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Glenn H Brown

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Glenn H Brown

Birth
Fauquier County, Virginia, USA
Death
22 Apr 1932 (aged 77)
Warwick Lawns, Newport News City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.9471889, Longitude: -77.0107417
Plot
Section: E Lot: 219 Grave: 5
Memorial ID
View Source
Glenn Brown, a founding member of the Washington Chapter, was tapped to become executive secretary of the AIA when it moved to Washington. Brown was a strong administrator and had the connections to position the Institute as a major player in shaping the architectural landscape of this country. During Brown's tenure, the Institute was instrumental in consolidating the MacMillan Commission (also know as the Senate Park Commission) plan for Washington and ensuring that it became a reality. This plan reasserted the open spaces and planning concepts of the eighteenth-century L'Enfant plan. In addition, the commission envisioned complexes for government buildings in the Federal Triangle and around the Mall and Lafayette Square.

--American Institute of Architects (AIA) history website

Survived by sons, Bedford (also an architect) and Madison, an artist, both of Washington DC.

He attended Washington and Lee University and received his Master of Arts degree from George Washington University
Glenn Brown, a founding member of the Washington Chapter, was tapped to become executive secretary of the AIA when it moved to Washington. Brown was a strong administrator and had the connections to position the Institute as a major player in shaping the architectural landscape of this country. During Brown's tenure, the Institute was instrumental in consolidating the MacMillan Commission (also know as the Senate Park Commission) plan for Washington and ensuring that it became a reality. This plan reasserted the open spaces and planning concepts of the eighteenth-century L'Enfant plan. In addition, the commission envisioned complexes for government buildings in the Federal Triangle and around the Mall and Lafayette Square.

--American Institute of Architects (AIA) history website

Survived by sons, Bedford (also an architect) and Madison, an artist, both of Washington DC.

He attended Washington and Lee University and received his Master of Arts degree from George Washington University


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