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THE MORRIS HOUSE:
(1854-1900)
LOCATION
The
Morris House was located on the northeast corner of Jackson Avenue
and Ocean Avenue.
BUILDING:
No photographs or plans of the Morris House are
currently known to exist. From a description of the house, it can
be estimated with some degree of certitude that the structure was
probably about 4000 square feet in area. The gallery may have been
as large as 900 square feet.

HISTORY
The
Morris House was one of the first boarding houses to be built in
Ocean Springs. It was located on the east side of Jackson Avenue
just north of the steamboat landing at the foot of Jackson Avenue.
It was a neighbor to the large Ocean Springs Hotel just across the
street. This inn was built by James Morris and Ann Morris on land
purchased from E.R. Porter and George A. Cox in September 1853 and
October 1854.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 72, pp. 446-448)
The
Ocean Springs Gazette
dated March 4, 1855 ran an advertisement to sell the Morris House.
The ad read as follows:
The undersigned offers for sale on accommodating terms, his new,
large and spacious boarding house, situated on the corner of Jackson
and Ocean Avenues. Said house is well furnished for a private
boarding house, containing 24 rooms well furnished.
The house is well supplied with furniture, a good cooking range,
cooking utensils, etc. I will sell with or without furniture.
The lot on which said house stands is 91 ft. 6 in. front, more or
less, and 200 ft. in depth, or I will sell with it or separately
another lot adjoining, 90 ft. front more or less, and 200 ft, in
depth. Apply to the undersigned on the premises.
JAMES MORRIS
James
Morris was probably born in Ireland. His wife, Ann (1819-1900), was
a native of Ireland, and came to the United States in 1832. They
had ten children, but only Elizabeth Morris Hill (1848-1933), Emmanuel
J. Morris (1849-1899) both born in Louisiana, and Kate Morris (b. 1855) probably
born at Ocean Springs survived to adulthood. From the US Census, it
appears James Morris died before 1860. At least four of the Morrises are known to be buried in the Evergreen Cemetery at Ocean
Springs.
Mrs.
Morris ran the boarding house with the philosophy that the
"object of the proprietress is to render the Morris
House in every respect a home residence".(The New Orleans
Times, May 20, 1866, p. 1).
The
New Orleans Times
of July 1, 1866 advertised as follows:
MORRIS HOUSE
Ocean
Springs
The Morris House, located on the main road (JacksonAvenue), offers every accommodation to invalids,
families, and transient guests.Its location in immediate proximity to the chalybeateand sulphur springs, is a great convenience, and the
facilities for sea bathing are unsurpassed.
It presents every advantage of a watering place with
the comforts of a private residence.(p.
2, col. 4).
E.J.
Morris and Ann Morris also owned the Artesian House on Jackson at
Porter between 1895-1900. She leased it to Caspar Vahle in October
1899.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 20, pp. 639-640)
Elizabeth Morris married Thomas G. Hill (1839-1880+) from Alabama.
Hill was a retail grocer at Ocean Springs. In 1896, Elizabeth Hill
was the proprietor of the Morris House. She was a widow by 1900
living in Ocean Springs with her two daughters, Alice Hill Grayson (b.
1868), and Annie Hill Simmons (b. 1880) as well as her mother, Ann
Morris, who would die shortly in October 1900. She also had a son,
Harry Hill (1866-1915).
Mrs.
Annie Morris advertised in The Pascagoula Democrat-Star on
July 4, 1884, as:
Nice Furnished Rooms
In
private family, single or in suits; with or without board. Terms to
suit the times.
Apply to
Mrs. A. Morris
Ocean Springs, Miss.
Emmanuel Morris, called E.J., became a real estate magnate at Ocean
Springs. Charles Dyer in Along The Gulf (1895) said
this about Morris:
Mr. Morris is one of the largest real estate dealers in this city
and has done more towards the advancement and up building of Ocean
Springs than any man who lives there. He is enthusiastic on the
subject, and, if anyone is desirous of gaining any information on
this subject, they would do well to write him.
In
August 1896, E.J. Morris was awarded a contract for ten years by the
City of Ocean Springs to run the public wharf, bath house, and
concession at the foot of Jackson Avenue. The Morris Pavilion at
the end of the pier was the site of band concerts on Sunday
afternoons. E.J. Morris sold his lease to Alice Grayson, his niece,
for $460 on September 30, 1896.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. Book 20, pp.
639-640 and The City of Ocean Springs, Minute Book (1892-1899), p.
140)
In
1898, Morris also owned a large lumber mill on Fort Bayou called the
E.J. Morris Lumber Company. The Millsite Subdivision is located on
this former plant site.
The
Morris House was probably the first boarding house built at Ocean
Springs. It existed for approximately forty-five years on Jackson
Avenue serving as a haven for travelers at Ocean Springs seeking a
home away from home. Its demise possibly came about as the railroad
displaced the steamboat as a mode of mass transportation in the
area. Other contributing factors could have been the aging of the
structure and Ann Morris, and the construction of the "modern"
Artesian House by Alfred E. Lewis in 1891. It appears the building
burned or was demolished by 1901. The lot has remained vacant
since this time.
Aline
Cottage
In
late 1896, the Morris House was leased and called the Aline Cottage.
The "Aline House" was mentioned in The Pascagoula Democrat-Star of October 15, 1897.
No further
information.
Louis
A. Lundy et al
L.A.
Lundy (1876-1941) acquired the former Morris House property from the Hills in 1901.
Lundy sold the lots to Frank H. Bryan (1872-1936) in March 1910.
Joseph Weider (1879-1931) built a lovely Queen Anne home here at 406
Jackson Avenue for Mr. Bryan in May 1910. For many years, Julia Allen Love (1909-1994)
lived here and it was locally referred to as the "Love House".(The
Ocean Springs Record, March 2 and March 9, 1995 and JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 17, p. 521, Bk. 22, p.
229, Bk. 24, p. 9, and Bk.
35, pp. 495-496)
Pamela
Boudoin-Aimee and Douglas B. Letoha acquired the Bryan-Love home on
April 28, 1995. They possessed the house and property when it
was damaged by Hurricane George in 1998. It was devastated and
destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed
Bk.1062, p. 674)
REFERENCES:
Charles L. Dyer,
Along The Gulf, (reprint: The Women of the Trinity Episcopal
Church: Pass Christian, Mississippi-1971).
Journals
The
Daily Herald,
"Mrs. Ann Morris Obit", October 10, 1900, p. 8.
The New Orleans Times,
July 1, 1866, p. 1.
The New Orleans Times,
"Morris House, Ocean Springs", July 1, 1866.
The Ocean Springs
Record, "Frank Bryan House", March 2, 1995.
The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
“Niced
Furnished Rooms”,
July 4, 1884.
The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
“Ocean Springs Locals”, January 31, 1896.
The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
“Ocean Springs Locals”, July 11, 1897.
Archives
M. James Stevens
Collection, Biloxi Public Library, Biloxi, Mississippi.
US
Census - Jackson County, Mississippi (1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, and
1910).
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