RIAMCO

Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online

For Participating Institutions

The Records of James Browne (MSS 948)

Rhode Island Historical Society

121 Hope Street
Providence, RI 02906
Tel: 401-273-8107
Fax: 401-751-7930
email: reference@rihs.org

Historical note

James Browne was born in 1724, the first son of James (1698-1739) and Hope (Power) Browne (1702-1792) of Providence. He followed his father’s practice of ending his name with an “e”, although his younger brothers dropped it. His father founded a successful mercantile business, trading to the Caribbean, which he operated in Providence with his younger brother Obadiah (1712-1762). In 1739, when James was fifteen, his father died, leaving him and his four brothers and one sister to the care of their uncle Obadiah, whose four sons had all died in childhood. James trained under his uncle to enter the family business, and traveled to Barbados as early as March 1742/3, when he wrote a journal of the voyage in the back of his navigation and cyphering book. Other voyages are recorded from 1747 to 1750. In September of 1750 he left “Rhodesiland harbur on board the sloop frelove [Freelove] and am bound to maryland.” He never returned from this voyage, dying in York, Virginia, on February 15, 1750/1.

When James, the eldest son, gained his majority in February 1745, he assumed the responsibilities at the head of the Browne household providing for his mother and younger siblings. His siblings were Nicholas (1729-1791), Mary (1731-1795), Joseph (1733-1785), John (1736-1802) and Moses (1738-1836). According to his father’s will, each child was to receive 1/5 of the estate upon turning 21 with James, Jr. inheriting an extra sum as his birthright. Although James became active in maritime trade, he used some of his newly acquired wealth to start up a still house which his brother, Nicholas, ran while James was away at sea.

It is unclear in what capacity James Browne sailed to the West Indies, but he is associated with sloop Humbird, schooner Neptune, brigantine Hope, sloop Dolphin and schooner Smithfield. He was on board sloop Freelove when he died on February 15, 1750 off the coast of York, Virginia. Two of his younger brothers, Nicholas and John continued in the mercantile tradition between 1750 to 1762. They were eventually joined by their brothers Joseph and Moses in business endeavors under the partnership of Nicholas Brown and Company in 1763.