Francis Fisher Browne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Francis Fisher Browne (b. December 1, 1843, South Halifax, Vermont - d. 1913, aged 69) was an American editor, poet, and critic.
He was born at After his high school education, Browne enlisted in the Forty-sixth Massachusetts Volunteers (1862-63).
He went on to study law in Rochester and Ann Arbor; edited the Lakeside Monthly (Chicago) (1869-74), The Alliance (1878-79), and The Dial (1880-1913), a semimonthly literary review.
He authored:
- Every-Day Life of Abraham Lincoln (1886, new edition, 1913)
- Volunteer Grain (1896)
[edit] External links
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.