Sydney became a very successful solicitor, setting up the firm of Sydney Morse & Co, based in the City of London. His firm was associated with many institutions themselves involved in new technologies, including forty or more tramway and electric lighting companies, through to gramophone manufacturers. Sydney married Juliet with whom he had a number of children, including Leopold George Esmond Morse. Sydney also became known as a collector of art, including the portrait of Sir
John Everett Millais, 1st Bt by
William Holman Hunt. This particular portrait remained in the family until the death of his wife Juliet Morse. At her sale, Christie's, 19 March 1937, it was bought by their son Leopold George Esmond Morse for presentation to the
National Portrait Gallery in memory of his father. Amongst other works collected by Sydney Morse were important pieces by Blake, Whistler and a number of
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood pieces. Holman Hunt also did a drawing of Sydney Morse himself, c.1897–8. Sydney Morse died on 27 January 1929 at 14 Airlie Gardens, Campden Hill, "in his 75th year and the 51st year of his marriage". Many years after his death Sydney Morse & Co continued to operate, becoming in the mid-twentieth century part of Waltons & Morse LLP, who continued into the twentieth-first century as one of the City of London's leading specialists in shipping and insurance law. ==References==