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Morris family papers

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Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Hugh Martin Morris was born to William Wilkinson Morris and Mary Luther Collison Morris at the family home in Greenwood, Sussex County, Delaware on April 9, 1878. Six generations earlier, around 1740, the Greenwood land had been granted by the Colony of Maryland to Daniel Morris, Daniel's son, Curtis Morris, further developed the Morris acquisitions in Sussex County.

Hugh M. Morris was graduated from Delaware College with a Bachelor of Arts in 1898 and returned to Sussex County to teach school for two years. In 1900, he began the study of law under the preceptorship of Willard Saulsbury, Jr., who served as United States Senator from Delaware, 1913-1919. After admission to the Bar in 1903 and several years of independent practice in Wilmington, Morris joined Saulsbury's firm in 1909. In 1914, the firm was reorganized under the name Saulsbury, Morris & Rodney.

On January 27, 1919, Morris was appointed U.S. district judge by President Woodrow Wilson. The time of Judge Morris' appointment to the Federal Bench immediately following the First World War was marked by a growth in the nature and the volume of corporate litigation coming before the Delaware courts. The new judge was required to deal with changing Delaware corporate laws that set both state and federal precedent. "That Judge Morris was fully equal to the task and discharged that duty and responsibility diligently and to the high credit of the office is attested by the penetrating analysis, adherence to sound legal principle, and clarity of expression which characterize his reported opinions both in the District Court and in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, where he was sometimes called to sit, and by the esteem in which he was held by lawyers everywhere." (Reed)

Judge Morris resigned from the Federal Bench on June 30, 1930 and returned to private practice of the law at the firm of Morris, Steel, Nichols & Arsht. At the time of his death in 1966, the name of the firm was Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnel.

Hugh Morris was also active in civic and community affairs. He served as vice president and director of Wilmington Trust Company; manager of the Wilmington Savings Fund Society; member and president of the Board of Trustees of the University of Delaware; and trustee of the Tower Hill School. He was a member of the Society of Colonial Wars, and member and president of the Delaware Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. Hugh Morris was a member of the Phi Kappa Pi Fraternity, a registered democrat, and a member of the Episcopal Church. He received an honorary doctorate of laws from the University of Delaware in 1928.

Morris married Emma Carter Smith, daughter of James Andrew Smith and Rachel Carter Smith, on October 10, 1908. Their only daughter, Mary Smith Morris, was born August 8, 1912. The Morris home in Newark was located near Polly Drummond Hill.

Bevan, Wilson Lloyd, ed. History of Delaware, Past and Present. New York: Lewis Historical Pub. Co., 1929. vol 3, p. 88.Reed, Henry Clay, ed. Delaware, A History of the First State: Personal and Family Records. New York: Lewis Historical Pub. Co., 1947. vol. 3, p. 5.Who's Who in Delaware. Chicago: The A.N. Marquis Company, 1939. p. 623.

The Morris family papers span the dates 1740-1985, with the bulk dates 1864-1925. The collection includes legal deeds, account books, personal and business correspondence, legal briefs, and photographs. The papers were acquired in various separate accessions: general correspondence and papers were received as a gift after the death of Judge Morris in 1966, miscellaneous William Wilkinson Morris letters were received as a gift in 1974, and a single letter was donated in 1985. Photographs were added in the 1990s, and a 2015 addition added significantly to the papers of James A Smith.

There are six series in the Morris family papers:

Series I, Morris family, documents the Morris family land holdings and includes both original and photo reproductions of deeds and indentures of Greenwood, Northwest Fork Hundred, and other Morris land holdings. Also includes some family wills. The documents date from 1740-1890s.

Series II, William Wilkinson Morris, consists of personal correspondence. Major correspondents include M.N. Gray (correspondence dating between 1865-1867), a friend who was making better wages working at a store in Greensborough, Maryland than he could make on the farm in Delaware; the courting letters between Williams and Mary Luther Collison, dating between 1874-1875; and letters from cousin W.H. Brokaw in Fair Hill, Maryland (letters date from 1864-1868).

Series III, James A. Morris, includes receipts, checks, correspondence, wills, estate documents, broadsheets, accounts, clippings and bank account books, reflecting various clerical appointments held and legal work conducted by Smith, Hugh M. Morris' father-in-law.

Series IV, Hugh M. Morris, consists of school notebooks, correspondence and legal papers. The school notebooks include books of verbatim lecture notes from Delaware College, 1896-1898. His personal correspondence includes ca. 100 letters of congratulations received upon Morris' appointment to the Federal Bench, 1919, and carbons of his replies to these letters. Miscellaneous items include a memo reflecting a political difference between Delaware Governor Cox and P.S. DuPont, 1920; legal documents in re Pusey & Jones submitted by Saulsbury to Judge Morris, 1923-1925; and a reprint of an article published in The Outlook, 1903, by George Kennan. Written in the muckraking journalism of the day,

Holding up a State tells the story of political corruption and vote buying by J. Edward Addicks in Sussex and Kent counties. The Hugh Morris papers also include landscape plans from 1960 commissioned by Mary Smith Morris for renovation of the Morris Estate in Polly Drummond Hill, Newark.

Series V, Willard Saulsbury, Jr., includes letters of introduction carried on his travels abroad and miscellaneous business correspondence. The correspondence from his senate years, 1913-1919 includes a passport signed by U.S. Secretary of State W. J. Bryan, prepared for Saulsbury's 1915 trip to Japan and China.

Series VI, Morris family photographs, seem to be chiefly from the Hugh M. Morris family, although there are several people from an earlier generation and one arte de visite of Willard Saulsbury, Sr., U.S. Senator from Delaware, 1859-1871. The Hugh Morris family pictures include portraits of family members, photographs of family pets, and numerous scenes from the Morris Estate in Polly Drummond Hill, Newark. Also includes portraits of Judge Hugh M. Morris by Yousuf Karsh.

  1. Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS record center cartons
  2. Box 2: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize boxes (24 inches)
  3. VHS tape: Shelved in SPEC media videocassettes

Multiple gifts from the Morris family (1985), Robert F. Rider (1992), Samuel Arsht (1993), Helen Kirkatrick Patchel (1995), David Sheehan, Jr. (1995), and James Hall (2015). The collection also includes material transferred from the University of Delaware University Archives and University of Delaware Special Collections.

Processed by L. Rebecca Johnson, December 1990. Finding aid encoded by Lauren Connolly, May 2016. Additional processing and encoding by John Caldwell, February 2020.

Publisher
University of Delaware Library Special Collections
Finding Aid Author
University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
Finding Aid Date
2016-05-16
Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research

Use Restrictions

Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/

Collection Inventory

Documents and maps.
Box 1 Folder F1 Box 2 Folder F1
Documents related to land holdings.
Box 1 Folder F2 Box 2 Folder F2
Wills.
Box 1 Folder F3 Box 2 Folder F3
Family and miscellaneous indentures and documents.
Box 1 Folder F4

Correspondence from friends and relatives, 1863-1868.
Box 1 Folder F5
Correspondence from Mary Luther Collison, 1874-1875.
Box 1 Folder F6
Correspondence from John Holland, 1904.
Box 1 Folder F7
Letters to Mary (Mrs. W.W.) Morris, n.d.
Box 1 Folder F8

Scope and Contents

This series documents in part the legal, social and business environment and relationships in Kent County, Delaware, at the turn of the twentieth century through the legal and financial management work of James A. Smith.

The original content of this series included two folders "Documents, 1896-1905," and "Bank Books, 1896-1926." The 2015 addition to the collection includes a wider array of estate and legal documents, checks, bills and accounting records, and correspondence, arranged separately.

Papers from the 2015 addition included in this series are organized by type (e.g. checks and deposit clips, legal documents, etc.). For individuals or families with a significant number of records, these have been identified by name, and are filed separately.

Documents, 1896-1905.
Box 1 Folder F9
Scope and Contents

Correspondence, cetrificates of apppointment to clerkships, and account information related to his legal and estate administrative work.

Bank Books, 1896-1926.
Box 1 Folder F10
Anderson, Charles, 1912.
Box 1 Folder F39
Blades, William, 1903-1905.
Box 1 Folder F40 Box 2 Folder F4
Booth, J. Kaerman and Etta, 1918.
Box 1 Folder F41
DeLong, Estella and Sydney/Samuel Knox, 1909.
Box 1 Folder F42
Dorman, George W., 1903-1904.
Box 1 Folder F43
Franklin Bros [Brothers], 1909-1912.
Box 1 Folder F44
Lewis, Emmit, 1901.
Box 1 Folder F45
Mileham, Lydia, 1902-1904.
Box 1 Folder F46 Box 2 Folder F4
Money, Elizabeth M., 1908-1910.
Box 1 Folder F47
Morris, William and Sarah, 1902-1919.
Box 1 Folder F48 Box 2 Folder F4
Parris, Matthew, 1899.
Box 1 Folder F49
Paskey, Walter, 1911, 1918.
Box 1 Folder F50
Peckham, Sarah, 1904-1910.
Box 1 Folder F51 Box 2 Folder F4
Perkins, Joseph F., 1911.
Box 1 Folder F52
Radcliffe, George, 1894.
Box 1 Folder F53
Reynolds, Wollie Taylor, 1897-1898.
Box 1 Folder F54
Sherwood, Samuel and Ellen, 1884.
Box 1 Folder F55
Smith, Mary, 1892-1912.
Box 1 Folder F56
Walls, Mary, 1909.
Box 1 Folder F57
Correspondence, general, 1899-1924, undated.
Box 1 Folder F58
Delaware State Sunday School Association, 1893-1905, undated.
Box 1 Folder F59
Miscellaneous legal documents, 1892-1916.
Box 1 Folder F60
Checks and receipts: Amos P. Hinsley.
Box 1 Folder F61
Scope and Contents

Checks written by James A. Smith to Amos P. (A.P.) Hinsley.

Checks and receipts: S.L. Shaw.
Box 1 Folder F62
Scope and Contents

Checks written by James A. Smith to S.L. Shaw.

Tax assessments and receipts.
Box 1 Folder F63
Miscellaneous checks, receipts, and accounting, 1 of 4.
Box 1 Folder F64
Miscellaneous checks, receipts, and accounting, 2 of 4.
Box 1 Folder F65
Miscellaneous checks, receipts, and accounting, 3 of 4.
Box 1 Folder F66
Miscellaneous checks, receipts, and accounting, 4 of 4.
Box 1 Folder F67
Miscellaneous checks and deposit slips.
Box 1 Folder F68
James A. Smith papers, oversized.
Box 2 Folder F4

Delaware College Notebooks, 1896-1898.
Box 1 Folder F11
1919 Jan 22-23.
Box 1 Folder F12
1919 Jan 24-25.
Box 1 Folder F13
1919 Jan 26-31.
Box 1 Folder F14
1919 Feb 1-18.
Box 1 Folder F15
Part 1.
Box 1 Folder F16
Part 2.
Box 1 Folder F17
Part 3.
Box 1 Folder F18
Part 4.
Box 1 Folder F19
"Holding Up a State" by George Kennan, 1903.
Box 1 Folder F20
Governor Cox/P.S. duPont letter, 1920.
Box 1 Folder F21
Delaware Society of Colonial Dames, 1939.
Box 1 Folder F22
Miscellaneous items.
Box 1 Folder F23
Morris Estate landscape plans, 1960, 1960.
Box 1 Folder F24 Box 2 Folder F5
Judge Hugh M. Morris and daughter, Mary, on holiday in Bermuda with Mr. and Mrs. S. Samuel Arsht and family, 1953.
Box VHS 4

Correspondence, 1909–1910.
Box 1 Folder F25
Correspondence (Senate years), 1913-1919.
Box 1 Folder F26 Box 2 Folder F6
Correspondence, 1920-1925.
Box 1 Folder F27

People (older photographs).
Box 1 Folder F28
People.
Box 1 Folder F29 Box 2
Scope and Contents

Includes oversized portraits of Judge and Mrs. Hugh M. Morris.

May Morris.
Box 1 Folder F30
Pets.
Box 1 Folder F31
Unrestored.
Box 1 Folder F32
[n.d.].
Box 1 Folder F33
1934-1935.
Box 1 Folder F34
1950 May – Jun .
Box 1 Folder F35
Scope and Contents

(color photographs)

[n.d.].
Box 1 Folder F36
Scope and Contents

(color photographs)

1961 Sep .
Box 1 Folder F37
Scope and Contents

(color photographs)

Unidentified home.
Box 1 Folder F38
Morris Estate, oversized, n.d.
Box 2 Folder F7

Print, Suggest