Robert E. Brown Papers, 1922-1938, n.d. | Oberlin College Archives
Robert Elliott Brown was born in Middleville, Ontario, Canada on December 17, 1873, the son of Rev. Robert and Anna Unsworth Brown. He attended the Oberlin Academy, graduated from Oberlin College (B.A.) in 1901, from Yale Divinity School (B.D.) in 1904, and in 1921 he received the D.D. degree from Carleton College.
While he served pastorates as a Congregational minister in Waterbury and New Haven, Connecticut, and in Oakland, California, he was appointed to the Oberlin College Board of Trustees in 1920. His service as a trustee ended in 1929 when he joined the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology as a Professor of Practical Theology and Human Relations, a position he held until his sudden death on November 25, 1938. He was buried at Westwood Cemetery in Oberlin.
He participated actively on Executive Committees of the National Council of the Congregational-Christian Churches and the Congregational World Movement. During World War I he served in France in 1917 and 1918 in YMCA work.
His wife, Mabel Aurelia Millikan (O.C. 1901), whom he married June 24, 1904, was the sister of Nobel Prize winning physicist, Robert E. Millikan, class of 1891. They had two children, Edward and Elizabeth.
Sources Consulted:
Faculty and Student file of Robert E. Brown (RG 28)
Records of the Graduate School of Theology (RG 11)
Faculty and Student file of Robert E. Brown (RG 28)
The papers of Robert E. Brown document his career as a minister, member of the Oberlin College Board of Trustees, and as a Professor of Practical Theology and Human Relations at the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology. The collection consists of very little biographical material.
The collected works include notebooks containing lecture notes for “Preacher’s Philosophy,” as well as “Hymnology,” courses taught by Brown while a professor at the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology from 1930 until his death in 1938. The collection also consists of a notebook containing the records of weddings, funerals, and baptisms performed by Brown. These records span the years 1924-38 and contain the service date, name(s) of involved parties, location of the service, as well as the monetary compensation received.
A selection of writings is also contained within the collection, including published articles, published sermons, a student paper titled “The History of Carols,” written by Frances N. Hutchinson in 1936, and a work entitled, “In Praise of British-American Friendship...” c. 1935 compiled by Brown.
SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
Series 1. Notebooks, 1924-38 (0.4 l.f.)
Consists of notebooks spanning the years 1924 through 1938, including lecture notes from “Preachers Philosophy” and “Hymnology,” as well as a register of weddings, funerals, and baptisms performed by Brown.
Series 2. Writings and Sermons (published and unpublished), 1922-38, n.d. (0.2 l.f.)
Contains writings and sermons, both published and unpublished (see inventory for details).
INVENTORY
Series 1. Notebooks, 1924-38 (0.4 l.f.)
Box 1
Lecture notes (7f)
“Preachers Philosophy,” 1930-1932
“Preachers Philosophy,” 1933-1934
“Preachers Philosophy,” 1935-1936, 1938
“Preachers Philosophy,” 1937
“Hymnology,” 1930, 1932
“Hymnology,” 1933-1934
“Hymnology,” 1935-1936
Register of weddings, funerals, and baptisms, 1924-1938
Series 2. Writings and Sermons (published and unpublished), 1922-38, n.d. (0.2 l.f.)
Box 1 (cont.)
Articles by Robert E. Brown (1f)
“Manasseh Cutler and the Settlement of Ohio,” 1938
“The Nation’s Wheat for the Nation’s Hungry,” 1933
“The Three Cent Meal, or, How to Use Wheat,” 1931
Sermons by Robert E. Brown (1f)
“The Atonement,” 1926
“Belief and Unbelief,” n.d.
“God And Evolution,” 1922
“Resolutions for the New Year,” Excerpts from the New Year’s
Sermon, December 31, 1922
Student Paper, “The History of Carols,” written by Frances N. Hutchinson, 1936
Box 2
"In Praise of British-American Friendship..." Compiled under the direction of Robert Elliott Brown, c. 1935 (3f) [2001/94]