John Brown, a Scottish gillie who had previously accompanied Victoria when horse riding at Balmoral before she was widowed, managed to break through societal boundaries and befriend the Queen.
John Brown dedicated his life to abolishing slavery, helping countless slaves escape—but his violent tactics remain controversial even today.
Did genre painting exist in the early twentieth century? This question forms the premise of John Fagg’s Re-envisioning the Everyday: American Genre Scenes, 1905–1945.
John Brown is determined to build an army, and when he tells Frederick Douglass, he makes it clear—abolishing slavery will require violence. His conviction sets him on a path that will lead directly ...
Sophomore Trae Oetting poured in a game-high 23 points, including 13 from the free-throw line, as the John Brown University men's basketball team fought off a late push from Texas Wesleyan to secure a ...
John H. Brown and Sheila L. Brown of Rialto, California, a husband and wife duo with a crackling wit and the parents of two loving children, passed away last year. John died on July 13 ...