Felix Reville Brunot
Felix Reville Brunot
Felix Reville Brunot

Felix Reville Brunot

1820 - 1898
BiographyFelix Reville Brunot was the first born child of Hilary and Ann Brunot and was born in Newport Barracks, Kentucky. At the age of fourteen, after attending Western University in Allegheny, he enrolled at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. Upon graduation, he was employed as a civil engineer. Felix moved to Rock Island, Illinois and operated a flour mill in Camden, Illinois from 1842 to 1847. In 1846, he married Mary Ann Hogg. The couple returned to Pittsburgh in 1847 where Felix co-founded the Singer, Nimick and Co. steelworks. Felix was a director, and later president, of the Allegheny Valley Railway in the 1850s and 1860s.

Felix Brunot twice refused a military commission to serve in the Civil War and instead chose to arrange and lead volunteer teams to aid wounded soldiers. In 1862, he was captured by the Confederate Army and was a prisoner at Libby Prison in Richmond Virginia for three months. He returned to Pittsburgh in time to serve as the Chairman of the Pittsburgh Sanitary Fair which was held in 1864. In 1868, President Johnson named Brunot the chairman of the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs. Brunot spent four summers, over the six years that the Bureau was active, visiting Native Americans and Indian agencies throughout the western territories to provide the federal government with recommendations on the treatment of the Native American peoples.

Felix Brunot's philanthropic activities established him as one of prominent donors to many institutions in the city. In 1848, he co-founded the Young Men's Mercantile Library Association which operated a commercial library which was open to men at a nominal fee. The Association sponsored courses and lectures and through Brunot's efforts, built a permanent home in 1870.Brunot was a director of several organizations including: Allegheny Cemetery Association, Western Pennsylvania Hospital, Allegheny General Hospital and the Western University of Pennsylvania, and the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania.
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