USCS Morris

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History
United States
NameMorris
Acquired1849
Commissioned1849
Decommissioned1855
NotesSank in 1853, but raised and repaired
General characteristics
Type
Survey ship (schooner
)
Length91.6 ft (27.9 m)
Beam22.6 ft (6.9 m)
Draft4.6 ft (1.4 m)
Propulsion
Sails
Sail planSchooner-rigged

The USCS Morris was a

United States Coast Survey
from 1849 to 1855.

The Coast Survey acquired Morris from the

Quartermaster Department
in 1849 and placed her in service that year along the United States Gulf Coast, where she spent her entire Coast Survey career.

In 1852, a member of Morris's crew–Daniel L. Bryan, M.D., past Assistant Surgeon, United States Navy–died of disease at Pensacola, Florida, while voluntarily attending the sick during an epidemic on the U.S. Gulf Coast. His sacrifice was noted as one of great heroism.

Morris sank in Pensacola Harbor at Pensacola during a gale at the end of the 1853 surveying season, but she was raised and returned to service. She was retired in 1855.

References