His great-grandfather, Richard Morris, immigrated to New York through Barbados after being part of Oliver Cromwell's army in the English Civil War of 1648. He purchased the first tract of land in the Bronx that became the basis for the Morrisania manor. Richard and his young wife died, leaving behind an infant son, Lewis Morris. Richard's brother, Colonel Lewis Morris, also of Barbados, came to Morrisania to help manage the estate owned by his infant nephew. Col. Morris and his wife were childless. When he came of age, Lewis Morris expanded and patented the estate. He married Isabella and went on to serve as the 8th Colonial Governor of New Jersey. Morris was a popular governor who championed land owning rights for the colonists. Morristown, New Jersey was named for him.
When active revolution began, he was a member of the New York Provincial Congress, the revolutionary government, from 1775 until 1777. That body, in turn, sent Morris to the Continental Congress for those same years. While in Congress, he was an active supporter of independence and signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776. When warned by his brother Staats Morris, who was a general in the British army, of the consequences that would follow his signing of the rebellious document, Morris stated, "Damn the consequences. Give me the pen." In 1777, Lewis returned to New York, became a county judge of Westchester County, and was appointed a member of the New York State Senate representing the Southern District, which consisted of Kings, New York, Queens, Richmond, Suffolk and Westchester counties. He served in the 1st New York State Legislature, which began on September 9, 1777, until the end of the 4th Legislature, on July 1, 1781. His eldest three sons served during the Revolutionary war, and had distinguished military careers.
On September 24, 1749, Lewis married Mary Walton, a member of a well-known merchant family. Maria was the daughter of Jacob Walton and Maria Walton Lewis and Mary were the parents of ten children:
Catherine Morris, who married Thomas Lawrence
Mary Morris.
Col. Lewis V. Morris, who married Ann B. Elliott, sister-in-law of Congressman Daniel Huger.
Capt. Staats Morris, who married Everarda van Braam Houckgeest, the daughter of Andreas van Braam Houckgeest and Baroness Catharina C.G. van Reeds van Oudtshoorn.
After the Revolution, Morris had to rebuild the family estate, which had been looted and burned by the British when they occupied New York. In 1790, he offered the land, now part of the South Bronx neighborhood of Morrisania, as the site of the U.S. capital. He died on the estate and is buried in the family vault beneath St. Ann's Church in the Bronx.
Descendants
Through his eldest son, Lewis V. Morris, he was grandfather to Lewis Morris and Sabina Elliott Morris. Lewis Morris was the father of Charles Manigault Morris, a ConfederateOfficer. Sabina married her first cousin, Robert Walter Rutherfurd, the son of John Rutherfurd and Helena Morris, and was the mother ofLewis Morris Rutherfurd, a pioneering astrophotographer who took the first telescopic photographs of the moon and sun, as well as many stars and planets. Through his son, Staats Morris, his great-grandson was Daniel François van Braam Morris, a Dutchman and governor of Celebes. A great-granddaughter of his grandfather, Lewis Morris, named Mary Antill was married to Gerritt G. Lansing, himself a brother of Congressman John Lansing. John Lansing's daughter, Sarah, was married to Edward Livingston, a great-grandson of Philip Livingston.
Lewis Morris is portrayed by Ronald Kross in the 1969 Broadway musical 1776 and by Howard Caine in the 1972 film. Although Morris was chairman of the New York delegation to the Second Continental Congress, he abstained on every vote, claiming that the New York Provincial Congress never gave Morris explicit instructions on anything. However, when George Washington noted in a dispatch that Morris's estates were destroyed by the British, but his family was taken to safety in Connecticut, Morris abandons his lack of instructions and moves to sign the Declaration anyway.