Professor Jennifer Brown

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Professor Jennifer Brown

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        1940-

        History

        Professor Jennifer Stacey Harcourt Brown was born on 30 December 1940, in Providence, Rhode Island. Brownís parents, Professor Harcourt Brown of Brown University and his wife Dorothy were good friends of Professor Kenneth and Martha Kidd, who were long associated with Trent University. Her father and Professor Kidd became friends through similar research interests. Their families visited one another throughout the summer months in Providence, Rhode Island, and at their summer island place near Perry Sound. Browns family visited the Kidds in Scarborough and later in Peterborough. Professor Jennifer Brownís uncle, Quentin Brown, was a generous supporter of the Archives at Trent University and accessioned over 100 records into the collection. Professor Brown was invited by Professor Kidd to participate in the Serpent Mounds archaeological dig at Rice Lake when she finished high school. She was a student digger for 10 weeks during the summer of 1958. She then went on to complete an archaeological dig in San Carlos, Guatemala, during the summer of 1959. Professor Brown received a BA Honours in Ancient and Medieval Culture from Brown University in 1962. She received her AM in Classical Archaeology from Harvard University in 1963 and her PhD in Cultural and Social Anthropology from the University of Chicago in 1976. Professor Brown has published many books in which one in particular has received Honourable Mention for the Canadian Historical Associationís Sir John A. Macdonald Prize. This book is titled ìStrangers in Bloodî, published by The University of British Columbia Press.†

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        Trent University Archives

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