Justin Smith Morrill and Ruth Barrell Swan


Index


Husband Justin Smith Morrill

Born
14 APR 1810[1] at Strafford, Vt.
Resided
1860[2] at Strafford, Vt.
Died
28 DEC 1898 at Wash., D.C.
Father Nathaniel Morrill
Mother Mary Hunt
Married
17 SEP 1851 at Strafford, Vt.

Wife Ruth Barrell Swan

Born
11 APR 1821 at Easton, Mass.
Died
13 MAY 1898 at Strafford, Vt.
Father
Mother

Additional information available.[3]



US Postage Stamp of Congressman Justin Smith Morrill. He was US congressman from
Vermont for 43 years, responsible for passage of the Morrill Land-Grant College
Act, signed into law by Abraham Lincoln in 1862.
This legislation established the country’s land grant colleges or “aggies.”

CHILDREN


Name Justin Harris Morrill
Born
28 APR 1853[5] at Strafford, Vt.
Died
16 JAN 1855[6] at Strafford, Vt.

Name James Swan Morrill
Born
08 OCT 1857[7] at Strafford, Vt.
Died
26 JUL 1910


FOOTNOTES

[1]Vermont, Secretary of State, General index to vital records of Vermont, early to 1870 (Name: Salt Lake City: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1951;).
.

[2]1860 US Census , Straffort VT, p. 407. 1860 US Census, Source Medium: Book
.

[3]Annie Morrill Smith, Morrill Kindred in America, Volume 2 (Name: New York: Grafton Press, 1931;), 211.
. See also Justin Smith Morrill was perhaps the most well-known of his surname. He was a Whig who served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1855 to 1867, and the U.S. Senate from 1867 until his death in 1898. His most important achievement in his long career was the Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862, which donated land eventually establishing over 106 agricultural colleges. This legislation simultaneously enhanced the country’s ability to industrialize its economy and gave working class families the opportunity of higher education. In 1999, the U.S. Postal Service issued a 55 cent stamp commemorating the contributions of Justin Smith Morrill to the history of the country.
.

[5]Vermont, Secretary of State, General index to vital records of Vermont, early to 1870 (Name: Salt Lake City: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1951;).
.

[6]ibid.
.

[7]ibid.
.