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Nicholas Wood Brown

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Nicholas Wood Brown

Birth
Whitby, Durham Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada
Death
21 Nov 1889 (aged 68)
Whitby, Durham Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada
Burial
Ajax, Durham Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
THE CANADIAN BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY
AND
PORTRAIT GALLERY OF EMINENT AND SELF-MADE MEN.

ONTARIO VOLUME.
Toronto, Chicago and New York
American BIOGRAPHICAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1880.

NICHOLAS W. BROWN, M.P.P.,
WHITBY.

If anybody, in the County of Ontario, is self-educated or self-reliant, it is Nicholas Wood Brown, member of the Provincial Parliament, from the South Riding of Ontario. He is of Scotch descent, though both parents, Abram and Bathsheba (Wood) Brown, were from Vermont. They moved from Ferrisburg, in that State, to Whitby in the Spring of 1821, and our subject was born on the 8thof August following, first seeing the light of this world in a half-finished, doorless shanty.

Fifty years ago literary privileges in what is now the well-settled, well-improved county of Ontario, were of a meagre and very ordinary character, and Nicholas, living in a little opening in the woods, browsed as best he could on the tree of knowledge, making no attempts to reach the higher branches. His education, however, did not end with his few school days ; he has been a reader and thinker all his days, and has always had a disposition to "cipher in his head," otherwise his calculations would have been missed, and he been left out of Parliament.

Mr. Brown farmed until eighteen years old then learned the carpenter and joiner's trade at Whitby ; worked at it seven or eight years, and then started a carriage shop. He seems to have been a born wagon-maker, turning out one with his own hands without ever having seen one made or being shown how it was done. He has a buggy of his own make which has run eighteen years, and which having had a little repairing, now and then, looks "amaist as weel's the new." (note: spelling is correct)

For nearly twenty years Mr. Brown has been engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements and machinery—reapers and mowers, fanning mills, plows, &c., employing about sixty men and doing $80,000 a year. He is of the firm of Brown and Patterson. The "Whitby Harvester," invented by Mr. Brown, is a favorite machine in Canada, about six hundred being -sold annually. It has a wrought iron frame, with the least possible gearing, a broad-faced drive-wheel, and as the frame and table tilt at the same time, the pitman is always in line with the knife. It is no doubt one of the most perfect machines of the kind ever invented.

Mr. Brown was a school trustee five or six years was in the common council fourteen years ; has been deputy-reeve, reeve, and mayor, and on the 17th of January, 1875, was elected to the Ontario Legislature. While in that body the first term he introduced and secured the passage of a bill of great importance to his section of the Province—an Act authorizing the building of a Railway from the town of Whitby to Georgian Bay. In June, 1879, Mr. Brown was again the candidate of the Conservative party for the South Ontario Riding, and was defeated.

October 28, 1845, Susan, daughter of Joseph Chapman, of the township of Pickering, county of Ontario, was married to Mr. Brown, and they have three children living and two dead.
THE CANADIAN BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY
AND
PORTRAIT GALLERY OF EMINENT AND SELF-MADE MEN.

ONTARIO VOLUME.
Toronto, Chicago and New York
American BIOGRAPHICAL PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1880.

NICHOLAS W. BROWN, M.P.P.,
WHITBY.

If anybody, in the County of Ontario, is self-educated or self-reliant, it is Nicholas Wood Brown, member of the Provincial Parliament, from the South Riding of Ontario. He is of Scotch descent, though both parents, Abram and Bathsheba (Wood) Brown, were from Vermont. They moved from Ferrisburg, in that State, to Whitby in the Spring of 1821, and our subject was born on the 8thof August following, first seeing the light of this world in a half-finished, doorless shanty.

Fifty years ago literary privileges in what is now the well-settled, well-improved county of Ontario, were of a meagre and very ordinary character, and Nicholas, living in a little opening in the woods, browsed as best he could on the tree of knowledge, making no attempts to reach the higher branches. His education, however, did not end with his few school days ; he has been a reader and thinker all his days, and has always had a disposition to "cipher in his head," otherwise his calculations would have been missed, and he been left out of Parliament.

Mr. Brown farmed until eighteen years old then learned the carpenter and joiner's trade at Whitby ; worked at it seven or eight years, and then started a carriage shop. He seems to have been a born wagon-maker, turning out one with his own hands without ever having seen one made or being shown how it was done. He has a buggy of his own make which has run eighteen years, and which having had a little repairing, now and then, looks "amaist as weel's the new." (note: spelling is correct)

For nearly twenty years Mr. Brown has been engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements and machinery—reapers and mowers, fanning mills, plows, &c., employing about sixty men and doing $80,000 a year. He is of the firm of Brown and Patterson. The "Whitby Harvester," invented by Mr. Brown, is a favorite machine in Canada, about six hundred being -sold annually. It has a wrought iron frame, with the least possible gearing, a broad-faced drive-wheel, and as the frame and table tilt at the same time, the pitman is always in line with the knife. It is no doubt one of the most perfect machines of the kind ever invented.

Mr. Brown was a school trustee five or six years was in the common council fourteen years ; has been deputy-reeve, reeve, and mayor, and on the 17th of January, 1875, was elected to the Ontario Legislature. While in that body the first term he introduced and secured the passage of a bill of great importance to his section of the Province—an Act authorizing the building of a Railway from the town of Whitby to Georgian Bay. In June, 1879, Mr. Brown was again the candidate of the Conservative party for the South Ontario Riding, and was defeated.

October 28, 1845, Susan, daughter of Joseph Chapman, of the township of Pickering, county of Ontario, was married to Mr. Brown, and they have three children living and two dead.


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