Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1900, volume 1).djvu/400

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372
BREWSTER
BRIDGE

religious books that were contraband in England. Through the assistance of his friend, Sir Edwin Sandys, treasurer of the Virginia company, he obtained a grant of land in North America, and in September, 1620, the first company of pilgrims set sail in the “Mayflower,” landing where Plymouth, Mass., now stands, on 21 Dec., 1620. Brewster was ruling elder of the church, and until 1629 acted as teacher and minister, enduring the hardships of the memorable first winter with wonderful courage and cheerfulness. He left four sons and a daughter, and his descendants are among the most honored New England families. His sword and many relics of his personal property are still preserved in the museum of the Massachusetts historical society in Boston, and at Plymouth, Mass. See “Life and Times of William Brewster, Chief of the Pilgrims” (Philadelphia, 1857).


BREWSTER, William, ornithologist, b. in South Reading (now Wakefield), Mass., 5 July, 1851. He was graduated at the Cambridge high school in 1869, but was prevented by a difficulty with his eyes from entering Harvard. Subsequently he devoted his attention exclusively to the study of ornithology, becoming in 1880 assistant in charge of the collection of birds and mammals in the Boston society of natural history, and in 1885 curator of ornithology at the museum of comparative zoölogy, Cambridge. Mr. Brewster is a fellow of the American association for the advancement of science, and in 1876 became president of the Nuttall ornithological club of Cambridge. He has published articles in the “Bulletin of the Nuttall Ornithological Club,” in the “Annals of the New York Lyceum of Natural History,” “Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History,” “The Auk,” and other periodicals.


BREWSTER, William R., soldier, d. in Brooklyn, N. Y., 13 Dec, 1869. He was a colonel in the Excelsior brigade, organized by Daniel E. Sickles in 18G1, and after the promotion of that officer was made a brigadier-general of vohinteers. At the time of his death he held a place in the U. S. internal revenue department.


BRICE, Benjamin W., soldier, b. in Virginia in 1809; d. in Washington, D. C, 4 Dec, 1892. He was graduated from the U.S. military academy in 1829, served as"a lieutenant of infantry in an expedition against the Sac Indians in 1831, and on 13 Feb., 1831, resigned from the army. He was brigade major in the Ohio militia in 1835-'9, became a lawyer, and was a judge of common pleas in 1845, and adjutant-general of the state in 1846. At the beginning of the Mexican war he re-entered the army with the rank of major on the staff, on 3 March, 1847, and served as paymaster at Cincinnati and in the field. He was discharged on 4 March, 1849, but was reappointed on 9 Feb., 1852, and served in the pay department. He had charge of the pay district of Kansas and the territories in 1861-'2, and of that of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware in 1862-'4, and on 29 Nov., 1864, was appointed paymaster-general with the rank of colonel. On 13 March, 1865, he was brevetted major-general in the U. S. army for faithful, meritorious, and distinguished services. He was continued in charge of the pay department at Washington, was promoted brigadier-general on 28 July, 1866, and on 1 Jan., 1872, was retired from active service.


BRICEÑO, Alonso (bre-thayn'-yo), b. in San- tiago de Chili in 1591 ; d. in Caracas in 1667. He entered the Franciscan order in Lima. Peru, 30 Jan., 1605. and was soon promoted to the office of definer and inspector of the convents of his order in Chili, Charcas, and Cajamarca. Briceno presided over a literary assembly in Rome and distinguished himself so much that he was appointed general of his order and judge of appeals of the Spanish provinces. He was proposed by King Philip IV. for the bishopric of Nicaragua, consecrated at Panama, and then translated to the see of Caracas, Venezuela, where he died.


BRICENO, Antonio Nicolas, a revolutionary chief of Venezuela, and one of the signers of the act of independence of that republic, d. in 1813. He was called " the devil " on account of his fiery and violent temper. He was the first chief who made war to the death against the Spanish troops, as Bolivar did afterward. Briceno did not follow Bolivar's orders and separated from him. Being routed by the Spaniards and taken prisoner, he was executed with others in Barinas.


BRICHER, Alfred Thompson, painter, b. in Portsmouth, N. H., 10 April, 1837. He was educated in Newburyport (Mass.) academy, and entered upon a mercantile career in Boston, devoting his leisure to drawing and painting without professional instruction. In a few years he attained noteworthy skill in making landscape studies from nature, and after 1858 devoted himself to the art as a profession. He opened a studio in Boston, and met with some success there, but in 1868 sought a wider field in New York. At the national academy of that year he exhibited “Mill-Stream at Newburyport.” Soon afterward he began to use water-colors in preference to oils, and in 1873 was chosen a member of the American water-color society. Since then he has devoted himself mainly to water-color painting of landscape, marine, and coastwise scenery. His coloring is brilliant, harmonious, and singularly transparent. His attention to detail bars him from the ranks of modern “impressionists,” but he has many admirers among lovers of natural scenery. Among his more notable drawings are “Sunset in October” (1869); “The Maiden's Rock, Lake Pepin” (1870); “Mt. Adams” (1871); “On the Esopus” (1874); “Off Halifax Harbor” (1875); “A Lift in the Fog” (1876); “St. Michael's Mount” (1877); and “What the Tide Left” (1878).


BRICKETT, James, soldier, b. m 1737 ; d. in Haverhill, Mass., 9 Dec, 1818. He practised medicine successfully in Haverhill until the French war offered him an opportunity for service in the field. He was a surgeon at Ticonderoga in 1759-'60, when the French abandoned the vicinity of Lake Champlain. At the beginning of the revolutionary war he was made lieutenant-colonel of the Essex co., Mass., regiment, 20 May, 1775, was wounded at Bunker Hill, 17 June, and in the following year was made brigadier in the expedition preparing for Canada. After Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga (17 Oct., 1777), Gen. Brickett was placed in command of the escort, and marched the prisoners, about 6,000 in number, from the battlefield on Hudson river to Cambridge, Mass.


BRIDGE, Horatio, naval officer, b. in Augusta, Me., 8 April, 1806; d. in Athens, Pa.. 20 March, 1893. He was graduated at Bowdoin in 1825. Among his classmates were Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry W. Longfellow. After the usual three years' course of study he was admitted to the bar in 1828, and practised for ten years, at first in Showhegan, and afterward in Augusta. In 1838 he was appointed a paymaster in the U. S. navy. He was assigned to the "Cyane," and cruised in her until 1841, when, after aii interval of shore duty, he was ordered to the "Saratoga," and in her visited the African coast. After his return he pub-