantage of the free schooling offered in the county, attending Adams' Grammar School at Newport, before going up to Christ Church, Oxford and there meeting the college's dean, Dr Fell. Fell was well known as a disciplinarian, and Brown throughout his life displayed a disdain for restrictions. The legend behind Brown's most recognised work is therefore plausible: it states that Brown got into trouble while at Oxford, and was threatened with expu ...
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Thomas C
Thomas may refer to: People * List of people with given name Thomas * Thomas (name) * Thomas (surname) * Saint Thomas (other) * Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, and Doctor of the Church * Thomas the Apostle * Thomas (bishop of the East Angles) (fl. 640s–650s), medieval Bishop of the East Angles * Thomas (Archdeacon of Barnstaple) (fl. 1203), Archdeacon of Barnstaple * Thomas, Count of Perche (1195–1217), Count of Perche * Thomas (bishop of Finland) (1248), first known Bishop of Finland * Thomas, Earl of Mar (1330–1377), 14th-century Earl, Aberdeen, Scotland Geography Places in the United States * Thomas, Illinois * Thomas, Indiana * Thomas, Oklahoma * Thomas, Oregon * Thomas, South Dakota * Thomas, Virginia * Thomas, Washington * Thomas, West Virginia * Thomas County (other) * Thomas Township (other) Elsewhere * Thomas Glacier (Greenland) Arts, entertainment, and media * ''Thomas'' (Burton novel) 1969 novel ...
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Thomas McPherson Brown
Thomas McPherson Brown (1906–1989) was a rheumatologist who held unorthodox views about the basis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and believed it could be cured with antibiotics. Brown graduated from Swarthmore College then attended Johns Hopkins Medical School. He did his medical residency at the hospital associated with the Rockefeller Institute.At Rockefeller he did research on synovial fluid from people with RA and in 1937 found ''Mycoplasma'' in the fluid from some patients, leading him to believe that RA might be an infectious disease. His work was interrupted by service in World War II; after the war he obtained a position at George Washington University and began to experimentally treat some people with RA with antibiotics, which at the time were a new class of drugs. Some of the people he treated were members of Congress or ambassadors, and some of them responded positively. He presented his work at a conference in 1949; at the same conference, the new drug cortisone ...
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Thomas Townsend Brown
Thomas Townsend Brown (March 18, 1905 – October 27, 1985) was an American inventor whose research into odd electrical effects led him to believe he had discovered a connection between strong electric fields and gravity, a type of antigravity effect. Instead of being an antigravity force, what Brown observed has generally been attributed to electrohydrodynamics, the movement of charged particles that transfers their momentum to surrounding neutral particles in air, also called "ionic drift" or "Ion wind, ionic wind". For most of Brown's life he attempted to develop devices based on his ideas, trying to promote them for use by industry and the military. The phenomena came to be called the "Biefeld–Brown effect" and "electrogravitics". In recent years Brown's research has had an influence in the community of amateur experimenters who build "Ionocraft, ionic propulsion lifters" powered by high voltage. There are still claims that Brown discovered antigravity, an idea popular wi ...
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Thomas Graham Brown
Thomas Graham Brown FRS (usually known as T. Graham Brown; 27 March 1882 – 28 October 1965) was a Scottish mountaineer and physiologist, most famous for finding three new routes up the east face of Mont Blanc. Life and academic work Graham Brown was born in Edinburgh on 27 March 1882. His father, Dr John Joseph Graham Brown was a President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh from 1912 to 1914. His mother was Jane Pasley Hay Thorburn. The family lived at 63 Castle Street in Edinburgh's New Town. Thomas studied science and medicine at the University of Edinburgh, gaining an MD in 1912 with a thesis on the rhythmic movement of decerebrate animals, followed in 1914 with a DSc from the same institution for a thesis on immediate and successive effects of compound stimulation in spinal preparations, before moving to Glasgow and Liverpool. Although his work was largely ignored for many years, he was the first to propose a half-centre model of motor neurons in which two g ...
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Thomas Brown (naturalist)
Captain Thomas Brown FRSE FLS (1785 – 8 October 1862) was a British naturalist and malacologist. Brown was born in Perth, Scotland, and educated at the Edinburgh High School. When he was twenty, he joined the Forfar and Kincardine Militia, rising to the rank of captain in 1811. When he was quartered in Manchester, he became interested in nature, and edited Oliver Goldsmith's ''Animated Nature''. After his regiment was disbanded he bought the Fifeshire flax mill. That, however, burned down before Brown had the opportunity to insure it. He then started to write books about nature for a living. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1818, one of his proposers being James Jardine. In 1840 he became curator of the Manchester Museum, where he served for twenty-two years. He wrote several natural history books, a few dealing with conchology. He became a fellow of the Linnean Society, a member of the Wernerian, Kirwanian and Phrenological Societies, a ...
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Thomas Brown Of Lanfine And Waterhaughs
Thomas Brown of Lanfine and Waterhaughs FRSE FFPSG (1774 – 16 March 1853) was a noted Scottish surgeon with an interest in botany, mineralogy and fossil collecting. He is best remembered for his large donation of his entire lifetime collection of fossils etc. to the University of Glasgow, which is generally known as the Lanfine Collection. Life Brown is thought to have been born in Glasgow in 1774. His father was a wealthy banker, also called Thomas Brown, and had purchased 117 acres of land in Langside from Robert Crawford of Possilpark. This house was completed in 1780 and he presumably spent his childhood here. He attended the University of Edinburgh, studying botany, and was taught by Professor Daniel Rutherford. He inherited the country estates of Lanfine and Waterhaughs in Ayrshire, from his cousin Nicol Brown in 1828. Lanfine House had been built by his uncle, John Brown (1729-1802) in 1772. From 1799 he was Deputy Professor of Botany at the University of Glasgow und ...
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Tom Brown (bishop Of Wellington)
Thomas John Brown (born 16 August 1943) is a retired Anglican bishop in New Zealand. He is the former Bishop of Wellington. On 29 July 2011, Brown announced, with the support of the Primate, that he would retire in March 2012, effectively completing his duties at the end of February 2012. He retired as Bishop of Wellington during an evening service on 26 February 2012, which had the Anglican Primate of Australia, who is also the Archbishop of Brisbane, in attendance along with Archbishop David Moxon, the Primate of New Zealand. Brown was educated at the University of Otago in New Zealand and ordained in 1972. After curacies at St Matthew's in Christchurch, New Zealand, and St James the Greater, Leicester, England, he returned to New Zealand to become the vicar of Upper Clutha in 1976. After further incumbencies at Roslyn and Lower Hutt he became the Archdeacon of Belmont in 1987. In 1991 he became the assistant bishop and the vicar general in the Diocese of Wellington ...
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Thomas Brown (minister And Natural Historian)
Thomas Brown (1811–1893) was a Scottish minister in the Free Church of Scotland who rose to its highest rank, Moderator of the General Assembly in 1890. He was a noted geologist and botanist. He wrote prolifically on the history of the Disruption of 1843. Life He was born on 23 April 1811 in the manse at Langton, Berwickshire in south-east Scotland, the son of John Brown, minister of that parish. He trained in theology at Edinburgh University and began working as a minister in 1837 at Kinneff in Aberdeenshire. He left the Church of Scotland at the point of the Disruption of 1843. He spent some years without a ministry before being placed in the relatively prestigious Dean Free Church on Belford Road in north-west Edinburgh in 1849. He remained in the Free Church of Scotland for the rest of his life, serving as its Moderator for 1890/91 and the age of 79 in succession to Rev John Laird. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1861. His address w ...
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Joseph Brown (bishop)
Thomas Joseph Brown OSB (called Joseph;Belmont Abbey Association – A Brief History
accessed 2 March 2014. 2 May 1796 – 12 April 1880) was a of the . He served for two ecclesiastical jurisdictions, first as the of the Welsh District from 1840 to 1850, then as Bishop of ...
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Thomas Brown (minister Of St John's, Glasgow)
Thomas Brown (9 August 1776 – 23 January 1847) was a Presbyterian minister who served in St John's church in Glasgow. After many years in the Church of Scotland ministry he walked out during the schism known as The Disruption and joined the Free Church of Scotland. He was elected the second ever moderator of the Free Church in October 1843. Life Thomas Brown, was a minister of St. John's, Glasgow and the 2nd moderator of the Free Church. He was born in the parish of Closeburn, Dumfriesshire, on the 9 August 1776. He received the first part of his education at Wallace-Hall, in the Parish of Closeburn, under the teacher Alex. Mundell; and was for some time engaged in the tuition of the younger boys of that seminary, along with Dr. Robert Mundell, the son of Mr. Mundell. He then entered as tutor into the family of Major Hoggan of Waterside, Dumfries-shire; and, while acting in that capacity, prosecuted his studies in the University of Glasgow during two winter-sessions. T ...
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Thomas Brown (martyr)
Thomas Brown may refer to: Arts and literature *Thomas Brown (satirist) (1662–1704), English satirist *Thomas Brown (philosopher) (1778–1820), Scottish poet and philosopher *''Thomas Brown'', pen name of Thomas Moore (1779–1852) *Thomas Brown (architect) (1781–1850), Scottish architect *Thomas Brown (prison architect) (1806–1872), Scottish architect *Thomas Edward Brown (1830–1897), Manx poet, scholar, and divine * T. Allston Brown (Thomas Allston Brown, 1836–1918), American theater critic and historian * Thomas Wilson Brown (born 1972), American actor Business and industry *Thomas Brown (businessman) (1738–1797), American husbandman, businessman, and land speculator * Thomas Brown (engineer) (1772–1850), English surveyor, engineer, businessman, and landowner * Thomas Forster Brown (1835–1907), English civil and mining engineer Politics and law Australia *Thomas Brown (settler) (1803–1863), Australian pastoralist and politician *Thomas Brown (New South Wales ...
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