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In 1769 Morris married Sarah (Sally) Chubb, daughter of a merchant at Bridgwater, by whom he had six children. [2] She was the sister of well-known amateur artist John Chubb. Thomas Morris was the nephew of Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Morris (1703-1767), also of the 17th Regiment of Foot and who also served in North America (1757-1758?). [27]
Sir Thomas More (7 February 1478 – 6 July 1535), venerated in the Catholic Church as Saint Thomas More, [2] was an English lawyer, judge, [3] social philosopher, author, statesman, theologian, and noted Renaissance humanist. [4] He also served Henry VIII as Lord High Chancellor of England from October 1529 to May 1532. [5]
Thomas Armstrong Morris (December 26, 1811 – March 22, 1904) [1] was an American railroad executive and civil engineer from Kentucky and a soldier, serving as a brigadier general of the Indiana Militia in service to the Union during the early months of the American Civil War.
Morris was said to have settled the peace with the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, four of whom had sided with the British during the Revolution. [6] His father then sold his substantial property in Western New York , which the younger Morris oversaw, [ 7 ] to the Holland Land Company in 1792–1793 for redevelopment in parcels, [ 8 ...
Thomas A. Morris (1811–1904), American General in the Union army, railroad executive and civil engineer Thomas Morris (engineer) (died 1832), English architect and engineer Thomas John Morris (1837–1912), U.S. federal judge
A dialogue of cumfort against tribulation, made by the right vertuous, wise and learned man, Sir Thomas More, sometime L. Chanceller of England, which he wrote in the Tower of London, An. 1534. and entituled thus: a dialogue of cumfort against tribulation, made by an Hungarian in Latin, and translated out of Latin into French, & out of French ...
Thomas Morris is a Welsh writer and editor. He was born and raised in Caerphilly and was educated in the Welsh language all through primary and secondary school. He worked for Welsh TV channel S4C for a period [1] and was a trialist for Cardiff City F.C. [2] He then moved to Ireland where he studied English and Philosophy at Trinity College Dublin, where he became chairperson of the Literary ...
Thomas Morris (January 3, 1776 – December 7, 1844) was an American politician from Ohio who served in the United States Senate and was a member of the Democratic Party. In the 1844 presidential election , he was the vice presidential nominee of the anti- slavery Liberty Party .