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Descriptive Summary |
Title: John B. Morris Papers |
Creator:
Morris, John B., 1930-
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Inclusive Dates: 1964-1972 |
Language(s): English |
Extent:
9 box(es)
(3.5 linear feet)
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Collection Number: RBRL126JBM |
Repository:
Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies
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Abstract: These papers consist of correspondence, newspaper articles, newsletters, pamphlets, memoranda, briefs, and card files related to Reverend John B. Morris' involvement in Write-In Georgia (1966 gubernatorial campaign to write-in Ellis Arnall as a candidate), the Georgia Democratic Party Forum, Georgia Convention of Loyal Democrats, the Democratic National Convention (1968), and the Georgia Democratic Party. |
Biographical Note
Reverend John B. Morris was born in Brunswick, Georgia on February 10, 1930. He attended the public schools in Brunswick . In 1947, Morris enrolled in classes at Columbia University in New York , New York. He graduated from Columbia University in 1951. From 1951 to 1954, he attended the Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia where he earned a Bachelor's of Divinity degree in 1954. He became an ordained deacon at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York , New York in June 1954 and an ordained priest at St. Barnabas Church in Dillon, South Carolina in March 1955.
Reverend Morris was the deacon and minister-in-charge of St. Barnabas Church from 1954 to 1958. During the latter part of 1958, he served as the priest-in-charge of the newly formed St. Luke's Mission in Latta, South Carolina. Reverend Morris along with four other white clergymen formed a group called Concerned South Carolinians. Motivated by both their religious beliefs and their political ideals, the ministers announced that they wished to encourage citizens of their state to consider desegregation as an acceptable way of life. This was an attempt to reach out to people living in small towns who might have viewed civil rights as an extremist political movement. Morris and his colleagues recruited respected civic leaders and active church people, to write essays about desegregation. Concerned South Carolinians self-published the collection of essays entitled South Carolinians Speak in October 1957. From 1959 to 1960, Reverend Morris helped found the Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity. Later, this organization appointed Morris executive director of the organization's Atlanta , Georgia office. He continued in this position until 1967. Morris also served as the special assistant in the Southern Regional Council from 1968 to 1970.
The candidates for the 1966 gubernatorial campaign in Georgia were Republican Howard "Bo" Callaway and Democrat Lester Maddox. Both espoused conservative ideas and approaches. Morris, along with other dissident Georgians, particularly those in favor of civil rights, felt strongly that the similarity between these two candidates offered voters little choice in the general election. To address this concern, Morris and his cohorts started a group called Write-In Georgia , which proposed Ellis Arnall as an alternative write-in candidate. The write-in campaign resulted in neither Maddox nor Callaway receiving the majority of votes necessary to take office. Immediately following the election, reports arose that some write-in votes may not have been counted properly. This prompted an investigation that led Reverend Morris (as a representative for Write-In Georgia ) to bring a lawsuit against Ben Fortson, Secretary of the State of Georgia . The case (Fortson v. Morris, et al.) traveled through all the lower courts and finally the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the state of Georgia and held that when a candidate does not receive a majority of the vote, the Georgia General Assembly must decide the victor. The Georgia General Assembly elected Lester Maddox governor in 1967.
Following the Write-In Georgia effort, a group of individuals including John Morris split from the Democratic Party of Georgia and formed the Georgia Democratic Party Forum. This organization later became the Georgia Delegation of Loyal National Democrats and challenged the seating of the Lester Maddox delegation at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.
In the mid-1970s, Reverend Morris became involved in researching his grandfather, Julian Burnett, a vice consul to Sierra Leone in 1887 who married an African woman. During this time he also bought and sold books related to his research. He officially retired from the church in 1995.
Reverend Morris married Harriet Barnes Pratt in 1952 and had four children. After his first wife's death he married Wright Cousins Morris in 1998. Reverend and Mrs. Morris currently reside in Evans, Georgia.
Scope and Content
This collection consists of materials collected by the Reverend John B. Morris, an Episcopalian priest from Atlanta, Georgia. It includes correspondence, memoranda, newspaper clippings and card files. The materials concern the activities and evolution of the Write-In Georgia movement into the Georgia Democratic Party Forum, then into the Georgia Delegation of Loyal National Democrats as they prepared to challenge the seating of the Lester Maddox delegation at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Also represented in the collection are materials related to Eugene McCarthy support among Georgia Democrats, as well as newspaper clippings that describe the controversy and upheaval of the 1968 National Democratic Party convention in Chicago. Additionally, two small series contain correspondence from U.S. House of Representative member Charles L. Weltner and the Fulton County Democratic Party.
Organization and Arrangement
The material is organized into eight series: I. Write-In Georgia, II. Georgia Democratic Party Forum, III. Democratic National Convention, IV. Georgia Democratic Party, V. Fulton County Democratic Party, VI. Weltner, Charles L., VII. Newspaper Clippings, and VIII. Photographs. With one exception, newspaper clippings, the series are arranged by subject and within each subject, they are arranged in reverse chronological order. VII. Newspaper Clippings is arranged chronologically.
John B. Morris Papers, Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia Libraries, Athens, Georgia, 30602-1641.
Newspaper clippings have been copied onto bond paper for protection of content. Photographs have been separated for preservation purposes.
Library acts as "fair use" reproduction agent.
Before material from collections at the Richard B. Russell Library may be quoted in print, or otherwise reproduced, in whole or in part, in any publication, permission must be obtained from (1) the owner of the physical property, and (2) the holder of the copyright. It is the particular responsibility of the researcher to obtain both sets of permissions. Persons wishing to quote from materials in the Russell Library collection should consult the Director. Reproduction of any item must contain a complete citation to the original.
Finding Aid Publication
Finding aid prepared on: 2000.
General Notes
Biographical Note excerpted from Biographical Sketch, State of Georgia Supreme Court, Atlanta, 1960
Subject Terms
Clifford Hodges Brewton Collection of Lester Maddox Speech/Press Research Files
Howard H. (Bo) Callaway Papers
Harold Paulk (Hal) Henderson, Sr. Oral History Collection: Series I. Ellis Arnall
Democratic Party of Georgia Records
Alvan S. Arnall Collection of Ellis G. Arnall Materials
Georgia Democratic Party Forum, 1959-1972, 1985, Southern Labor Archives, Special Collections, Georgia State University Library
Charles L. Weltner Papers, 1961-1968, Atlanta History Center
ESCRU Records, Episcopal Church Archives, Austin, Texas