Robert Brown (agriculturalist)

Robert Brown (1757-1831) was a Scottish writer on agricultural science and rural subjects.

He was born in East Linton, Haddingtonshire, entered into business in his native village, but soon turned to agriculture, which he carried on first at West Fortune and afterwards at Markle, where be practised several important experiments. He was an intimate friend of George Rennie of Phantassie. While Rennie applied himself to the practice of agriculture, Brown wrote on the science. He published a View of the Agriculture of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 8vo, 1799, and a Treatise on Rural Affairs, 2 vols, 8vo, 1811, and wrote many articles in the Edinburgh Farmer's Magazine, of which he was editor for fifteen years. Some of these articles have been translated into French and German. He died at Drylaw, East Lothian, on 14 Feb, 1831, in his seventy-fourth year.

An pseudonymous edition of a work relating to Scottish emigration to Canada, Remarks on the Earl of Selkirk's observations on the present state of the Highlands of Scotland …, is attributed Brown.[1]

References

  1. ^ Peel, Bruce Braden; Ingles, Ernest Boyce; Distad, Norman Merrill (2003-04-05). Peel's Bibliography of the Canadian Prairies to 1953. University of Toronto Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780802048257. http://books.google.com/books?id=XIqasapzMP8C&pg=PA11. Retrieved 23 December 2010. 
Attribution