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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Sarah E. Morris: Birth: 1848 in , , IL. Death: 1874

  2. William Armstrong Morris: Birth: 7 Feb 1849 in , , IL. Death: 3 Mar 1924

  3. Dizae J. Morris: Birth: 1850 in , , IL.

  4. James Franklin Morris: Birth: 1854 in , Johnson, IL.

  5. Matilda Catherine Morris: Birth: 15 Oct 1854 in , Johnson, IL. Death: 23 Feb 1940

  6. Susan Marinda Morris: Birth: 15 Feb 1856. Death: 20 Apr 1921

  7. Anganeta "Ann" Morris: Birth: 1858 in , , IL.

  8. Georgia Ann Morris: Birth: Oct 1859 in , Johnson, IL.

  9. Edward Anderson Morris: Birth: 8 Mar 1863 in , Johnson, IL. Death: 9 Aug 1929

  10. Arminta Emeline Morris: Birth: May 1866 in , Johnson, IL. Death: 1906

  11. Samuel Reuben Morris: Birth: 1870 in , Johnson, IL. Death: 1944

  12. Peter Morris: Birth: 18 Feb 1871 in , , IL. Death: 29 Jun 1939


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Person Not Viewable

  2. Person Not Viewable


Notes
a. Note:   !* Birth: Biographical Review Johnson and Massac Counties LDS#977.39/D3b. * 1850 census, Johnson Co IL; 1860 census, Johnson Co IL Zion Cemetery (calculated: d. 11 Apr 1897, age 71y 3m 8d) Johnson Co IL Early Mgs, p. 86 (age 56 on 14 Sep 1882) Twin to James Morris. * Name: Daniel W Morris Enumeration Date: 26 Jul 1860 Place: Township 13 S Range 4 E, Johnson, Illinois, USA Schedule Type: Agriculture OS Page: 59 Line Number: 33 !* Marriage: Johnson Co IL Marriages, LDS #964,807 Zion Cemetery Johnson Co IL Early Mrgs 1878-1885, Vol II, comp. by Foss & Lee. (p. 86, 2nd marriage)
  !* Death: Johnson Co IL Deaths,LDS #1,315,890 Zion Cemetery, Johnson Co IL, gathered by Zelda Mathis, RR 1, Box 251, Vienna, IL 62995.
  * Johnson County Illinois Biography of Daniel W. Morris
  Source: "The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope & Hardin Counties, Illinois" Published in 1893 Transcribed by Rick Giirtman April 15, 2002 page 307 & 308
  DANIEL W. MORRIS was born in Maury County, Tenn., in 1825, and is now a prosperous farmer in Bnrnside Township, Johnson County. His father, Reuben Morris, was a Virginian, and a farmer by occupation, who was taken to Tennessee when a child by his parents, and there was reared on a farm. He was married in his youth to Elizabeth Morris, a cousin, by whom he had nine children, five sons and four daughters. Daniel W. had two sisters and three brothers older than himself. He has a twin brother, James, who is a farmer in Arkansas, where he has resided for the past thirty years. The mother of these children died at the age of fifty-seven years, about 1841. She had buried two daughters in early childhood and left seven children at her death. The maternal grandmother of Mr. Morris was Sarah Tibbs, probably of Virginia, who was the daughter and wife of a farmer, and became the mother of sixteen children. She died in Franklin County, ILL., in 1852, at the great age of one hundred and five years, and kept house and did her own cooking until within a short time of her death. Her sons.were brave soldiers under Gen. Jackson. Daniel Morris and Reuben, who were married and were brothers-in-law, were comrades in the war. The latter was married four times, and had nine children,by his first wife, and four by the last, two sons and two daughters. He removed to southern Illinois in the fall of 1841, and brought with him the subject of this sketch and his twin brother, and also Elizabeth Brummet, a granddaughter. His second wife and her child joined him the next year, all coming with ox-teams and covered wagons, in very humble circumstances. Daniel W. at first worked for $8 per month, and during his first year's residence in Illinois he took up eighty acres of timber land within two miles of Vienna, built a log cabin on the claim, and began at once to make a farm. One of his brothers, William, took up an eighty-acre piece adjoining this, which he soon sold to the twin brother of Darnel W. Our subject was married in 1843, to Minerva J. Neely, of middle Tennessee, who was a playmate of his in his youth. His brothers made their home with him, and they lived on this farm about seventeen years, clearing up fifty acres and building a good new house, with a plank floor and clapboard roof, into which they moved from the original home. On this first farm two sons and four daughters were born. Our subject had bought his brother's eighty acres and sold the one hundred and sixty acres for $1,300, buying two miles east one hundred and twenty acres for $1,000. This was already improved with a good log house, and sixty acres were under cultivation. Upon this farm they lived eight years, and then sold it for $1,800, his farm then consisting of one hundred and fifty acres, He afterward removed to Burnside Township and bought two hundred and twenty acres adjoining his present home farm, paying $1,600 for the improved farm, together with corn in the crib and forty head of hogs, sheep and cattle. This was in the year 1866, and in the fall of 1882 he sold one hundred and eighty-three acres for $1,800, having previously sold the other portion for $360. This sale netted him a profit of $500. He now possesses one hundred and sixty-two acres one mile away from his home, besides a tract of one hundred and twenty-seven acres in his home estate. Our subject's first wife died June 6, 1880, aged forty-seven years, and he was married in 1882 to his present wife, who was the widow of A. M. Jackson. Her maiden name was Mary Johnson, and she was the daughter of John Johnson. By his last marriage Mr. Morris had two children, both of whom were sons. One of them died in infancy, and the other one, Danie D., is a bright boy of ten years. He has three sons and one daughter in Kansas. One of his daughters, Sarah, wife of Nathaniel Nichols, died at the age of twenty-six years, leaving one daughter. Awzonetta, died at the age of fifteen. The others died in infancy. Before the organization of the Republican party, Mr. Morris was a Whig, but he has ever since then been a Republican.. He and wife are members of the Missionary Baptist Church.


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