Morris and the Early Civil Rights Movement
An Advocate for Full and Equal Rights
Morris had an expansive vision of freedom that went beyond his antislavery work. Like the activists leading the U.S. civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, Morris鈥檚 activism was multifaceted. In addition to abolitionism, he worked tirelessly to desegregate schools, militias, and public spaces, and was a full-throated advocate of equal voting rights for women.
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School Desegregation
A little over a year after Morris鈥檚 1847 admission to the Massachusetts Bar, he was hired by Boston printer and activist Benjamin Roberts to handle a high-profile civil rights lawsuit. Roberts asked Morris to sue the Boston public schools on behalf of his five-year-old daughter, Sarah. In February 1848, a Boston police officer forcibly removed Sarah from the public school that was closest to the Roberts home. Because of the color of her skin, the young child was forced to make the longer journey to the Abiel Smith School, which was, at the time, one of two Boston public schools for Black children.
“The most important achievement on the part of our people and that which will be the most enduring, and prove most beneficial in its results to us and our children here and elsewhere was the abolition of Caste Schools in our Commonwealth. I had the honor to inaugurate that excellent and important measure, & to frame and pen the first petition sent to the School Committee here asking for Equal School rights. I had previously secured such rights to the children of color at Salem, my native city, and was determined to overthrow the separate school system here”
Roberts v. City of Boston
Morris lobbied for school integration as early as 1843, when he filed a petition to integrate public schools in his hometown of Salem. That effort came to fruition more quickly than a parallel effort in Boston. In April 1848, Morris sued the city of Boston, arguing that the city was unlawfully denying Sarah Roberts her right to a public education by forcing her into a segregated school. This writ (the equivalent of a modern day complaint), signed by Morris, initiated the lawsuit. His arguments focused on the fact that Sarah had to walk past five White primary schools in order to reach the Abiel Smith School and that she should be able to attend the public school closest to her home.
When the trial court rejected his claims, Morris appealed and joined forces with Charles Sumner, a White abolitionist lawyer and future U.S. senator. Led by Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rejected their arguments and adopted a 鈥渟eparate but equal鈥 ruling echoed later by the U.S. Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson (1898). However, the constitutional arguments about equality before the law that Morris and Sumner made鈥攊nspired by Black activists and parents who had been working to integrate Boston鈥檚 schools for decades鈥攔esonate throughout U.S. civil rights law. Indeed, their expansive understanding of equality in education can be seen in the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which reversed Plessy.
Despite the devastating loss in Roberts v. City of Boston, Morris and other Black activists such as Benjamin Roberts and WIlliam Cooper Nell continued the fight that they had been waging for years. They persisted in bringing lawsuits and petitioning the legislature. Finally, in April 1855, the Massachusetts legislature effectively overturned the Supreme Judicial Court鈥檚 decision in the Roberts case by enacting this law, which required the integration of Boston鈥檚 public schools and provided damages for any student excluded.
Full and Equal Rights
Morris witnessed and endured discrimination on many different fronts and responded by fighting a multi-front war for full and equal rights. He battled segregated schools and militias. He endured the sting of prejudice when traveling by carriage or railroad, and protested segregated transportation, theaters, hotels, and similar public places. He challenged housing discrimination, speaking out publicly when racist homeowners derailed his purchase of a new family home, 鈥渃arrying prejudice against color to its extreme extent.鈥 He advocated for expansive voting rights. His political activism used different strategies to pursue this broad agenda of equality, and he worked with different allies towards common goals.
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“[Morris] struck terrible blows at the exclusive school system for Negroes in Boston. He availed himself also of every opportunity that offered to annoy the railroad companies. He would go in person to theatres, lecture rooms, churches, and other public places, buy his ticket and force the employes [sic] to eject him, then he would carry the matter into the courts. In this way Mr. Morris succeeded in breaking up a barbarous custom of exclusion on account of color.”
Equal Rights for Women
Morris signed onto this 1853 petition to strike the word 鈥渕ale鈥 from the Massachusetts Constitution. The multiracial group of petitioners, including Morris, Lucy Stone, and William Lloyd Garrison, pushed for constitutional recognition of civil and political rights for women. This was a mere five years after the first women鈥檚 rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York. The all-male delegation at the 1853 Massachusetts Constitutional Convention refused to act upon the petition, but activists persisted for decades until the final ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920.