Ralph was born in Attikan estate in the
Biligirirangan Hills, the son of Mabel Camroux and Randolph Hayton Morris. Morris Sr. was the son of an Perthshire church rector who left home at the age of 18 to work on a ship. He landed in India in 1877 at a time of famine and worked at various estates before starting the first coffee plantation in the
Biligirirangans, an area he identified while out hunting. Morris Sr. was a friend of
G. P. Sanderson. Ralph was sent to study in England at Blue Coat School and at
Blundell's in Devon before returning to join his father at the estate. In 1895, his father was gored by a wounded
gaur while out hunting. He was taken to Mysore and survived but died in 1918 from pneumonia in the one lung that remained. Ralph became a member of the
Bombay Natural History Society in 1919, the same year in which he married Heather, daughter of another BNHS member Angus M. Kinloch, who lived in Kotagiri in the Nilgiris. In 1935, Ralph joined the Vernay-Hopwood expedition, sponsored by
Arthur S. Vernay, to the Upper Chindwin of Burma. Another expedition was made into the Malay jungles in the same year in search of the
Javan Rhinoceros. He was a President of the United Planters' Association of South India (UPASI) for one and half years in 1937-38 before joining as a volunteer officer in the war (Indian Army Reserve of Officers). He served in the Middle East and North Africa, seeing action at the
Siege of Tobruk. He returned after the war to work at his estate and extended it to
Honnametti. After Independence, he represented the South Indian Europeans in the Legislative Assembly. In 1955 he sold off his estate to the
Birla family and settled in the UK. R.C. Morris (left),
Arthur S. Vernay (centre, seated on the elephant's leg) and
J.C. Faunthorpe with a bull elephant shot in the Biligirirangans that is now in the American Museum of Natural History (1923) He documented the wildlife of the region in the Journal of the
Bombay Natural History Society. His estate was visited by numerous people including
Leslie Coleman,
Victor Brooke,
Arthur S. Vernay,
John Faunthorpe,
Kenneth Anderson, the
ornithologist Salim Ali, as well as the Maharaja of Mysore. In 1933, a fellow sportsman and friend Major Leonard Mourant Handley wrote a book called "Hunter's Moon" with a chapter on "The Great Blue Hills of Ranga" which was reviewed by Morris (under his initials "R.C.M.") in the
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society who stated that "there should surely be some limit to the inaccuracies which find their way into modern books, which purport to set forth observations of interest to natural scientists and Shikaris." Morris found 38 inaccuracies and Handley filed a case of libel in Middlesex and was awarded a damage of 3000 pounds in 1937. Morris never attended the trial and it was suggested the friction between the two former friends arose from differences between Mrs Morris and Mrs Handley.The secretary of the Bombay Natural History Society noted in volume 51 of the journal: A species of
flying squirrel is named after Morris,
Olisthomys morrisi, which was collected during the Vernay-Hopwood Chindwin Expedition. In 1994, one of Ralph's three daughters
Monica Jackson, a mountaineer and anthropologist, reflected on her roots in a book called
Going Back. ==Writings==