Charles Morris (surveyor general)

For other people with the same name, see Charles Morris (disambiguation).
Charles Morris
Surveyor General
In office
1748–1781
Monarch George III
Succeeded by Charles Morris (1731–1802)
Chief Justice of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court
In office
1776–1778
Preceded by Jonathan Belcher (jurist)
Succeeded by Bryan Finucane
Personal details
Born (1711-06-08)June 8, 1711
Boston, Massachusetts
Died November 4, 1781(1781-11-04) (aged 70)
Windsor, Nova Scotia
Relations Charles Morris (1731–1802), son; Charles Morris (1759–1831), grandson
Religion Church of England
Charles Morris St. Paul's Church (Halifax), Nova Scotia
Chaining Pin and Plaque marking original Charles Morris House Location, VIC Suites on Hollis & Morris Streets, Halifax, Nova Scotia[1]

Charles Morris (8 June 1711 buried 4 November 1781) army officer, served on the Nova Scotia Council, Chief Justice of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court (1776-1778) and, the surveyor general for over 32 years, he created some of the first British maps of Canada's maritime region and designed the layout of Halifax, Lunenburg, Lawrencetown, and Liverpool.[2] In Halifax he laid out both the present-day down town core and the Halifax Common.

History

He was born in Boston and when he first came to the colony he fought in the Battle of Grand Pre. The maps he produced and information he gathered about the disposition of Acadians villages during his surveying of the colony was later used by the Military authority in Halifax to initiate the Expulsion of the Acadians during the French and Indian War.

He fought for and won the establishment of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly (1758). Morris was instrumental in establishing New England Planters in the colony.

As chief justice, his most famous trial was of those who participated in the Eddy Rebellion (1776) at the outbreak of the American Revolution.

Publications

Legacy

See also

References

Endnotes

  1. http://www.snaphalifax.com/index.php?option=com_sngevents&id%5B%5D=564314
  2. Morris was preceded in his mapping by Nathaniel Blackmore's work of 1711 & 1712, published by Herman Moll, Geographer, of London. Morris may have been the first observer/surveyor to produce and publish his own maps of the region. Like Blackmore, Morris surveyed portions of the region and then combined his work with information from other mapmakers' maps to produce his larger regional maps.

Texts

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