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{{short description|American politician}}
{{Short description|American politician (1805–1870)}}


{{short description|American pioneer}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}
{{Infobox officeholder
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| known_for =
| years_active =
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| spouse = Susan Frenier (3rd wife)
| spouse = Susan Frenier (3rd wife); Margaret (unknown) (1st wife - divorced December 1839).
}}
}}


[[File:Joseph Brown's Monument 2001.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Joseph Brown's Monument in Brown Cemetery]]'''Joseph Renshaw Brown''' (1805–1870) was a politician, pioneer, fur trader, newspaper editor, businessman, inventor, speculator, and [[Indian agent]] who was prominent in [[Minnesota]] territorial and state politics for over 50 years.
[[File:Joseph Brown's Monument 2001.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Joseph Brown's Monument in Brown Cemetery]]'''Joseph Renshaw Brown''' (1805–1870) was an American politician, pioneer, fur trader, newspaper editor, businessman, inventor, speculator, and [[Indian agent]] who was prominent in [[Minnesota]] and [[Wisconsin]] territorial and state politics for over 50 years.


==Early life and family==
==Early life and family==
Joseph R. Brown was born in [[Harford County, Maryland]], on January 5, 1805. His third wife, Susan Frenier (1819-1904), was a member of the [[Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate|Sisseton]] tribe of [[Dakota people|Dakota]] and the half-sister of [[Gabriel Renville]], who became his legal ward.<ref>[http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/m0595.pdf Joseph R. and Samel J. Brown and family papers]</ref>
Brown was born in [[Harford County, Maryland]], on January 5, 1805. His third wife, Susan Frenier (1819-1904), was a member of the [[Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate|Sisseton]] tribe of [[Dakota people|Dakota]] and the half-sister of [[Gabriel Renville]], who became his legal ward.<ref>[http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/m0595.pdf Joseph R. and Samel J. Brown and family papers]</ref>


At the age of 15, he left his apprenticeship as a printer to join the army, and was sent to Cantonment New Hope to work on the construction of [[Fort Snelling]]. He was discharged from the army in 1828.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Goodman|first=Nancy and Robert|date=September 16, 2015|title=Brown, Joseph Renshaw (1805–1870)|url=https://www.mnopedia.org/person/brown-joseph-renshaw-1805-1870|url-status=live|access-date=2021-05-09|website=MNopedia}}</ref>
At the age of 15, he left his apprenticeship as a printer to join the army, and was sent to Cantonment New Hope to work on the construction of [[Fort Snelling]]. He was discharged from the army in 1828.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Goodman|first=Nancy and Robert|date=September 16, 2015|title=Brown, Joseph Renshaw (1805–1870)|url=https://www.mnopedia.org/person/brown-joseph-renshaw-1805-1870|access-date=2021-05-09|website=MNopedia}}</ref>


== Public service ==
== Public service ==
Brown first came to [[Minnesota]] in 1820 when the land was [[Michigan Territory]], traveling throughout what became Minnesota and Wisconsin during this time. In 1857, he was appointed Indian Agent to the [[Dakota people|Dakota Sioux]].
Brown served in the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature: the Wisconsin Territorial House of Representatives 1840-1842. He also served in the Minnesota Territorial Legislature: Territorial Council 1854-55 (District 6); Territorial House of Representatives 1857 (District 10); Minnesota Democratic Constitutional Convention 1857 (District 10).<ref>[http://www.leg.state.mn.us/legdb/fulldetail.aspx?ID=11448 Joseph Renshaw Brown, Minnesota Legislators Past and Present]</ref>


Brown served in the House of Representatives of the [[Wisconsin Territory|Wisconsin Territorial Legislature]] from 1840-1842. He also served in the Territorial Council of the [[Minnesota Territorial Legislature]] from 1854-1855, representing District 6, and in the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives in 1857, representing District 10. He also represented District 10 at the Minnesota Constitutional Convention in 1857.<ref>[http://www.leg.state.mn.us/legdb/fulldetail.aspx?ID=11448 Joseph Renshaw Brown, Minnesota Legislators Past and Present]</ref>
Brown came to [[Minnesota]] in 1820 when the land was [[Michigan Territory]]. In 1857, he was appointed Indian Agent to the Sioux (Dakota).


== Role in Dakota War of 1862 ==
== Role in Dakota War of 1862 ==
When the [[Dakota War of 1862]] broke out, his mixed-blood family and the whites fleeing with them were captured but not killed due to his wife's bravery in standing up to Cut Nose, Little Six, Dowanniye and hostile warriors who surrounded their wagon and threatened them. Their son [[Sam Brown (frontiersman)|Samuel J. Brown]] later wrote, "So she stood up in the wagon, and waving her shawl she cried in a loud voice that she was a Sisseton –– a relative of Waanatan, Scarlet Plume, Sweetcorn, Akipa and friend of Standing Buffalo, that she had come down this way for protection and hoped to get it."<ref name=":0" /> One of the men in their party recognized Susan Brown and argued in favor of sparing her life, because she had taken him in one winter and saved his life. When the men said they would kill the whites in their party regardless, she declared, "Remember what I say, if you harm any of these friends of mine, you will have to answer to Scarlet Plume, Akipa, Standing Buffalo, and the whole Sisseton and Wahpeton tribe!"<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Through Dakota Eyes: Narrative Accounts of the Minnesota Indian War of 1861|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society Press|year=1988|isbn=978-0-87351-216-9|editor-last=Anderson|editor-first=Gary Clayton|location=St. Paul|editor-last2=Woolworth|editor-first2=Alan R.}}</ref>
When the [[Dakota War of 1862]] broke out, his mixed-blood family and the whites fleeing with them were captured but not killed due to his wife's bravery in standing up to Dakota leaders Stands on Clouds, also known as "Cut Nose," Little Six, Dowanniye and hostile warriors who surrounded their wagon and threatened them. Their son [[Sam Brown (frontiersman)|Samuel J. Brown]] later wrote, "So she stood up in the wagon, and waving her shawl she cried in a loud voice that she was a Sisseton –– a relative of Waanatan, Scarlet Plume, Sweetcorn, Akipa and friend of Standing Buffalo, that she had come down this way for protection and hoped to get it."<ref name=":0" /> One of the men in their party recognized Susan Brown and argued in favor of sparing her life, because she had taken him in one winter and saved his life. When the men said they would kill the whites in their party regardless, she declared, "Remember what I say, if you harm any of these friends of mine, you will have to answer to Scarlet Plume, Akipa, Standing Buffalo, and the whole Sisseton and Wahpeton tribe!"<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Through Dakota Eyes: Narrative Accounts of the Minnesota Indian War of 1861|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society Press|year=1988|isbn=978-0-87351-216-9|editor-last=Anderson|editor-first=Gary Clayton|location=St. Paul|editor-last2=Woolworth|editor-first2=Alan R.}}</ref>


Susan Brown and her children were rescued on August 23 by her stepfather Akipa, a full-blood [[Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate|Wahpeton]], and her half-brother Charles Renville Crawford, who demanded their release. She spent the rest of the war under the protection of the "friendly" Dakota camp of Akipa, [[Gabriel Renville]] and the Dakota Peace Party, which opposed conflict with the United States. In the final days of the war, [[Little Crow]] confided in Susan Brown as he grew increasingly despondent about his options.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Anderson|first=Gary Clayton|url=|title=Little Crow: Spokesman for the Sioux|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society Press|year=1986|location=St. Paul}}</ref>
Susan Brown and her children were rescued on August 23 by her stepfather Akipa, a full-blood [[Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate|Wahpeton]], and her half-brother Charles Renville Crawford, who demanded their release. She spent the rest of the war under the protection of the "friendly" Dakota camp of Akipa, [[Gabriel Renville]] and the Dakota Peace Party, which opposed conflict with the United States. In the final days of the war, [[Little Crow]] confided in Susan Brown as he grew increasingly despondent about his options.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Anderson|first=Gary Clayton|url=|title=Little Crow: Spokesman for the Sioux|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society Press|year=1986|location=St. Paul}}</ref>


Joseph R. Brown was away at the outbreak of the war. Upon his return, desperate to find out what happened to his wife and family, he asked to join the burial expedition which left [[Fort Ridgely]] on August 31, 1862, and ended up wounded by a ball in his neck on September 2 during the [[Battle of Birch Coulee]]. He was finally reunited with his family at [[Surrender at Camp Release|Camp Release]].
Joseph Brown was away at the outbreak of the war. Upon his return, desperate to find out what happened to his wife and family, he asked to join the burial expedition which left [[Fort Ridgely]] on August 31, 1862, and ended up wounded by a ball in his neck on September 2 during the [[Battle of Birch Coulee]]. He was finally reunited with his family at [[Surrender at Camp Release|Camp Release]].


He died on November 9, 1870, in New York City and was buried in Brown Cemetery, [[Henderson, Minnesota]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Sibley County Grave Finder|url=http://www.genealogy.history.sibley.mn.us/graves.php3|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090401030137/http://www.genealogy.history.sibley.mn.us/graves.php3|archivedate=2009-04-01}}</ref>
He died on November 9, 1870, in New York City and was buried in Brown Cemetery, [[Henderson, Minnesota]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Sibley County Grave Finder|url=http://www.genealogy.history.sibley.mn.us/graves.php3|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090401030137/http://www.genealogy.history.sibley.mn.us/graves.php3|archivedate=2009-04-01}}</ref>


== His Minnesota legacy ==
== House and legacy ==
[[Brown County, Minnesota|Brown County]],<ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q_lKAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA12 | title=History of the Origin of the Place Names in Nine Northwestern States | year=1908 | pages=12}}</ref> [[Browns Valley, Minnesota|Browns Valley]] in [[Minnesota]], and [[Brown's Creek (St. Croix River)|Brown's Creek]] near Stillwater, Washington County, Minnesota are named after him.

== His house ==
{{main article|Joseph Brown House Ruins}}
{{main article|Joseph Brown House Ruins}}
Joseph R. Brown State Wayside Reststop is located on [[Renville County, Minnesota|Renville County]] Highway 15, south of [[Sacred Heart, Minnesota]], which displays the granite ruins of Brown's home from 1862. The house was destroyed on August 19, 1862 during the [[Dakota War of 1862]]; the three story home was a mansion compared to normal pioneer homes.
The Joseph R. Brown State Wayside Rest is located on [[Renville County, Minnesota|Renville County]] Highway 15, south of [[Sacred Heart, Minnesota]]. The site displays the granite ruins of Brown's home, which was destroyed on August 19, 1862, during the [[Dakota War of 1862]]. The three-story home was a considered a mansion when compared with many other pioneer homes of the day.

Minnesota's [[Brown County, Minnesota|Brown County]],<ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q_lKAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA12 | title=History of the Origin of the Place Names in Nine Northwestern States | year=1908 | pages=12}}</ref> [[Browns Valley, Minnesota|Browns Valley]] in [[Traverse County, Minnesota|Traverse County]], and [[Brown's Creek (St. Croix River)|Brown's Creek]] near [[Stillwater, Minnesota|Stillwater]] in [[Washington County, Minnesota|Washington County]] are named after him.

== Personal life ==
Brown was married three times. His first wife, Margaret, was considered a [[Mixed-blood]] [[Ojibwe]], whom he divorced in December 1839.<ref name="Petition of Joseph R. Brown asking for a divorce">{{cite web |title=Wisconsin Citizen Petitions, 1836-1891 |url=https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/petitions/id/10720 |website=Wisconsin Historical Society |access-date=6 July 2022}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
* {{Cite book|last=Goodman|first=Nancy|title=Joseph R. Brown: Adventurer on the Minnesota Frontier 1820–1849|last2=Goodman|first2=Robert|publisher=Lone Oak Press|year=1996|isbn=978-1-883477-12-7|location=Rochester, MN}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Goodman|first1=Nancy|title=Joseph R. Brown: Adventurer on the Minnesota Frontier 1820–1849|last2=Goodman|first2=Robert|publisher=Lone Oak Press|year=1996|isbn=978-1-883477-12-7|location=Rochester, MN}}
* {{Cite book|last=Brown|first=Joseph Renshaw|title=Letters on the Indian System|publisher=Wentworth Press|year=2016|isbn=978-1372838125}}


==External links==
==External links==
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20100102071136/http://www.sacredheartmn.net/josephbrown.html Joseph R. Brown Memorial]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20100102071136/http://www.sacredheartmn.net/josephbrown.html Joseph R. Brown Memorial]
*[http://files.dnr.state.mn.us/destinations/state_parks/jrbrown_brochure.pdf Joseph R. Brown House Interpretive Sign and Brochure]
*[http://files.dnr.state.mn.us/destinations/state_parks/jrbrown_brochure.pdf Joseph R. Brown House Interpretive Sign and Brochure]
*[https://forgottenminnesota.com/forgotten-minnesota/2018/04/joseph-r-browns-little-castle-prairie Forgotten Minnesota: Joseph R. Brown’s Little Castle on the Prairie]
*[https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/petitions/id/10720 Petition of Joseph R. Brown asking for a divorce]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:1805 births]]
[[Category:1805 births]]
[[Category:1870 deaths]]
[[Category:1870 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Harford County, Maryland]]
[[Category:Politicians from Harford County, Maryland]]
[[Category:Members of the Minnesota Territorial Legislature]]
[[Category:Members of the Minnesota Territorial Legislature]]
[[Category:Members of the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature]]
[[Category:Members of the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature]]
[[Category:United States Indian agents]]
[[Category:United States Indian agents]]
[[Category:American fur traders]]
[[Category:American fur traders]]
[[Category:19th-century American politicians]]
[[Category:People from Renville County, Minnesota]]
[[Category:People from Renville County, Minnesota]]
[[Category:People from Henderson, Minnesota]]
[[Category:People from Henderson, Minnesota]]

Latest revision as of 03:10, 2 May 2024

Joseph R. Brown
Joseph Brown c. 1853
Member of the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives
In office
1857–1857
Member of the Minnesota Territorial Council
In office
1854–1855
Member of the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature
In office
1840–1842
Personal details
Born
Joseph Renshaw Brown

(1805-01-05)January 5, 1805
Harford County, Maryland
DiedNovember 9, 1870(1870-11-09) (aged 65)
New York City, New York
NationalityAmerican
Spouse(s)Susan Frenier (3rd wife); Margaret (unknown) (1st wife - divorced December 1839).
Occupationpolitician, pioneer, fur trader, newspaper editor, businessman, inventor, speculator, Indian agent
Joseph Brown's Monument in Brown Cemetery

Joseph Renshaw Brown (1805–1870) was an American politician, pioneer, fur trader, newspaper editor, businessman, inventor, speculator, and Indian agent who was prominent in Minnesota and Wisconsin territorial and state politics for over 50 years.

Early life and family[edit]

Brown was born in Harford County, Maryland, on January 5, 1805. His third wife, Susan Frenier (1819-1904), was a member of the Sisseton tribe of Dakota and the half-sister of Gabriel Renville, who became his legal ward.[1]

At the age of 15, he left his apprenticeship as a printer to join the army, and was sent to Cantonment New Hope to work on the construction of Fort Snelling. He was discharged from the army in 1828.[2]

Public service[edit]

Brown first came to Minnesota in 1820 when the land was Michigan Territory, traveling throughout what became Minnesota and Wisconsin during this time. In 1857, he was appointed Indian Agent to the Dakota Sioux.

Brown served in the House of Representatives of the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature from 1840-1842. He also served in the Territorial Council of the Minnesota Territorial Legislature from 1854-1855, representing District 6, and in the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives in 1857, representing District 10. He also represented District 10 at the Minnesota Constitutional Convention in 1857.[3]

Role in Dakota War of 1862[edit]

When the Dakota War of 1862 broke out, his mixed-blood family and the whites fleeing with them were captured but not killed due to his wife's bravery in standing up to Dakota leaders Stands on Clouds, also known as "Cut Nose," Little Six, Dowanniye and hostile warriors who surrounded their wagon and threatened them. Their son Samuel J. Brown later wrote, "So she stood up in the wagon, and waving her shawl she cried in a loud voice that she was a Sisseton –– a relative of Waanatan, Scarlet Plume, Sweetcorn, Akipa and friend of Standing Buffalo, that she had come down this way for protection and hoped to get it."[4] One of the men in their party recognized Susan Brown and argued in favor of sparing her life, because she had taken him in one winter and saved his life. When the men said they would kill the whites in their party regardless, she declared, "Remember what I say, if you harm any of these friends of mine, you will have to answer to Scarlet Plume, Akipa, Standing Buffalo, and the whole Sisseton and Wahpeton tribe!"[4]

Susan Brown and her children were rescued on August 23 by her stepfather Akipa, a full-blood Wahpeton, and her half-brother Charles Renville Crawford, who demanded their release. She spent the rest of the war under the protection of the "friendly" Dakota camp of Akipa, Gabriel Renville and the Dakota Peace Party, which opposed conflict with the United States. In the final days of the war, Little Crow confided in Susan Brown as he grew increasingly despondent about his options.[5]

Joseph Brown was away at the outbreak of the war. Upon his return, desperate to find out what happened to his wife and family, he asked to join the burial expedition which left Fort Ridgely on August 31, 1862, and ended up wounded by a ball in his neck on September 2 during the Battle of Birch Coulee. He was finally reunited with his family at Camp Release.

He died on November 9, 1870, in New York City and was buried in Brown Cemetery, Henderson, Minnesota.[6]

House and legacy[edit]

The Joseph R. Brown State Wayside Rest is located on Renville County Highway 15, south of Sacred Heart, Minnesota. The site displays the granite ruins of Brown's home, which was destroyed on August 19, 1862, during the Dakota War of 1862. The three-story home was a considered a mansion when compared with many other pioneer homes of the day.

Minnesota's Brown County,[7] Browns Valley in Traverse County, and Brown's Creek near Stillwater in Washington County are named after him.

Personal life[edit]

Brown was married three times. His first wife, Margaret, was considered a Mixed-blood Ojibwe, whom he divorced in December 1839.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Joseph R. and Samel J. Brown and family papers
  2. ^ Goodman, Nancy and Robert (16 September 2015). "Brown, Joseph Renshaw (1805–1870)". MNopedia. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  3. ^ Joseph Renshaw Brown, Minnesota Legislators Past and Present
  4. ^ a b Anderson, Gary Clayton; Woolworth, Alan R., eds. (1988). Through Dakota Eyes: Narrative Accounts of the Minnesota Indian War of 1861. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87351-216-9.
  5. ^ Anderson, Gary Clayton (1986). Little Crow: Spokesman for the Sioux. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press.
  6. ^ "Sibley County Grave Finder". Archived from the original on 1 April 2009.
  7. ^ History of the Origin of the Place Names in Nine Northwestern States. 1908. p. 12.
  8. ^ "Wisconsin Citizen Petitions, 1836-1891". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 6 July 2022.

Further reading[edit]

  • Goodman, Nancy; Goodman, Robert (1996). Joseph R. Brown: Adventurer on the Minnesota Frontier 1820–1849. Rochester, MN: Lone Oak Press. ISBN 978-1-883477-12-7.
  • Brown, Joseph Renshaw (2016). Letters on the Indian System. Wentworth Press. ISBN 978-1372838125.

External links[edit]