Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Stuyvesant Fish Morris

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Stuyvesant Morris

Role
  
Physician

Died
  
May 10, 1928


Stuyvesant Fish Morris (August 3, 1843 - May 10, 1928) was an American physician and the progenitor of Manhattan's prominent family of physicians.

Contents

Biography

He was a son of Richard Lewis Morris (1805-1880) and Elizabeth Sarah Stuyvesant (1810-1881) and he was born in Manhattan. His siblings include:

  • Richard Lewis Morris, Jr.
  • Elizabeth Stuyvesant Morris
  • James Morris
  • He was also a nephew of Hamilton Fish.

    Stuyvesant enlisted as a private in the Union Army, Company K, 7th Infantry, New York Regiment on June 1, 1862 and he mustered out on September 5, 1862.

    He married Ellen James "Elly" Van Buren (1844-1929), on December 10, 1868 at Saint Mark's Church in Manhattan, New York City. Elly's paternal grandfather was president Martin Van Buren (1782-1862).

    They had the following children:

  • Elizabeth Marshall Morris (1869-1919) who married B. Woolsey Rogers
  • Ellen VanBuren Morris (1873-1954) who married Francis Livingston Pell (1873-1945)
  • Richard Lewis Morris III (1875-?) who married Carolyn Whitney Fellowes (1882-?)
  • Stuyvesant Fish Morris, Jr. (1877-1925)
  • Morris retired in 1913, and in 1920 was living at 16 East 30th Street in Manhattan. He died on May 10, 1928.

    Writings about Morris family

    Jeffrey Thomas writes:

    In 1864 Henry James wrote of [Ellen Van Buren] in a letter, 'Miss Ellen Van Buren is here -- pale, thin, and drooping. We taunt her facetiously with being in love ... whereat she smiles languidly.' Four years later Henry James commented in a letter to William James, 'We heard from Elly Van Buren that she is engaged to one Dr. Morris of New Rochelle, a young physician who has cared for her for 4 years and never has been attentive to any girl in the interval. I should think Elly's own conscience should sting her.' About this time Alice James remarked acidly that Elly's flustered carryings - on about her engagement were likely to exasperate her fiancé beyond endurance. In 1913, Henry, writing to his acolyte Howard Sturgis about the relatives he had mentioned in his memoir A Small Boy and Others, explained enigmatically, 'Yes, my Father's two other sisters were my Van Buren and my Temple aunts. I should have liked to drag in the former's daughter, the intimate of our childhood, or of mine, later Mrs. Stuyvesant Morris, but forebore.' In January 1902 William James wrote to Henry during a visit to the United States, 'I also saw Elly Van Buren, old looking but unaltered in manner.'

    References

    Stuyvesant Fish Morris Wikipedia