On June 29, 1921, Timothy Brown married Margaret Seymour Titchener, at her parents' home in Ithaca, New York. Margaret Titchener was the eldest daughter of psychologist
Edward B. Titchener. They met at the University of Wisconsin, while she was working on the staff of the Romance language department, where she earned her Ph.D. They had one son together, Timothy Jr. Margaret suffered from a long illness in the 1930s and died at age 40 in February 1936. Later that year, on July 16, Brown married Louise Coxon, daughter of a prominent Madison family. Louise was a dress designer, and had studied under
Bradshaw Crandell. Brown, his second wife, and his son all died in the last quarter of 1977. Brown's son, Timothy Jr., followed his mother in the study of Romance languages and taught Spanish and Portuguese at the
University of Arizona for 25 years. During
World War II, he served as a first lieutenant in the
U.S. 3rd Infantry Division. He died in Arizona at age 55 after suffering from a respiratory disease. Brown's wife, Louise, died on December 5, 1977, at age 71, after 41 years of marriage. At the time of her death, she was celebrated as a civic leader and patron of the arts in Madison. Timothy Brown died just a few weeks later, in a nursing home in Madison, on December 31, 1977. He left an estate valued at $3 million (about $15 million adjusted for inflation to 2024). He was survived by three granddaughters. == Notes==