William Leverett Morrison
Nominee: William Morrison, Lt. Commander, USNRF
Nominated by: Mark Weber

Lt. Commander, USNRF
Erie native Morrison (1869-1956) graduated from the
Peekskill Military Academy in 1887 and joined the Pennsylvania Naval Militia in
1911, assuming command of the U.S.S. Wolverine (formerly U.S.S.
Michigan, the first iron-hulled ship in the U.S. Navy, commissioned in 1844)
when the Navy transferred the ship to Pennsylvania in 1912. Before the First
World War, Wolverine trained men for the Naval Militia, the forerunner of
the Naval Reserve. With the exception of World War I service, in European
waters, as 1st Lieutenant of the battleship U.S.S. Utah
(BB-31), Morrison remained in command of Wolverine until the ship was
laid up in 1923 due to engine failure.
Morrison then avidly sought funding from the Navy and the
State to repair Wolverine. When these efforts failed, he tried to gain
support for preservation of the ship as a museum. When these efforts were
exhausted, Wolverine was scrapped in 1949. Morrison raised funds to
preserve a portion of the iron steamer's bow as a memorial to the ship and the
men that had served on her. The monument to the ship became a ceremonial
meeting place for Morrison and other Wolverine crewmen to place wreaths
and remember their shipmates. In 1954, a plaque in Morrison's honor was placed
at the monument in honor of the ship's last captain. This plaque and the ship's
anchor are now located in front of the Erie Maritime Museum; Wolverine's
bow section is proudly displayed inside the Museum where it forms the
centerpiece of an exhibit on the ship's amazing history.
Captain Morrison's most lasting achievement may be the
spearheading of efforts to raise and reconstruct the U.S. Brig Niagara in
1913 for the centennial of the Battle of Lake Erie. Niagara was then
triumphantly towed around the Great Lakes by Wolverine, under Morrison's
command.
Morrison was also an avid yachtsman, a founding member and
second commodore of the Erie Yacht Club, 1904-05. A member of the State Parks &
Harbor Commission, he was instrumental in the creation of Presque Isle State
Park, and was appointed the first superintendent of the Park in 1922. He also
served two terms as a State Representative, 1923-26.
Mark T. Weber, Erie Maritime
Museum 1/08
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