Although such testimonials do not disprove the possibility that he fled Europe to avoid a shotgun wedding, it seems far more likely that he left in order to pursue a career in a progressive form of Judaism. Many others from Central Europe, among them the renowned liberal rabbis Samuel Adler, Max Lilienthal, Isaac M. Wise, and David Einhorn, did likewise during the middle and late nineteenth century.
Einhorn, no relation to the fiery Ignaz Einhorn of the Pesth congregation, had in fact followed his namesake as rabbi in Pesth in1852, but had to leave after two months because the government closed his synagogue. Having so inflamed the powers governing European Judaism, David Einhorn came to America as rabbi of Temple Har Sinai in Baltimore, where he became known as this country’s uncompromising leader of radical Reform. A generation older than Braun, he shared much of the younger man’s temperament, possibly because both were influenced by their native environment in Hungary.14
When Moshe ben M’hader Yaakov Braun came to America in late August, 1865, he became Edward Benjamin Morris Browne—Ed to his intimates. At least one of his friends was among the many young men who traveled with him that year, just a few months after the American Civil War ended. Adding to the attraction of new opportunities for work and individual enterprise was the novelty of crossing the Atlantic by steamship which had just begun when the war ended. Although this radically improved mode of travel was launched in the early 1860s, it was used exclusively for government priorities and not available to the public until after the war. Thus did the voyage hold exceptional promise for young men like Browne who were embarking not only on a new form of transportation, but on a new life as well.15
Such an experience remains a milepost in memory, easily becoming romanticized and embellished. Years later Browne recalled standing on the docks in Hamburg, “with a longing look [toward] this land of freedom... watching in wonder the many different kinds of ships “ungearing, loosening their tackles, heaving anchor, developing steam, setting sails and saluting with a cannon ball a farewell to old Europe.”16
Musing on the destinations of so many ships, the young rabbi asked an old mariner on a small schooner where he was going. “New York,” the man answered.
Next, Browne noticed a bark and asked its skipper, “Where to, good friend?”
He, too, replied “New York.”
Then Browne spied another ship, the “Red, White and Blue.” It was manned by two sailors and a dog, also going to New York. Browne considered this an indication of American foolhardiness.
Then, according to his memoir, the young emigre watched hundreds of vessels start for New York, “with proud or humble masts, with swelled or baffled sails, with steam, with screws, and with side wheels....” Following them in the distance as they scattered in different directions, he saw them “float on for awhile, and finally rise and sink and recede in the mist....”
Weaving this image into a sermon years later, Browne noted that his ship had reached New York before the others. After three weeks ashore he returned to the docks and encountered the skipper of the “Red, White and Blue,” which had just arrived. Greeting him, Browne mentioned that this crossing had taken much longer than his own, whereupon the seasoned seaman replied, “You traveled by steam.... I had to travel by sail.... The steamer can no more deride the sail than the sail the rudder, for they are the developments of each other. First the rudder, then the sail, then the steam, next electricity. Or the sunbeam, for all we know.”17
Even assuming that Browne concocted the story to enhance a sermon, the words provide evidence that his early interest in science and technology continued throughout his life, as indeed it did. In 1912 he designed an airplane which, after the United States entered the first World War, he offered to the War Department. Even more revealing was his reference to sailing toward the same place by different routes and diverse sources of power, which became a metaphor for his entire life. As shall be seen, he sought the same basic goals as others did, but by different vehicles and different routes. More often than not, he plied the waves alone on uncharted seas, powered solely by his own resourcefulness.18
Browne stayed a short while in New York before departing for Cincinnati at the invitation of Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, a leader of Reform in America, then in its initial stages of development. Reform had no national organization, no standard of observance, and no American-trained rabbis. Wise, who became its chief organizer and institution builder, emigrated from Bohemia in 1846, and after a stormy eight-year tenure in Albany, New York, accepted a call to Congregation B’nai Jeshurun (now known at Wise Synagogue) in the well established German Jewish community of Cincinnati. Soon renowned throughout the country, it was he whom most congregations other than those in the large Jewish centers of New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore consulted when they needed a rabbi. In this capacity Wise was constantly on the lookout for promising young scholars with rabbinic potential.
Wise probably heard of Browne from mutual friends or colleagues in Europe. The renowned rabbi soon took the neophyte under wing and into his home, treating him like a member of the family. Theresa Bloch Wise, the rabbi’s wife, became a surrogate mother to Browne, and he became the brotherly confidant of her children, especially the rebellious son Leo who was only a few years his junior. I. M. Wise nurtured and instructed Browne, supervised his secular education, and masterminded his moves for the foreseeable future.19
The Wises mingled freely in gentile society and introduced Browne to it as one of their own. They were the only Jews living on College Hill, so named because of several institutions of higher learning located there, including Farmer’s College, the Medical College of Ohio, and the Ohio Female College. Browne, while studying privately with Wise for the Reform rabbinate, enrolled in Farmer’s College to further his general education and entered the medical school to follow his interest in science. At the Ohio Female College, where the Wise daughters were the only Jewish students, he spent a sufficient amount of time to become friends with some of more literary minded ladies.20
Although he did not study English before coming to America and later claimed to have had little fluency in it during his initial stay in Cincinnati, Browne made himself understood well enough by members of the Hesperian literary society of the Ohio Female College for them to invite him to contribute to their publication, The Hesperian Gazette. He obliged by submitting a number of humorous, romantic verses. In 1869, Browne inscribed these poems along with others in a 276 page handwritten album entitled “Floral House Weeds,” which he dedicated to Wise and presented to him and Theresa on their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Browne’s first body of work in English, it also included four items in other languages that Wise understood—one in Hebrew, one each for Rabbi and Mrs. Wise in German, and a translation of Lord Byron’s “Maid of Athens” in Hungarian. The verses were mostly romantic and about women, probably tongue-in-cheek. One that was both serious and touching he dedicated to his sister Ilona.21
Despite a disclaimer that his views, “religious or otherwise, should by no means be inferred from these writings,” they often foreshadow issues that he would espouse in the future. In one that suggests the rising voice of organized labor, which he vigorously supported as the movement grew, he seemed to be scolding those who demanded higher wages without having earned them.
We are always complaining, we have less than our neighbor,
Why man! do compare your reward with your labor!
If he works more than you, more reward he may claim;
And