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Charles Oliver Brown : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles Oliver Brown Dr. Charles Oliver Brown lived to the age of 93 (1848–1941). His life experiences began early when at the age of 11 he drove a team on the canal from Toledo to Cincinnati (Miami and Erie Canal). He served as a bugler in the American Civil War at age 13, became a minister, was a noted speaker in the United States and Canada, and became a key figure in the controversy around General William Tecumseh Sherman's famous remark, "War is Hell." Following the Civil War, Brown survived a highly publicized blackmail incident in San Francisco,〔(ON THE VERGE OF A DECISION ), ''San Francisco Call'', Volume 79, Number 108, 17 March 1896 — Page 10.〕〔''Pontiac Gazette'' ((Michigan )), January 3, 1896.〕 became a sought after speaker, and was frequently quoted on his writings on the development of Congregational churches.〔Harper, Keith, ''American Denominational History: Perspectives on the Past, Prospects on the Future'', The University of Alabama Press, 2008, page 45.〕〔Dewey D. Wallace Jr., "Charles Oliver Brown of Dubuque, A Study in the Ideals of Midwestern Congregationalists in the Late Nineteenth Century," ''Church History'' 53 (1984): 57.〕〔Charles Oliver Brown Biography, ''American National Biography'', Supplement 1 (2002)〕 ==From Michigan to Ohio==
Charles Oliver Brown was born in Battle Creek, MI on July 22, 1848, but moved to Toledo, OH at the age of 4 where his father had a blacksmith shop. At the age of 11, he drove a team on the canal from Toledo to Cincinnati (Miami and Erie Canal). He attended the Toledo Grammar School.〔''Oak Leaves'' (Oak Park, IL), July 26, 1938.〕
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