Charles Morris (surveyor general) explained
Charles Morris (8 June 1711 - buried 4 November 1781) army officer, served on the Nova Scotia Council, Chief Justice of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court (1776–1778) and, the surveyor general for over 32 years, he created some of the first British maps of Canada's maritime region and designed the layout of Halifax, Lunenburg, Lawrencetown, and Liverpool.[1] In Halifax, he laid out both the present-day down town core and the Halifax Common.
History
He was born in Boston and when he first came to the colony he fought in the Battle of Grand Pré. The maps he produced and information he gathered about the disposition of Acadians villages during his surveying of the colony was later used by the Military authority in Halifax to initiate the Expulsion of the Acadians during the French and Indian War.
He was named to the Council 30 December 1755, and did not directly participate in the expulsion decision that July.[2]
He fought for and won the establishment of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly (1758). Morris was instrumental in establishing New England Planters in the colony.
As chief justice, his most famous trial was of those who participated in the Eddy Rebellion (1776) at the outbreak of the American Revolution.
Publications
- Morris . Charles . 1755 . 1881 . Judge Morris' remarks concerning the removal of the Acadians . Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society . II . 158–160 .
- Morris . Charles . 1764 . 1964 . Observations and remarks on the survey made by order of His Excellency according to the instructions of the 26th June last, on the eastern coasts of Nova Scotia and the western parts of the island of Cape Breton . PANS Report (Halifax) . app.B, 20–28 .
- Morris . Charles . 1768 . April 1903 . The St. John River: Description of the harbour and river of St. John's, in Nova Scotia, and of the Townships of Sunbury, Burton, Gage, and Conway, lying on said river . . . dated 25th Jan. 1768 . Acadiensis . III . 2 . 120–128 .
- (originally printed as a four page pamphlet)
- Morris . Charles . Bulkeley . Richard . 1763 . 1933 . State and condition of the province of Nova Scotia together with some observations &c, 29th October 1763 . PANS Report . app.B, 21–27 .
- Morris . Charles . 1762 . 1904 . Description and State of the New Settlements in Nova Scotia in 1761 . Report Concerning Canadian Archives for the Year 1904 . Appendix F, 289–300 .
- Morris . Charles . 1749 . 1912 . Report by Captain Morris to Governor Shirley Upon His Survey of Lands in Nova Scotia Available for Protestant Settlers, 1749 . Report of the Work of the Archives Branch for the Year 1912 . Appendix H, 79–83 .
Legacy
See also
References
Endnotes
Texts
Notes and References
- Morris was preceded in his mapping by Nathaniel Blackmore's work of 1711 & 1712, published by Herman Moll, Geographer, of London. Morris may have been the first observer/surveyor to produce and publish his own maps of the region. Like Blackmore, Morris surveyed portions of the region and then combined his work with information from other mapmakers' maps to produce his larger regional maps.
- Morris, Charles (1711-81) . Phyllis R. . Blakeley . 4 .
- Web site: Researchers Identify Morris Building as Halifax's Oldest Wooden House . St. Mary's University . 19 June 2012 . 2021-08-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120819202222/https://www.smu.ca/newsreleases/2012/june/researchers-identify-morris-building-as-halifaxs-oldest-wooden-house.html . 2012-08-19 . dead.