Lewis Gouverneur Morris (August 19, 1808 – September 19, 1900) was an American maritime advocate and sheep and cattle breeder who was a member of the prominent Morris family of Morissania.[1]
Morris, who inherited "Mt. Fordham", his family's estate,[2] was a resident of Morris Heights, New York, maintained a small farm at Fordham, until it was encroached upon. He then purchased another farm in Scarsdale and on these farms bred sheep and cattle.[1][9][10]
In 1838, he took up his lifelong fight to restore and improve the Harlem River. After careful legal consultation and planning, on September 14, 1838, he led a raid on the Macombs Dam, and restored the channel. After a long legal battle with the dam's owner, he persevered in Renwick v. Morris. The removal of the dam was justified as being a public nuisance in violation of the original provisions of the dam's public authorization.[2]
In 1840, Morris was appointed inspector of the New York State Militia, 4th Division, with the rank of colonel. During the U.S. Civil War, he was prominent and active in support of the Union, serving as a member of the War Committee.[2] In August 1862, he again was appointed Colonel and was noted for recruiting the 135th Regiment of Infantry, later known as the 6th New York Heavy Artillery Regiment, under the command of Brigadier Gen.William H. Morris, son of George Pope Morris, the poet, although neither were members of his Morris family.[2]
Personal life
In July 1839, he married Emily Lorillard (1819–1850),[2][11] the daughter of Jacob Lorillard (1774–1836) and granddaughter of Pierre Abraham Lorillard, founder of the Lorillard Tobacco Company.[12] Her sister Eliza Meier Lorillard married Nathaniel Platt Bailey.[11] Together, they were the parents of four sons, two of whom died young. Their two surviving sons were:[2]
Fordham Morris (1842–1909),[13] who married Annie Louisa Westcott, daughter of Joseph H. Westcott, in 1872.[2]
Francis Morris (1844–1883), who married Harriet Hall Bedlow, daughter of Henry Bedlow.[2] After his death, she married John Rex Guelph-Norman (1861–1932), who claimed to be the son of King Edward VII and rightful heir to the throne,[14] in 1898.[15] They divorced after she discovered he had a wife in India.[16][17]
Morris died at his home, Mt. Fordham,[18] on September 19, 1900, at the age of 92.[1][19]
Descendants
Through his son Fordham, he was the grandfather of Emily Lorillard Morris,[20] who married Rolaz Horace Gallatin,[21] son of Frederic Gallatin and Almy Goelet (née Gerry),[22] and cousin of Albert Eugene Gallatin and nephew of Commodore Elbridge Thomas Gerry, in April 1896.[23]
^An Abstract of the Proceeding of the County Agricultural Societies: Address, Lewis G. Morris, President of the Society. Vol. XIII - 1853. Albany, New York: Transactions of the New York State Agricultural Society. 1 March 1854. pp. 210–218, 87, 745, 757. Having drawn a very favorable position for agriculture, as an occupation[...]It is mainly owing to the establishment of societies such as this, all over our Union, and by aid of the agricultural press,[...] which means it affords our American aptitude a change to apply the experience of the old world, for centuries, and our inventive genius as a nation has led to many improvements which are better adapted to our soil and climate.[...Won by Morris...] Award of Premiums, 1853: Class I. - Cattle: No. 1. Short Horns. [8 Awards totaling $110(equivalent to $3,381 in 2019) ] No. 2 Devons [6 Awards totaling $63(equivalent to $1,936 in 2019)]
^"Prince de Guelph". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. March 27, 1909. p. 10. Retrieved 27 September 2017. [Guelph-Norman] then came to New York as "Prof. John R. Guelph Norman," attracted by the offer of Charles Broadway Rouss of $1,000,000 (equivalent to $30,732,000 in 2019) to any man who could restore his sight. He said he had lived in India and had attended the King of Siam for blindness. Sued Month After Marriage,. Then Norman met Mrs. Harriet Hall Bedlow Morris, widow of Commander Morris, U. S. N., and daughter of the late Henry Bedlow, once Mayor of Newport, R. I. Norman treated the daughter. He courted her and won the mother. Here entered the stories of his having a wife in India. Mrs. Norman filed suit for divorce within one month of the marriage. Norman returned to New York, where Mrs. Hilda Schleatter, charging that he had hypnotized her out of $1000, had him arrested. He was sent to Ludlow Street Jail