A Few of Our Favorite Things, Part Eight: Marriott C. Morris Photograph Collection
Fava and his colleague Christopher Dougherty decided to comb through the Morris collection to see what other treasures they might unearth. Lo and behold, they came upon images of Cedar Grove, once located in Frankford but moved to Fairmount Park by the Parks and Recreation Department in the late 1920s. Images of the house shed light on exterior as well as interior architectural details that department staff are now using as a reference for their current renovation of the house. Marriot C. Morris’s cousin Lydia Thompson Morris was the last person to live in the house at the Cedar Grove estate; she donated it to the City of Philadelphia in 1926.
We were recently visited by grandchildren of Marriott C. Morris who came to view the collection and were able to assist me with biographical information on the family. The image below taken by Morris on a canoeing trip in the New Jersey Pine Barrens had piqued my interest since I grew up in the vicinity of Atsion—an historic industrial village and present-day recreation spot in the Wharton State Forest. At the time of this photograph, dated May 18, 1906, the Philadelphia industrialist Joseph Wharton owned the grounds of Atsion and I wondered if he might have had a connection with the Morris family, given Morris’s various associations with Philadelphia’s social elites. The Morris relatives were not able to identify a connection, knowing only that their grandfather enjoyed canoeing in South Jersey. When I spoke to Pine Barrens historian and author Barbara Solem-Stull about this coincidence, she mentioned that Joseph Wharton’s daughter Anna married Harrison S. Morris. I was not able to identify a direct connection, but Solem-Stull made the point that, since this was private property at the time, Morris most likely had permission from Wharton to be there. This photograph is also an invaluable record of the slab-sheathed house—the oldest structure still standing in Atsion—believed to have been built in the early years of Atsion’s bog iron industry, which dated from 1766 until 1850. Look for my upcoming post in which I plan to juxtapose a recent photograph of this structure with the below photograph!
Overall, the Marriott C. Morris Collection is an extensive treasure trove of material documenting Morris’s travels and family life. Those looking for domestic images and records of historic structures in and around Philadelphia from the late nineteenth into the early twentieth centuries will do well to search the Morris database (this database is available to researchers on-site and can also be shared digitally on request). A small selection of Marriott C. Morris photographs can also be found on our website. More information on the Morris family can be found on the National Park Service’s Morris Family Papers Blog.
Nicole Joniec
Print Department Assistant & Digital Collections Manager
1314 Locust St., Philadelphia, PA 19107
TEL 215-546-3181 FAX 215-546-5167
http://www.librarycompany.org
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