- Ralph A. Brown
Ralph Arthur Brown (
23 March 1889 – 1958) was a British art dealer and diplomat.Brown was born in
Highbury , London. He was educated at the Wesleyan School in Kentish Town and atQueen Mary, University of London training as a pharmaceutical chemist.Sadly, he could not take up his post-graduate studies at Heidelberg University due to the failure of his father's business. Instead he entered the world of Fine Arts. After joining Gooden & Fox of Pall Mall and serving with the British Army in the First World War, he joined the Fine Art & Antiquarian Booksellers, B.F.Stevens & Brown ['....And Brown' by Lawrence Clark Powell, London, 1959] in 1921. B.F.Stevens & Brown was established by
Benjamin Franklin Stevens in 1864.Brown liked nothing better than 'putting the right thing in the right place' and tirelessly worked with his American Librarian counterparts in this regard. He was a dedicated literary agent & fine art dealer, archivist, and diplomat.
He was intermediary in the matching of various artifacts from the estate of
Sir Edmund Andros , first Governor of New York, with the City. The Royal Warrant from King Charles II with attachedGreat Seal of England , authorizing Sir Edmund "to take over the Dutch City of Nieuw Amsterdam henceforth to be known asNew York ", was acquired by theNew York Historical Society .Other precious artifacts to pass his hands included the original manuscripts of
R.D. Blackmore 's "Lorna Doone";Ruskin 's "Stones of Venice";Thackeray 's "Virginians";Shelley 's Notebooks,Caxton 's printings and various copies ofShakespeare 's First Folio.However, his greatest triumph was probably the negotiation of the sale of the Harmsworth pre-1641 books to the
Folger Shakespeare Library . In one stroke this elevated the Washington Library to eminence in the field of Elizabethan literature.References
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