After graduating from
Yale Law School in 1928, Morris joined his father's law firm and took a seat on the Republican County Committee. By 1933 he was president of the
17th congressional district Republican club, where he met mayoral candidate
Fiorello La Guardia. Morris campaigned vigorously for La Guardia and after his election was appointed an assistant corporation counsel. when he was elected to the
New York City Board of Aldermen representing the
Silk Stocking district. In September 1938 he served as acting mayor of New York City while La Guardia was out on a 3 week trip through the
East and
West Coasts, during which the
1938 New York City truckers' strike started. Morris ran for New York City Mayor in
1945 and in
1949. He also served on the
New York City Planning Commission from 1946 to 1948. Morris was appointed
special assistant to the Attorney General by Attorney General
J. Howard McGrath to investigate possible corruption in the
Department of Justice. After Morris distributed a questionnaire to senior justice officials and called for unlimited access to all of McGrath's personal records, McGrath fired Morris on April 3, 1952. Morris had spent a mere 63 days in the job. A few days later Howard McGrath was forced to resign his position by
President Harry Truman.
Park Commissioner Morris was appointed
Parks Commissioner of New York City by Mayor
Robert F. Wagner Jr. on May 24, 1960, succeeding
Robert Moses, who had served as Commissioner for an unprecedented 26 years. In this role, Morris sought to save the famous
Doric columns that adorned the main entrance to
Penn Station. While Morris, in this respect, served as one of the few dissenting voices during the early planning of the destruction of the first Pennsylvania Station, widely considered to have been in terms of architectural substance an irreversible and traumatic loss to the city, he ultimately failed at preventing the columns from being slated for their ultimate destruction and discarding in the
New Jersey Meadowlands. Sunday
folk music was regularly played in
Washington Square Park on Sundays until April 9, 1961, when Morris rejected the folkies' application for a permit with no explanation. A riot ensued with many of the folk singers being arrested by police and placed into paddy wagons. Some people suspected that local real estate interests were involved, wanting to rid the park of
beatniks and other "undesirables," as some called them. But whether Morris had been influenced by such interests was never determined. The riot and arrests themselves got plenty of newspaper coverage, with one headline proclaiming "3,000 Beatniks Riot in Village." But the hysteria faded quickly. Morris served as Commissioner until January 15, 1966, when he retired. He was replaced by
Thomas P. F. Hoving. ==Personal life and death==