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MORRIS, Lewis, (half brother of Gouverneur Morris and uncle of Lewis Richard Morris),
a Delegate from New York; born in Morrisania (now a part of New York City),
N.Y., April 8, 1726; instructed by private tutors and was graduated from Yale College in 1746;
engaged in agricultural pursuits; appointed by the Crown a judge of the Court of Admiralty in 1760
and resigned in 1774; again appointed by the provincial congress in 1776, but declined; elected to the
Colonial Assembly of New York in 1769, but was declared disqualified for nonresidence; delegate to
the provincial convention of the colony in April 1775; Member of the Continental Congress
1775-1777, and was a signer of the Declaration of Independence; deputy to the state provincial
congress in 1776 and 1777; county judge of Westchester County in 1777; member of the committee
on detection of conspiracies in 1777; served in the state senate 1777-1781 and 1784-1788, and was
a member of the council of appointment in 1786; member of the first board of regents of the University
of New York and served from 1784 until his death; delegate to the state convention which adopted
the Federal Constitution in 1788; died in Morrisania, N.Y., January 22, 1798; interment in vault
beneath St. Annes of Morrisania Church, Bronx, N.Y.
BibliographyReport of a Treaty with the Western Indians:
Conducted at Pittsburgh September 12-October 21, 1775 and Now for the First Time Published. Commissioners from the Colonial Congress, Lewis Morris... [et. al.]. Madison: Wisconsin
Historical Society, 1908.
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