- Sir Robert Brown 1st Baronet, of Westminster
Sir Robert Brown, 1st Baronet (died 5 October 1760) was a British politician and merchant. The son of William Brown and Grisel Brice, he lived for some time in Venice. On 11 March 1732, he was made a Baronet, of the City of Westminster, with a special remainder to the heirs of his two brothers. From 1734 to 1747, Brown was Member of Parliament (MP) for Ilchester. In 1741, he was Paymaster of His Majesty's works. - Robert Brown
Robert Brown (December 21, 1773-June 10, 1858) is acknowledged as the leading British botanist to collect in Australia during the first half of the 19th century. Brown was born in Montrose, Scotland on 21 December 1773. He studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, where he was a classmate of Thomas Dick. He joined the army as a surgeon in 1795. - Robert Delford Brown
Robert Delford-Brown (b. Portland, Colorado 1930) is an American performance artist. - Robert Brown
Robert E. Brown (born December 25, 1947, Newcastle-upon-Tyne) is a Scottish Liberal Democrat politician, Member of the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow Region, Deputy Minister for Education and Young People, and a solicitor. A graduate of University of Aberdeen, he was Depute Procurator Fiscal of Dumbarton 1972-1974 and has since been a partner & consultant with a Glasgow firm of solicitors. He was a Glasgow City Councillor (Liberal) for a few years in the 1970s and 1980s, … - Robert McAfee Brown
Robert McAfee Brown (born 28 May 1920 Carthage, Illinois, died 4 September 2001 near Heath, Massachusetts) was an American theologian and activist. Brown earned a bachelor's degree from Amherst College in 1943 and was ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1944. Brown earned a bachelor of divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary in New York in 1945 and served as a United States Navy chaplain from 1945 to 1946. - Robert Hanbury Brown
Robert Hanbury Brown AC (31 August, 1916 - 16 January, 2002) was a British astronomer and physicist born in Aruvankadu, India. He studied electrical engineering at the University of London, from where he received a Master's degree in telecommunication in 1935. From 1936 to 1942 he worked for the Air Ministry, where he helped to develop radar. He then joined the Tizard Mission and spent 3 years in Washington, … - Robert E. Brown
Robert E. "Bob" Brown (18 April, 1927 - 29 November, 2005) was an ethnomusicologist who is credited with coining the term "world music". He was also well known for his recordings of music from Indonesia. Many of these recordings, among the first widely distributed and commercially available in the United States, inspired a generation of musicians to study and perform Indonesian gamelan music. Brown grew up in Clinton, New York. - Robert Latham Brown
Robert Latham Brown is the author of "Planning the Low-Budget Film" and works as a producer, line producer, and production manager on feature films. He has worked on such films as "S.W.A.T.", "Return of the Jedi", and the first three "Child's Play" movies. - Robert Brown
Robert James Brown (July 23, 1921 - November 11, 2003) was an English actor known for his portrayal of M in the James Bond movies, succeeding Bernard Lee, who died in 1981. Brown was born and died in Swanage, Dorset, England. Before appearing in the Bond films, he had a long career as a bit-part actor in films and television. Two of his most notable parts were as the galley-master in "Ben-Hur" (1959) and as factory worker Bert Harker in the BBC's 1960s soap opera, … - Robert Brown
Robert Brown (17 November 1927), is a television actor from the 1960s and 1970s. Brown was born in Trenton, New Jersey. He guest starred on numerous television programs but is most famous for his starring role as Jason Bolt in the 1968-1970 television series "Here Come the Brides". He also starred as Carter Primus in the 1971-1972 syndicated sea adventure series "Primus". - Robert Brown
Robert Brown, (1842 - 26 October 1895), was a Scottish scientist, explorer, and author. He was born in Campster, Caithness, and studied in the universities of Edinburgh, Leyden, Copenhagen, and Rostock. He took the habit of referring to his home town, Campster ("Campsterianus") to distinguish himself from his famous contemporary homonym: Robert Brown of Montrose. He visited Spitzbergen, Greenland, and the western shore of Baffin's Bay (1861), … - Robert K. Brown
Robert K. Brown is a combat correspondent, investigative journalist, and founder/editor/publisher of Soldier of Fortune magazine (SOF), a pro-gun, pro-military magazine which reports on various armed confrontations around the world, as well as on new weapons and other military technology. Brown is also president of Omega Group Ltd, which is the parent group of SOF. - Robert Brown
Robert Brown (December 25, 1744 - February 26, 1823) was a United States Representative from Pennsylvania. Born in Weaversville, he attended the common schools and was apprenticed to the blacksmith trade. At the beginning of the American Revolutionary War he was commissioned first lieutenant in the Pennsylvania "Flying Camp" on September 10, 1776; he was captured at the surrender of Fort Washington on November 16, 1776, and worked at the blacksmith trade while a prisoner. - Robert Brown
Robert "Buck" Brown (born c1936 - died 2 July, 2007) was an African American painter and cartoonist best known for creating "Playboy Magazine's" "Granny" character. Brown was born in Morrison, Tennessee in the 1930's and moved to Chicago as a child. He graduated from Englewood High School in 1954. He joined the United States Air Force and later studied at the University of Illinois. - Robert Brown
Robert Crofton Brown (May 16, 1921-3 September 1996) was an English Labour politician. Brown was a district gas inspector with the Northern Gas Board and a branch secretary of the National Union of General and Municipal Workers. He was secretary of his Constituency Labour Party and a councillor on Newcastle Borough Council. Brown was elected Member of Parliament for Newcastle upon Tyne West in 1966, then for Newcastle upon Tyne North from 1983, retiring in 1987. - Robert Leslie Brown
Robert Leslie Brown is an Australian politician. He has been a Shooters Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Council since May 2006, when he filled a casual vacancy sparked by the retirement of long-time party leader John Tingle. Brown, formerly the party's chairman, is one of only two Shooters Party members currently represented in a Australian parliament. Brown was born into a working-class family in the Sydney suburb of Leichhardt. - Robert Brown
Robert Brown (born 1960) is a former American Football defensive end who played for the Green Bay Packers in an eleven year career that lasted from 1982 to 1992 in the National Football League. He ranks ninth in team history in sacks and played in more games than any Packer defensive lineman in the team's history. - Robert Allan "volcanic" Brown
Robert Allan "Volcanic" Brown was a well-known and flamboyant prospector and speculator in 19th and early 20th Century in the Canadian province of British Columbia. He was known generally as "Volcanic" Brown, especially in the province's Kootenay and Boundary districts and in adjoining Eastern Washington, and also as "Sunset" Brown in the Similkameen District and still also to others as "Crazy" Brown. - Robert M. Brown
Robert M. Brown was the Chief Engineer for Union Pacific Railroad in the 1960s and 1970s. For his work with the railroad, Modern Railways magazine selected Brown to receive the magazine's Man of the Year award in 1978; the award has since been continued by Railway Age magazine as the Railroader of the Year. He was the first railway Chief Engineer to receive this honor that was previously awarded only to top-level executives. - Robert Mark Brown
Brigadier General Mark Brown is the Commanding General, Soldier Systems Center (SSC), Natick Massachusetts, and the Program Executive Officer (PEO) Soldier, headquartered at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. The United States Army Soldier Systems Center (SSC) is a military research complex and installation in Natick, Massachusetts charged by the U.S. Department of Defense with the research and development (including fielding and sustainment) of food, clothing, shelters, … - Robert A. Brown
Robert A. Brown , a distinguished scholar of chemical engineering and an innovative leader in higher education, became the tenth president of Boston University in September 2005. A Texas native, Dr. Brown, 57, earned B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemical engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Minnesota, where he worked under the guidance of Professor L.E. Scriven. - Bobby Brown
Robert Berisford "Bobby" Brown (born February 5, 1969) is an American Grammy Award-winning R&B singer, songwriter, and dancer. Brown began his career with the popular boy band New Edition in 1980 but was later ousted from the group due to behavioral problems. He embarked on a solo career in 1986 and had a string of Top 10 Billboard hits. Brown is the ex-husband of R&B singer Whitney Houston and the star of his own reality show, "Being Bobby Brown" on Bravo. - Bobby Brown
DR. Robert William Brown, M.D. (born October 25 1924 in Seattle, Washington) is a former third baseman and executive in professional baseball who served as president of the American League from 1984 to 1994. He also was a physician who successfully studied for his medical degree during his eight-year (1946-52, 1954) career as a player with the New York Yankees. - Bobby Brown
Robert "Bobby" Brown (born 19 March, 1923 in Dunipace, Stirlingshire) is a former Scottish footballer and football manager. Bobby Brown made his debut as a goalkeeper for Queen's Park in 1940. He went on to establish himself as the first-choice goalkeeper for the next two seasons, but like many others at this time, his appearances were interrupted by the Second World War, where he served in the Fleet Air Arm as a pilot. - Robert Brown
He was born and died in Swanage, Dorset, where his father had been coxswain of the town's lifeboat. In 1992, a lifeboat was named "Robert Charles Brown" after his father. He went went from playing Roger Moore's servant on "Ivanhoe" (1958) to becoming his superior in the Bond movies, starting with Octopussy (1983). Studied acting in New York City at both the New School for Social Research's Dramatic Workshop and the American Theater Wing. - Robert Lansing
1991 to 1993: President of The Players, the famous theatrical club in New York City. Borrowed his stage moniker from the capital city of Michigan. Rugged American leading man of 50s Broadway and 60s standard film and TV action drama -- the star of several TV series ("Twelve O'Clock High" (1964) and "The Man Who Never Was" (1966) among others). Daughter with Hardy: Alice Lucille (b. 1970) now known as Alyiki Son with Emily McLaughlin: Robert Frederick Orin Lansing. The... - Robert Brown
Boxed professionally at Olympic Auditorium, going 14-1. Played football at USC. Worked as a Los Angeles Sheriff's Deputy. - New Edition
Convicted and ordered to jail for driving under the Influence of alcohol in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA. [January 1998] He is a singer. Some of his hit songs include "Every Little Step", "Don't Be Cruel" and "On Our Own" (which appears on the Ghostbusters II (1989) soundtrack album). Before becoming a solo artist, he was a member of the music group New Edition. He appeared in the music video and sang lead vocals on the song "Voices That Care." soundtrack album). He has 3 children by 2... - Robert H Brown
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