Felicia Mary Browne (18 February 1904 – 25 August 1936) was an English artist. She was the first British volunteer to die in the Spanish Civil War.
Felicia Browne was born at Weston Green, Thames Ditton, Surrey, on 18 February 1904, she studied at the St John's Wood School of Art and the Slade School of Art between 1920–21 and 1927-28. She arrived at the Slade at the unusually young age of 16 where she was a contemporary of William Coldstream, Clive Branson, Claude Rogers and Nan Youngman.
She travelled to Berlin in 1928 and to study metalwork and became an apprentice to a stone mason. She was living in Berlin during the rise of Nazism and participated in anti-Fascist activities. One account describes her taking part in anti-Fascist street-fighting. In the early 1930s she returned to Britain, leaving her sculptures and tools behind. In 1933 she joined the Communist Party of Great Britain, attracting the interest of M15 and Special Branch who continued to monitor her until she left for Spain in 1936.
She also became an active member of the Artists' International Association, in 1934 she won a prize for her design of the Trade Union Congress Tolpuddle medal. She contributed art to Left Review.
In July 1936 Browne embarked on a driving holiday to France and Spain, accompanied by her friend Dr Edith Bone, a left-wing photographer. Their objective was to reach Barcelona in time for the People's Olympiad (the socialist riposte to the Olympic games in Hitler's Berlin). However, they arrived shortly before the military rebellion against the Spanish republic that heralded the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), and were immediately caught up in the violence that engulfed Barcelona on 19 July 1936. On 3 August 1936, after several attempts she successfully enlisted in the PSUC (Catalan Communist) Karl Marx militia to fight in Aragaon on the Zaragoza front. According to the Daily Express correspondent Sydney Smith she demanded to be enlisted to fight, declaring that "I am a member of the London Communists and I can fight as well as any man". Shortly after joining she wrote to her friend Elizabeth Watson describing her desperation to get involved; "Apparently no chance of aviation school on account of my eyesight, God damn it."