Marriage and family In 1868, Murphy married Martha Elizabeth Howard, a daughter of the well-to-do African-American farmer, Enoch George Howard of
Montgomery County, Maryland, who was a
free man of color before the war. They met in church. Murphy and his wife Martha settled in Baltimore and had 11 children together; 10 of them survived to adulthood. Among them was their son
Carl J. Murphy, who began to work formally with his father on the paper in 1918. Due to the economic and political power of blacks in Baltimore, who comprised a large community, and the activism of people like Murphy, the Maryland state legislature did not follow the example of other southern states and
disenfranchise black voters at the turn of the century. African Americans struggled with discrimination in the city but maintained more freedom and political power than blacks in most other southern states. His son
Carl Murphy, by then having a doctorate from the
University of Jena in Germany and serving as head of the German department at
Howard University, returned to Baltimore in 1918 to work on the paper in his father's last years. In 1922, after his father's death, Carl J. Murphy was named as editor and publisher of the paper. After John Henry Murphy's death on April 5, 1922, his descendants led the newspaper over the course of the next generations, including son
Carl J. Murphy for 45 years, and John's grandson and namesake,
John H. Murphy, III. ==Legacy and honors==