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                <text>Poster for the Movie "Monuments Men" by Columbia Pictures (2014)</text>
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                <text>Forbes Magazine</text>
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                <text>This movie is a dramatization of the exploits of the Monuments Men, a group of Americans who saved arts treasures stolen by the Nazis. John Nicholas Brown II was part of the real life Monuments Men.</text>
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                <text>Lena Bohman</text>
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                <text>Article about Anne Brown by The Providence Sunday Journal (July 8th, 1984)</text>
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                <text>This article from The Providence Sunday Journal outlines Anne's fiery personality. </text>
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                <text>This is an article about Anne Seddon Kinsolving Brown’s previous life before she married John Nicholas Brown II. &#13;
&#13;
Born in Brooklyn in 1906, Anne was the daughter of Rev. Arthur B. Kinsolving of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Baltimore and poet, Sally Bruce Kinsolving. After completing high school at Baltimore’s Bryn Mawr School, Anne began writing columns for The Baltimore News. She wrote about celebrities such as the movie star Rudolph Valentino and French tennis ace, Suzanne Lenglen. She was adventurous and outspoken as well; she once rode upside down in a plane over the Washington Monument.&#13;
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She met John Nicholas Brown II at a wedding he soon after proposed to her while she was recovering from appendix surgery. In 1930, after their marriage, they went on a year-long honeymoon all over Europe.</text>
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                <text>Digital copy of item held at the John Hay Library, Brown University</text>
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                <text>This is a cartoon of Anne Seddon Kinsolving Brown’s military collection. Anne's childhood passion for military uniform followed her through the honeymoon during which Anne Brown began collecting miniature lead soldiers from all over the world as well as  books, prints, and drawings of military costumes of the 17th to 20th centuries. Her collection, so large that it caused structural damage to this house was transferred to the John Hay Library in 1982. She was able to see her legacy live on as the Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection before she died in 1985. &#13;
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mattersofstyleblog.com/2010/06/bullseye-mirror-makeover-and-mini.html"&gt;Matters of Style Blog&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>This is an example of a Girandole mirror used to decorate a room with a modern design scheme, used as an illustration of how Girandoles are utilized today as decorative objects.</text>
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                <text>Receipt of Canterbury purchased by Anne S.K. Brown (June 25th, 1934)</text>
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 &#13;
The history of the Canterbury dates back to the eighteenth century, when Thomas Sheraton was the first to record the term “Canterbury” in his Cabinet Dictionary.  He referred to it as two different pieces of furniture with one being a small music stand with divisions for holding loose sheet music.&#13;
 &#13;
When sheet music became popular, due to new printing technologies, the Canterbury became an accessory to the piano, which was appearing in middle and upper class homes.  It took on many styles of interior design, ranging from Georgian simplicity to Victorian exuberance and even to Chinese styles.  The Browns used this Canterbury as a music stand, similar those in English homes during the 19th century.</text>
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                <text>This is the appraisal receipt of the Canterbury from a firm in NY. &#13;
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In 1934, Mrs. Brown discovered this music rack, called a Canterbury, for $30 at the Boat Yard Shop in Bristol, RI. Made of mahogany, and dated to England, 1810, the rack is described as a rectangular Canterbury with “fretted ends, fitted with four open partitions with inversely arched cross rails.” In 1945, Mrs. Brown had the Canterbury appraised for $250 in New York.&#13;
 &#13;
The history of the Canterbury dates back to the eighteenth century, when Thomas Sheraton was the first to record the term “Canterbury” in his Cabinet Dictionary.  He referred to it as two different pieces of furniture with one being a small music stand with divisions for holding loose sheet music.&#13;
 &#13;
When sheet music became popular, due to new printing technologies, the Canterbury became an accessory to the piano, which was appearing in middle and upper class homes.  It took on many styles of interior design, ranging from Georgian simplicity to Victorian exuberance and even to Chinese styles.  The Browns used this Canterbury as a music stand, similar those in English homes during the 19th century.</text>
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An Italian architectural technique popularized by the Medici family, Scagliola substituted  cheaper material for expensive marble inlays. As this practice became more widespread and popular, scagliola furniture and art became more refined and valued at higher prices. The Browns bought this furniture at the height of its popularity and may well have paid as much for it as for real marble.  Conservators repaired the inlay on these original tables during the reconstruction of the house.</text>
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