Difference between revisions of "William Montgomery Brown"
From FranaWiki
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''William Montgomery Brown''' (1855-1937) was a bishop of the [[Episcopal Diocese of Arkansas]]. | + | '''William Montgomery Brown''' (1855-1937) was a bishop of the [[Episcopal Diocese of Arkansas]]. He became bishop of the Arkansas Diocese on September 5, 1900, and served the church in this position until 1912. |
− | He | + | Brown was a native of Galion, Ohio. He is notable as an author of leftist literature. The Episcopal Church tried Brown for heresy in 1924-1925. |
− | He was the author of ''The Church for Americans'' (1896) | + | He was the author of many books, including: |
+ | |||
+ | *''The Church for Americans'' (1896) | ||
+ | *''The Crucial Race Question'' (1906) | ||
+ | *''Communism and Christianism'' (1920) | ||
+ | *''My Heresy: The Autobiography of an Idea'' (1926) | ||
+ | *''Why I Am a Communist'' (1932) | ||
+ | *''Teachings of Marx for Girls and Boys'' (1935) | ||
+ | *''Communism: The New Faith for a New World'' (1935) | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 20:34, 30 May 2011
William Montgomery Brown (1855-1937) was a bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Arkansas. He became bishop of the Arkansas Diocese on September 5, 1900, and served the church in this position until 1912.
Brown was a native of Galion, Ohio. He is notable as an author of leftist literature. The Episcopal Church tried Brown for heresy in 1924-1925.
He was the author of many books, including:
- The Church for Americans (1896)
- The Crucial Race Question (1906)
- Communism and Christianism (1920)
- My Heresy: The Autobiography of an Idea (1926)
- Why I Am a Communist (1932)
- Teachings of Marx for Girls and Boys (1935)
- Communism: The New Faith for a New World (1935)
References
- Who's Who in the World, 1912 (The International Who's Who Publishing Company., 1911), 190.