Martin Ferdinand Morris

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Martin Ferdinand Morris (b. 3 December 1834, at Washington, D.C.; d. 12 September 1909, at Washington, D.C.) was an American lawyer.

[edit] Life

Descended from an Irish Catholic family, he was educated at Georgetown University, from which he graduated in 1854. On leaving Georgetown, he entered the Jesuit novitiate at Frederick, Maryland, to prepare himself for the priesthood. His ambition, however, could not be realized, as the death of his father left him the sole support of his mother and sisters.

In 1863, he began the practice of law in Baltimore, Maryland, and in 1867 moved to Washington to enter into partnership with Richard T. Merrick. He continued a member of the firm Merrick and Morris until the death of Merrick (1885), when he formed a partnership with George E. Hamilton, and continued actively to practice his profession, being connected with important litigation both in the local courts and in the Supreme Court.

He was appointed by President Cleveland an associate Justice of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia upon the establishment of that Court in 1893.

He was one of the founders of Georgetown Law School (1871), then under the direction of P. F. Healy, S.J.

[edit] Awards and honors

In 1877, he received from Georgetown the degree of LL.D.

[edit] Works

He wrote "Lectures on the History of the Development of Constitutional and Civil Liberty" (1808); also numerous monographs and addresses.

This article incorporates text from the entry Martin Ferdinand Morris in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.