Morris family papers

The Morris family papers (Collection 2000E) contain the genealogical and estate records of the Morris family of Philadelphia, prominent Quaker businessmen, brewers, and later iron manufacturers, who were also active in the political and civic life of the city. The collection follows several generat...

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Main Author: Morris. (Creator)
Collection:Morris Family Papers
Collection Number:2000E
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
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Online Access:Link to finding aid
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LEADER 12180ntc a2200445 u 4500
001 ead-2000E
008 160718i16761930xx eng d
040 |e dacs 
041 0 |a eng 
099 |a 2000E 
100 3 |a Morris.  |e creator 
245 1 |a Morris family papers  |f 1676 - 1930 
300 |a 2.2 Linear feet  |f ; 6 boxes 
500 |a Processing Information: A few items from the collection have been removed for conservation.They will be returned to the collection, and this finding aid will be updated, once they have been repaired. 
506 |a Open to researchers without restriction. 
520 |a The Morris family papers (Collection 2000E) contain the genealogical and estate records of the Morris family of Philadelphia, prominent Quaker businessmen, brewers, and later iron manufacturers, who were also active in the political and civic life of the city. The collection follows several generations beginning with Anthony Morris (1654-1721) and his descendants through Anthony Saunders Morris (1803-1885) and Henry Morris (1802-1881). Included are early original documents pertaining to Anthony Morris and his immediate descendants, including marriage certificates, deeds, wills, and various business and personal papers. The collection also contains significant genealogical correspondence and documentation, including a manuscript of the Morris family history. 
520 |a The Morris family papers consist of 2.2 linear feet of miscellaneous papers pertaining to the Morris family, prominent Quakers of Philadelphia, beginning with the marriage of Anthony Morris and Mary Jones in 1676, their immigration to America with their son Anthony in 1681, and the family’s establishment in Philadelphia as wealthy brewers and later as iron manufacturers. The papers include correspondence, wills, testamentary papers, deeds, estate papers and genealogical records. The collection follows several Morris generations: Anthony Morris (1654-1721), his son Anthony Morris (1681-1763), and his grandson Anthony Morris (1705-1780), all prominent in the brewing business and all active in political and civic affairs. From this point the collection focuses on two lines of descent. One follows the family of Thomas Morris (1745-1809), son of Anthony Morris (1705-1780), his son Thomas Morris (1774-1841), and his grandson Anthony Saunders Morris (1803-1885), whose correspondence forms a significant part of this collection. The other follows the descendants of Thomas’s brother Samuel Morris (1734-1812), who married Rebecca Wistar (1735-1791). Several of their children figure prominently in the collection, including Anthony Morris (1766-1860), Luke Wistar Morris (1768-1820), Isaac Wistar Morris (1770-1831), Catherine Wistar Morris (1772-1859), and Israel Wistar Morris (1778-1870), the father of Henry Morris (1802-1881). Box 1 includes the genealogical correspondence of Anthony Saunders Morris (1803-1885) and his wife Anne Emlen Morris and her relations. A curious but undated “Memoirs from my father to be regarded” by James Morris (Box 1, Folder 1) may relate to the James Morris born in 1688, thus containing the fatherly advice and counsel of Anthony Morris (1654-1721) to his son. Also noteworthy is the diary of an unidentified woman, possibly of the Morris family, dating from 1845-1849 (Box 1, Folder 5). Box 2 contains wills, testamentary papers, and marriage certificates. Most of the persons represented here are clearly attested in the Morris family history background note. Others not directly attested include Samuel Howell (1723-1807), a copy of whose will is included here. He was a prominent Quaker merchant and financier of the American Revolution. His relation to the Morris family is unclear. William Carter was the second husband of Mary Sutton, whose first husband was John Morris, son of Anthony Morris (1681-1763). The Stephen Paschall and Thomas Paschall wills represent a link to Isaac Wistar Morris (1770-1831), who was married to Sarah Paschall (1772-1842). Of special note is the original 1676 marriage certificate (Box 2, Folder 7) of Anthony Morris (1654-1721) and Mary Jones, and a 1682 certificate from the London Yearly Meeting of Friends, recommending them to the Society of Friends in America in Burlington, New Jersey. The marriage certificate records additional family history on the verso. Recorded here is the birth of Mary’s last son James in 1688, and Mary’s death not long after. Midwife to Mary in 1688 was Agnes Bom, Anthony’s second wife. A photocopied marriage certificate of Elizabeth Bailyes and William Hand (1673, Box 2, Folder 7) relates to the ancestors of Anthony’s wife Phoebe Guest, daughter of George and Alice Bailyes Guest, and represents the actual beginning date of documentary evidence in this collection. Box 3 and 4 contain deeds and related real estate documents, along with some early professional papers of Anthony Morris (1654-1721) and his son Anthony Morris (1681-1763). Most of the documents here have a direct link to the Morris family. A significant series of deeds and related documents, 1792-1863, concerns a tract of land known as Stephen’s Green in Berks, later Schuylkill County. Other deeds and similar documents concern real estate within Philadelphia. Documents of interest include 1695/6 articles of apprenticeship binding Anthony Morris (1681-1763) to Henry Babcock, brewer (Box 3, Folder 1) and Anthony’s 1725 appointment as overseer to the Charter School (Box 3, Folder 3). Box 5 contains the estate papers of Henry Morris (1802-1881), including will, correspondence, sale papers, deeds, and some business records, including papers relating to Morris, Tasker & Co. (Box 5, Folder 3). Henry Gurney Morris (1839-1915) served as executor to his father’s estate. Of note is a photostatic copy of a document (Box 5, Folder 9) detailing the distribution of property, which contains information concerning the descendants of Henry Morris living in 1912. Box 6 contains genealogical material, much of it fragmentary and undated. There is some significant background information concerning ‘Baron’ Henry W. Stiegel (1729-1785), ancestor to Caroline Old, wife of Henry Morris, and Elizabeth and William Bailyes, whose granddaughter, Phoebe Guest, married Anthony Morris (1681-1721). A Morris family history (Box 6, Folder 4) records the Morris genealogy in some detail. There is also a folder of photographic portraits, silhouettes, and photographs of houses related to the Morris family.  
524 8 |a Cite as: [Indicate cited item or series here], Morris family papers (Collection 2000E), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 
541 1 |a Gift of Mrs. Anthony S. Morris; 1976 acquired 
544 |a At the Historical Society of Pennsylvania: Morris family papers (Collection 2000A) Morris family papers (Collection 2000B)  
545 |a The Morris family of Philadelphia is descended from Anthony Morris (b. 1630) of London, a mariner and trader who was lost at sea sometime around 1656. His only son, Anthony Morris (1654-1721), was active in the Society of Friends and immigrated with his wife Mary Jones (d. 1688) and their son Anthony Morris (1681-1763) to America in 1682, settling in Burlington, New Jersey. By 1685 he had moved his family to Philadelphia, building a home on Front Street between Walnut and Chestnut Streets. Anthony worked as a brewer and established the Anthony Morris Brewhouse around 1687. He was also active in politics and civic affairs. He was among the founders of Philadelphia’s first public school in 1689 (later Penn Charter School), commissioned a justice of the peace in 1692, and elected to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1694. He was also mayor of Philadelphia from 1703 to 1704. His son Anthony Morris (1681-1763) followed his father in the brewing profession, becoming apprenticed to Henry and Mary Badcock [Babcock] in 1695. He later built the Morris Brewery at Second and Arch Street. Anthony married Phoebe Guest (1685-1786). Her parents, George Guest and Alice Bailyes Guest, had emigrated from England in 1681. Anthony was also active in local politics. He was elected a member of the Philadelphia Common Council in 1715, and in 1721 was chosen as representative in the Assembly of the Province of Pennsylvania. In 1738 he was elected mayor of Philadelphia. Among the children of Anthony and Phoebe Guest Morris was a son, also Anthony Morris (1705-1780). Anthony Morris (1705-1780) remained in the family brewing business. He is often referred to as “Anthony of Southwark” since he owned two properties, “Solitude” and “Peckham,” in the Southwark section of the city. Anthony married Sarah Powell (1713-1751) in 1730 and later Elizabeth Hudson (circa 1721-1783) in 1752. Anthony and Sarah had several children, among whom were Deborah Morris (1736-1787), Thomas Morris (1745-1809), and Samuel Morris (1734-1812). The children of Anthony and Elizabeth included Luke Morris (1760-1802). Thomas Morris (1745-1809) married Mary Saunders (1747-1774). One of their children, Thomas Morris (1774-1841) married Sarah Marshall (1777-1824), who gave birth to Anthony Saunders Morris (1803-1885). Anthony S. Morris married Anne Emlen Jones (1806-1883). Samuel Morris (1734-1812) married Rebecca Wistar (1735-1791). Together they had many children, among whom were Anthony Morris (1766-1860), Luke Wistar Morris (1768-1830), Isaac Wistar Morris (1770-1831), Catherine Wistar Morris (1772-1859), and Israel Wistar Morris (1778-1870). Luke Wistar Morris and Isaac Wistar Morris became brewers, proprietors of the Luke W. Morris & Co brewery at Dock and Pear Streets. In 1817 Luke Wistar Morris purchased a home at 225 South 8th Street known as the “Morris Mansion.” Isaac married Sarah Paschall (1772-1842). Catherine Wistar Morris remained unmarried. Israel Wistar Morris became a prominent Philadelphia broker and merchant. He married Mary Hollingsworth (1776-1820) in 1799. Among their children was Henry Morris (1802-1881). Henry Morris (1802-1881), an ironmaster by trade, joined his brother Stephen Paschall Morris (1800-1865), proprietor of the Paschall Iron Works, and a third partner, Thomas T. Tasker in 1835 to create the firm of Morris, Tasker and Morris. In 1856 the firm became Morris, Tasker and Company. Henry Morris’s home “Solitude,” was located at Fifth and Tasker Streets; he also maintained a “cottage” in Newport, Rhode Island. Henry Morris married Catherine Old (1800-1889), who was descended from 'Baron' Henry W. Stiegel (1729-1785) a German-American glassmaker and ironmaster, and one of the founders of Manheim, Pennsylvania. Henry Morris and Elizabeth Old had several children, including Henry Gurney Morris (1839-1915). Henry G. Morris married Sarah “Sallie” Marshall; he later served as executor of his father’s estate.  
555 |a Finding Aid Available Online:  
600 1 7 |a Morris, Anne Emlen  |d 1806-1883  |2 Local Sources 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Anthony S.  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Anthony  |d 1654-1721  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Anthony  |d 1681-1763  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Anthony  |d 1705-1780  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Henry  |d 1802-1881  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Isaac Wistar  |d 1770-1831  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Israel Wistar  |d 1778-1870  |2 Local Sources 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Luke  |d 1707-1793  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Thomas  |d 1745-1809  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Morris, Thomas  |d 1774-1841  |2 Local Sources 
600 1 7 |a Stiegel, Henry William  |d 1729-1785  |2 NACO Authority File 
650 7 |a Estate administration--18th-19th Centuries.  |2 Local sources 
650 7 |a Family life--Upper class--Philadelphia--18th and 19th Centuries  |2 Local sources 
650 0 |a Genealogy. 
650 7 |a Real Estate--Legal Documents--19th century  |2 Local sources 
852 |a The Historical Society of Pennsylvania  |b Morris Family Papers  |c 2000E 
856 4 2 |y Link to finding aid  |u http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/m/Morris2000E.html