Rev. Dr. Robert Hall Morrison

Is your surname Morrison?

Research the Morrison family

Rev. Dr. Robert Hall Morrison's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Robert Hall Morrison, Rev.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Rocky River, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
Death: May 13, 1889 (90)
"Cottage Home", Lincoln County, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Machpelah Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Lincolnton, Lincoln County, North Carolina, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of 'Miller' William Morrison and Abigail Morrison (McEwan)
Husband of Mary Morrison (Graham)
Father of Isabella Sophia Morrison; William Wilberforce Morrison; Harriet Morrison Irwin; Mary Anna Morrison; Eugenia Erixene Barringer and 4 others
Brother of Sarah Morrison; James McEwen Morrison; Margaret Kimmons (Morrison); Hugh Hall Morrison; Jean Erixene Morrison and 1 other

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Rev. Dr. Robert Hall Morrison

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/morrison-robert-hall

Robert Hall Morrison, first president of Davidson College and for sixty-five years an active Presbyterian minister, was born in the Rocky River section of Cabarrus County, the son of William—Revolutionary soldier, farmer, and miller—and Abigail McEwen Morrison, both of Scottish descent. He attended the Rocky River Academy and was thoroughly schooled by the Reverend John Makemie Wilson, D.D., the local minister. Morrison entered The University of North Carolina in 1816 as a sophomore and was graduated with honors in the class of 1818. This was a distinguished class in which James Knox Polk took first honors. Subsequently, Morrison taught school and studied theology with Wilson and the Reverend John Robinson of the Poplar Tent Presbyterian Church. Their example did much to lead him into the Christian ministry.

After briefly attending Princeton College (which awarded him an honorary A.M. in 1824), Morrison was licensed by the Concord Presbytery and accepted a call from Providence Church in Mecklenburg County. In 1822, after two years at Providence, he relocated in Fayetteville, where he served a church and established the North Carolina Telegram, the first religious gazette in the South. In 1827 Morrison returned to Mecklenburg County as pastor of the venerable Sugar Creek Presbyterian Church and a smaller Charlotte congregation. This arrangement continued until 1833, when he became fulltime minister at Sugar Creek.

Meanwhile, Morrison had become deeply interested in founding a denominational college in the "Western region." Like many other devout Christians, he had come to believe that secular institutions, such as his alma mater, were increasingly unsuited to prepare an educated clergy. Accordingly, in March 1835 he proposed that the Concord Presbytery found a "Manual Labor School"; from this suggestion grew the plan to establish Davidson College, named for Revolutionary hero General William Lee Davidson. Later that year Morrison prepared a feasibility study and proposed a tentative curriculum. Then he and the Reverend Patrick Jones Sparrow, of Salisbury, were assigned the unenviable task of raising the requisite funds. They secured $30,000, and on 10 Apr. 1836 the Presbytery laid the chapel cornerstone. Morrison addressed a large audience on "the importance of learning generally, and especially of a learned ministry to the happiness of a community, and the security of a free and religious government." The trustees first offered the presidency of the new institution to Samuel B. Wilson, of Fredricksburg, Va. After he declined it, the trustees selected Morrison.

When Morrison took up residence at Davidson in February 1837, the campus consisted of the president's home, one professor's home, a steward's hall, and sixteen small, crowded dormitories set amid a sylvan environment. During the first session (spring 1837), about sixty students enrolled and three professors, including Morrison, did all the teaching. Later a manual labor system—which Morrison warmly supported—was instituted. Under the program, each student was required to work on some mechanical or agricultural project for three hours on weekdays, with wages to be applied against his bill for room and board. This system resulted in widespread discontent and malingering. The period of labor was soon reduced to two hours and after three years was abandoned altogether. A student in these early years remembered President Morrison as a versatile teacher and a powerful preacher. However, personal tragedy and illness sapped Morrison's morale and strength. Two young daughters died of diphtheria in April 1838, and, though he faced this calamity with characteristic fortitude, the loss was a heavy blow. Morrison himself soon developed a serious throat ailment that affected his speech. In January 1839 the Davidson trustees authorized an extended leave, while urging him to retain the presidency. When northern specialists and rest did not cure the malady, Morrison resigned in 1849 and retired to his Lincoln County farm, where he resided until his death.

Fortunately, the growing Morrison family was easily accommodated in Cottage Home, a three-story farmhouse in eastern Lincoln inherited from Mrs. Morrison's father, General Joseph Graham. With four hundred acres here and several hundred in western Tennessee, there were no inordinate financial problems. The Morrison progeny fondly remembered Cottage Home as stimulating socially and intellectually. By 1842 Morrison had recovered sufficiently to become pastor of the Unity church, which his family attended. In time he also preached regularly at Machpelah and Castanea Presbyterian churches. He served all three—widely different in level of education and social status—for approximately forty years. Although he rarely left his home community, Morrison was one of the best-known preachers in North Carolina. In addition to preaching and studying theology, he was interested in scientific agriculture generally and silk production in particular. Nevertheless, his farm income was largely dependent on such staples as corn, wheat, cotton, and livestock.

While Morrison took no active role in public affairs, he was unusually well informed on current issues. A Union Whig, he opposed secession, but, as many likeminded Southerners, he felt obliged to support the Confederacy. He and his wife, Mary Graham Morrison (1801–64), had eight daughters and four sons, many of whom were deeply involved in the Civil War. The Morrison children included Isabella Sophia (1825–1904), wife of Confederate Lieutenant General Daniel Harvey Hill; Major William Wilberforce (1826–65); Harriet Abigail (1828–97); Mary Anna (1831–1915), second wife of Lieutenant General Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson; Eugenia Erixene (1833–58), wife of Brigadier General Rufus Barringer; Sarah (1834–38); Elizabeth Lee (1837–38); Susan Washington (1838–86), wife of Major Alphonso Calhoun Avery; Laura Panthea (1840–1920), wife of Colonel John Edmunds Brown; Captain Joseph Graham (1842–1906); Robert Hall (1843–1922), M.D.; and Alfred James (1849–76), who had a promising but brief career as a Presbyterian minister.

Although Robert Hall Morrison's long life was punctuated by personal grief, he never despaired or lost his faith. He died at age ninety-one, well-loved and venerated, and was buried at Machpelah Church in Lincoln County.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Presbyterian clergyman

Find A Grave Memorial# 23265791- http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=23265791&ref=wvr

His most known child is Mary Anna Morrison, who was the second wife of Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson.

Robert Hall Morrison fathered children that would be forever known within the circles of the Confederate States of America (CSA).

Robert Morrison's sons would also play their role in the CSA. Son William was with the Department of the Confederate Navy. Joseph Graham Morrison was on Stonewall's staff and was sent to fetch his sister after Stonewall was wounded and took her to Guniea Station where Stonewall died. Robert Morrison Jr. was on the staff of his brother-in-law General Barringer.

Blesssed are the dead that died in the Lord. Yea sayth the spirit that they may rest. From their labours and these works do follow them. Three of his daughters were married to Confederate Generals: Isabella (1848 D.H.Hill), Eugenia (1854 Rufus Barringer), and Anna (1857 Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson. He was the frist president of Davidson College 1836 to 1840.

Though she died in 1858, daughter Eugenia was married to Rufus Barringer, who would become a CSA general. Daniel Harvey Hill another renowned CSA general was married to his daughter, Isabella.

Parents:
 William Morrison (1756 - 1821)
 Abigail McEwen Morrison (1762 - 1825)

Spouse:

 Mary Graham Morrison (____ - 1864)*

Children:

 Alfred James Morrison*
 Isabella Morrison Hill (1825 - 1904)*
 William Wilberforce Morrison (1826 - 1865)*
 Mary Anna Morrison Jackson (1831 - 1915)*
 Eugenia Erixene Morrison Barringer (1833 - 1858)*
 Susan Washington Morrison Avery (1838 - 1886)*
 Joseph Graham Morrison (1842 - 1906)*
 Robert Hall Morrison (1843 - 1922)*

Note: Family links provided by charlott jones

Burial: Machpelah Presbyterian Church Cemetery Lincolnton Lincoln County North Carolina, USA

Created by: Richard Jordan Record added: Dec 06, 2007 Find A Grave Memorial# 23265791



Dr. Morrison was the founder of Davidson College and long its president

THE GROTON AVERY CLAN, Vol. I, by Elroy McKendree Avery and Catherine Hitchcock (Tilden) Avery, Cleveland, 1912. p. 619

view all 14

Rev. Dr. Robert Hall Morrison's Timeline

1798
September 8, 1798
Rocky River, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, United States
1825
1825
1826
August 13, 1826
1828
September 18, 1828
1831
July 21, 1831
Sugaw Creek Church, Mecklenburg Co., North Carolina
1833
February 5, 1833
Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, United States
1838
October 13, 1838
Davison College, North Carolina, United States
1842
June 1, 1842