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  1. 4 de jul. de 2004 · Lewis Morris. Although Lewis Morris was a wealthy landowner who enjoyed the prestige of the social elite, he represented the patriot element in Tory-dominated New York. The British sacked his estate during the war, and his three eldest sons fought under Washington. Born in 1726, Morris was the eldest son of the second lord of the vast manor of ...

  2. Morris was sent by his father to study at Yale College in Connecticut alongside his brothers Richard and Lewis, entering the college in 1743 and graduating three years later in 1746. The same year that he graduated, Morris' grandfather Lewis, who served as governor of New Jersey from 1738 to 1746, died.

  3. Morris was Chief Justice, and wrote a dissenting minority opinion which Cosby found deeply offensive. Cosby recommended Morris' removal from the New Jersey Council on February 5, 1735. In 1738, New Jersey petitioned the crown for a distinct administration from New York, and Lewis Morris served as Governor of New Jersey until his death in 1746 ...

  4. Biography. Born on the estate of his parents, Richard Morris (originally from Monmouthshire, Wales) and Sarah (Pole) Morris in 1671, this Lewis Morris was the first in a lengthy string of men with the same name to inherit the prominent estate of Morrisania in the southwest section of today's Bronx. Richard and Sarah moved their estate from ...

  5. Morris was born on June 4, 1882, in Newport, Rhode Island. He was the son of Francis Morris (1845–1883), a Knickerbocker gentleman and descendant of Gouverneur Morris (a signer of the Articles of Confederation and the United States Constitution ), and his wife Harriet Hall Bedlow (1849–1923). [2] After his father's death, his mother married ...

  6. He was the great-grandson of U.S. Senator John Rutherfurd and 2x great-grandson of Lewis Morris, the Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Rutherfurd was a direct descendant of Peter Stuyvesant , the last Dutch Director-General of New Netherland before it became New York, [5] [6] as well as John Winthrop , the first Governor of Massachusetts . [4]

  7. Its first publications started on November 5, 1733. It has contributions made anonymously by James Alexander, William Smith, and Lewis Morris. The journal targeted the new royal governor of New York, William Cosby, and his conduct. The journal was freely published for two months. Burning of New York Weekly Journal