Family and early life John Albert Brown was born in
Hampton, Pennsylvania on July 28, 1885, to Dr. John Jacobs Brown (1851–1889) and Viola Adelaide Albert (1861–1922). The Browns were descendants of Rudolph Braun, who had come to America from The Netherlands in the 17th century and settled in North Carolina. John Albert had two older siblings, Ryno (1880–1885) and Bertha Irene (1882–1966), and a younger sister, Mary Edith (1887–1977). His younger sister married Edwin Elmore Jacobs, the president of
Ashland College. John Albert's paternal grandfather was a bishop in the
Brethren Church, and his maternal grandfather was a minister in the
Reformed Church in the United States. His father, John Jacobs, was a country doctor who traveled by horse and buggy to visit patients. In 1888, John Jacobs was elected to the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives as a
Democrat. On June 27, 1889, John Jacobs Brown died from the effects of an attempted suicide by
morphine two days earlier. Following her husband's death, Viola placed John Albert in
Girard College. John boarded at the school and returned home in the summers to live with his mother and aunt. He finished school in the spring of 1901, a month before turning 16. In 1943, Brown was awarded the Stephen Girard Award as the school's outstanding alumnus, and gave the address at that year's convocation.
Career Upon graduation, Brown took a job in the auditor's department of the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Company. Later, he became private secretary to one of the heads of the company, and then became credit manager for the company. In 1911, Brown moved to
Taft, California to become secretary-treasurer of a small oil company. After the company was sold, Brown joined the Cecil Rhodes group, which had mining interests in North and South America, and oil in Mexico. In 1917, Brown led the sale of the Rhodes oil operations, the Mexican Petroleum and Liquid Fuel Company, to the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. Following the sale, Brown was hired by Jersey Standard to become assistant manager of its Mexican operations. At this time, Brown moved to
Tampico. Brown remained in Mexico until 1926, when he was posted to the Dutch East Indies. In 1928, Brown returned stateside and settled in Los Angeles, where he became vice-president of the General Petroleum Corporation, which was a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Company of New York (Socony). In July 1931, Socony merged with the
Vacuum Oil Company to form the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company. In November 1933, the company's board of directors met to review its executives. Following the review, Brown was brought to New York City to succeed Charles Francis Meyer as chairman of the executive committee, making him the de facto chief executive of Socony-Vacuum. At Socony's annual meeting on May 31, 1944,
Herbert L. Pratt retired as chairman of the company, and president Charles Edward Arnott demoted himself to a vice-presidency to enable himself more time for his work on stabilization in the industry. At this time, Brown assumed the presidency of the company. In addition to his work with Socony-Vacuum, in 1934 he was elected a director of the
Chase National Bank, and in 1942 became a member of the Bank's executive committee. Brown served as president of the
Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York and in 1940 served as chairman of the Greater New York Fund. He was a director and member of the executive committee of the
American Petroleum Institute. He was a director of the
1939 New York World's Fair, the Association of Commerce and Industry, and the
Economic Club of New York. During World War II, Brown played a major role in American petroleum oversight. At the outbreak of war, he was appointed chairman of the general committee of District 1, comprising the 17 eastern states and the District of Columbia, of the Petroleum Industry War Council. Later he became chairman of the National Oil Policy Committee. In April 1944, he was designated an industrial advisor to the Anglo-American conference on oil policies. In early August 1944, at the behest of colleagues and friends, Brown traveled to Quebec for a vacation. On August 13, he went to Montreal to receive an emergency gall bladder operation at the
Royal Victoria Hospital. Initially Brown recovered from the operation, however, on September 8, Socony reported that he had become critically ill. The following day, Brown died at the hospital, aged 59. On September 14, 1944, the Socony board met and elected
Brewster Jennings to succeed Brown as president and chairman of the executive committee, while Harold Frank Sheets was elected chairman of the board, an office that had been vacant since 1935. The funeral was held on September 12 at
St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in Manhattan, and the service was conducted by the Rev. Rev. George Paull Torrence Sargent. Honorary pallbearers were
Winthrop W. Aldrich, chairman, and Joseph E. Pogue, vice-president of the Chase National Bank;
John D. Rockefeller Jr.; F. S. Fales, retired directory of Socony-Vacuum; Alfred Jacobsen, president of the American Petroleum Corporation; Arthur B. Lawrence, partner in F. S. Smithers & Co.; D. Alva Little, president of
Magnolia Petroleum; R. L. Minckler, assistant to the president of the General Petroleum Corporation; Earl Tappan Stannard, president of
Kennecott Copper;
Walter C. Teagle, retired president of Jersey Standard; and G. S. Walden, former chairman of
Standard Vacuum.
Personal life On the evening of Thursday, September 21, 1916, at the
Old Bergen Church in
Jersey City, Brown married Ella Marie Mathiesen (1889–1978). During his tenure in New York City, the Browns lived in the
Waldorf Astoria. John and Ella did not have children. He was a member of the
Metropolitan Club,
Saint Andrew's Golf Club, Blind Brook Club,
Los Angeles Country Club, and
Monterey Peninsula Country Club. Brown was interred in
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. == References ==