John Brown House
Perched on College Hill in Providence, Rhode Island, the John Brown House stands as one of the finest surviving examples of 18th-century American architecture. It also is a powerful reminder of wealth, ambition and the moral complexity of early American life.

John Brown was one of Providence’s most prominent citizens in the late 1700s. Brown University is named after this influential family. As a member of this family, John was a merchant, ship owner and statesman. He served as a Revolutionary War patriot and helped finance the war effort and later became one of Rhode Island’s leading political figures. Yet his fortune, like many of New England merchants of the time, was built through global trade networks including slave trade.

Brown amassed his wealth through maritime commerce, dealing in goods such as rum, sugar, molasses and textiles. He was also involved in the transatlantic slave trade, and enterprise that generated enormous profits for Rhode Island merchants in the 18th century. Brown was eventually tried in federal court in 1797 for illegal participation in the slave trade under the early federal anti-slavery laws. He was the only American ever tried under this law and though he was acquitted, the trial cemented his place in history as a symbol of the contradictions in the nation’s founding ideals
The house was completed in 1788 and reflects the scale of John Brown’s success. Inside, the house contains an impressive collection of 18th-century decorative arts in New England. Many objects came from Europe and the Caribbean, demonstrating how Providence was tied to international commerce.
The John Brown house is preserved as a museum which invites you to see how wealth was created, who benefited from it and at what cost.
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