Academic career He taught for one year at the
University of Michigan and then in 1925 joined the History Department at the University of Toronto, where he taught Canadian and American History. In 1959 he retired and became
professor emeritus. From 1953 to 1954 he was Canadian visiting Commonwealth Fellow at the
Royal Institute of International Affairs and the
Institute of Commonwealth Studies,
University of London. He served as president of the
Canadian Historical Association (1943–44) and was elected a fellow of the
Royal Society of Canada in 1945. He received an honorary doctorate from the
University of British Columbia in 1952. A gold medal is presented annually in his name to the top graduating history student at Victoria College. A collection of Brown's papers, in particular with reference to his involvement with the Canadian Historical Review, is held in the York University Archives, Toronto.
Editorial career Throughout his career Brown was active in promoting Canadian historical scholarship. He became associate editor of the
Canadian Historical Review (CHR) in 1928 and was the editor of the CHR from 1930 to 1946, during which time he helped set its orientation towards the study of Canadian history. He also actively promoted the development of public archives in both the federal and the provincial governments across Canada, and he made this a priority during his term as President of the Canadian Historical Association. One of his collaborators in this effort was his brother-in-law,
Arthur Silver Morton, an historian at the
University of Saskatchewan who founded the Saskatchewan Historical Public Records Office, the forerunner of the
Saskatchewan Archives Board. With
Donald Creighton, the CHR associate editor, Brown conducted a survey of the state of Canadian historical scholarship in 1944 to mark the CHR's 25th anniversary. From 1946 to 1953 he continued his editorial work as general editor of the
University of Toronto Press, which publishes the CHR and other scholarly publications.
Dictionary of Canadian Biography In 1959, Brown became the founding general editor of the
Dictionary of Canadian Biography (
DCB), a position he held until his death in 1963. In setting up the
DCB, he introduced two of its distinctive features. The first was to organize the volumes of biographies in chronological rather than alphabetical order. The most significant feature of the
DCB was its establishment in 1961 as a partnership between the University of Toronto Press and Laval University Press, with identical volumes published simultaneously in English and French. This collaboration continues to the present day, and the
DCB' has become one of the most significant scholarly undertakings in Canada. (For a more complete account of the founding of the
DCB, see the article on the
Dictionary of Canadian Biography and the memoirs of the then Publisher of the University of Toronto Press.) The first associate general editor of the
DCB was the historian
Marcel Trudel of
Laval University. In addition to the organizational work of setting up the
DCB, Brown was the general editor and Trudel the associate general editor of its first volume, which was published in 1966. He also co-authored, with Jacques Rousseau, an introductory article on "The Indians of North America." == Research and publications ==