While in the yard she was prostrated by a shock of paralysis and was soon found after by her husband, Frank A Brownell, in a helpless and unconscious condition on the ground.ĭr. Almy, to the latter’s residence in Little Compton, returning about 5 PM. Brownell had been in her ordinary health and in better than her wonted spirits through the day, and after dinner, drove in a buggy with a friend, Mrs. The entire community was saddened and shocked this morning to learn of the sudden and unexpected death at her home here Saturday evening of Mrs. Few women would have had the nerve to check a running horse at full speed. Brownell was about half a mile further on in the road with her a little child, and seeing the animal coming, put her child into the ditch, caught the horse by the bit and kept him at a standstill until the owner arrived, who rewarded her liberally. He was discovered by men who tried to stop him, but the horse dodge them and set off at a full run. While absent, the horse backed the carriage out, turned around and started off toward home at a moderate trot. Saturday afternoon Charles W Howland rode into Little Compton in an open buggy attached to a spirited horse, drove under a shed and left the animal unhitched. Husband: Frank Albert Brownell (1858-1938) Siblings: Horace Gray Shaw, Rhoda Harriet Shaw, Lydia Coe Shaw – A Life in Four Newspaper ClippingsĮducation: Providence Conference Seminary East Greenwich Academy
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