Richard Valentine Morris | |
Office: | Member of the New York State Assembly from Westchester Co. |
Term Start: | July 1, 1813 |
Term End: | June 30, 1814 |
Predecessor: | Darius Crosby |
Successor: | William Requa |
Birth Date: | 8 March 1768 |
Birth Place: | Morrisania, Province of New York, British America |
Death Place: | New York City, New York, United States |
Party: | Federalist |
Parents: | Lewis Morris Mary Walton |
Children: | 4 |
Allegiance: | United States |
Serviceyears: | 1798–1804 |
Battles: | Quasi-War First Barbary War |
Richard Valentine Morris (March 8, 1768 – May 13, 1815) was a United States Navy officer and politician.[1]
He was born on March 8, 1768, in Morrisania, then a town in Westchester County, which became in 1898 a neighborhood in the borough of the Bronx, New York City. He was one of ten children born to Lewis Morris (1726–1798), a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Mary Walton (1727–1794), a member of a well-known merchant family.[2] [3]
His uncles included Staats Long Morris, Richard Morris, the Chief Justice of the New York Supreme Court, and Gouverneur Morris, a United States Senator from New York. His grand-uncle was Robert Hunter Morris, a Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, and his great-grandfather was Colonial Governor Lewis Morris. His aunt, Helena Magdalena Morris (1762–1840), was married to John Rutherfurd (1760–1840), a United States Senator from New Jersey who served from 1791 to 1798.[3]
On June 7, 1798, he was appointed as Captain in command of, during the Quasi-War with France and made several successful captures of French vessels. At the reduction of the US Navy after the war with France, Morris was retained as fifth in rank and recalled to command the Mediterranean Squadron in 1802 during the First Barbary War.[4]
In command of, Morris led an unsuccessful blockade of Tripoli, mostly remaining in Gibraltar for the better part of 1803.[5] Morris was relieved of duty and command of the squadron would turn over to Edward Preble in . Recalled to the United States, Morris faced a court of inquiry which decided that he had not "discovered due diligence and activity in annoying the enemy".[6]
On May 16, 1804, Secretary of the Navy Robert Smith, with the agreement of President Thomas Jefferson, revoked his captaincy in the U.S. Navy and dismissed him from the service.[7] [8] Morris had brought his wife and young son on board with him and was accused of taking actions "more reflective of a concerned husband and father than a military commander in the midst of a war."[4] In 1804, he published A Defence of the Conduct of Commodore Morris During His Command in the Mediterranean, as a defense to the actions he took while in command of the Mediterranean.[9]
From July 1, 1813 until June 30, 1814, Morris was a Federalist member of the New York State Assembly (Westchester Co.), serving in the 37th New York State Legislature.[10]
On January 24, 1797, Morris was married to Anne Walton (1773–1858). Together, they were the parents of:[11]
Morris died in May 1815 in New York City.[11]
A Political, Social, and Military History]
. 2014. ABC-CLIO. 9781598841572. 432–433. 15 August 2017. en.