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Carrie Mathilde <I>Brown</I> Bajnotti

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Carrie Mathilde Brown Bajnotti

Birth
Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Death
6 Apr 1892 (aged 49)
Città Metropolitana di Palermo, Sicilia, Italy
Burial
Rome, Città Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Died at Palermo, Sicily.
Age 46

Daughter of Nicholas Brown, of Providence, Rhode Island.
Wife of Paolo BainottiCarrie Mathilde Brown Bajnotti was the younger sister (b. 1841) of Annmary Brown Hawkins. The girls were the daughters of Nicholas Brown III and Caroline Clements Brown; they were the granddaughters of the second Nicholas Brown, the benefactor after whom Brown is named. As a result of their father's apppointment as Consul to Rome by President Polk, they spend much of their childhood in a variety of European locales, including Rome and Switzerland. General Christopher Rush Hawkins often blamed these childhood European sojourns for the continued respiratory ailments from which his beloved wife, Annmary Brown Hawkins, and also his sister-in-law, Carrie, of whom he was very fond, suffered during their lives. Carrie Brown married the Italian Count Bajnotti, a Foreign Affairs officer, and moved to Europe, living in St. Petersburg, Rome and Paris. She died in Palermo in 1892.

The painter Emilio Gola was the wealthy son of a Milanese aristocrat. Trained as an engineer, he studied with artists in Italy, France, the Netherlands, and England. He is known primarily for his original use of color and bold brushwork.
Died at Palermo, Sicily.
Age 46

Daughter of Nicholas Brown, of Providence, Rhode Island.
Wife of Paolo BainottiCarrie Mathilde Brown Bajnotti was the younger sister (b. 1841) of Annmary Brown Hawkins. The girls were the daughters of Nicholas Brown III and Caroline Clements Brown; they were the granddaughters of the second Nicholas Brown, the benefactor after whom Brown is named. As a result of their father's apppointment as Consul to Rome by President Polk, they spend much of their childhood in a variety of European locales, including Rome and Switzerland. General Christopher Rush Hawkins often blamed these childhood European sojourns for the continued respiratory ailments from which his beloved wife, Annmary Brown Hawkins, and also his sister-in-law, Carrie, of whom he was very fond, suffered during their lives. Carrie Brown married the Italian Count Bajnotti, a Foreign Affairs officer, and moved to Europe, living in St. Petersburg, Rome and Paris. She died in Palermo in 1892.

The painter Emilio Gola was the wealthy son of a Milanese aristocrat. Trained as an engineer, he studied with artists in Italy, France, the Netherlands, and England. He is known primarily for his original use of color and bold brushwork.


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