• Source: Gouverneur Morris (novelist)
  • Gouverneur Morris IV (1876–1953) was an American author of pulp novels and short stories during the early 20th century.


    Biography


    Gouverneur Morris IV was born in 1876 and was a great-grandson of American Founding Father Gouverneur Morris. He graduated from Yale University, where he wrote for campus humor magazine The Yale Record.
    He was a prolific novelist and short story writer, with multiple of his works adapted into films.
    He worked as a war correspondent during World War I. After relocating from New York to California in 1919.
    In 1905, he married Elizabeth "Elsie" Waterbury. They separated in 1919 and divorced in 1923. He married screenwriter and racecar driver Ruth Wightman that same year in Mexico, with a second ceremony in California the following year in 1924.
    Wightman worked as his secretary before moving into Samuel Goldwyn Studio's scenario department, where she adapted his novels The Beautiful Liar (1921) and The Ace of Hearts (1921).
    In the early 1920s, he purchased the historic home La Mirada Adobe in Monterey, California (now one of two sites for the Monterey Peninsula Museum of Art). The property was foreclosed on February 8, 1934 for $8,186.60.
    He also served as director of the Monterey Bank from 1930 until his retirement.
    In 1932, they moved to Manhattan Beach, where they were close to their work in the film industry.
    In 1936, actress Lila Lee was staying with them in their Manhattan Beach home, when Reid Russell (a friend of Ruth's and in a relationship with Lee) was found shot on their front porch. The death was eventually ruled a suicide.
    Soon after, he and Ruth moved to Coolidge, New Mexico, where they lived on a ranch owned by Charles Newcomb. He continued living there after his wife's death in 1939.
    His papers are held in the Pennsylvania State University Libraries Archival Collections.


    Publications


    Morris wrote several novels. His numerous short stories were first published in magazines, notably Cosmopolitan, Collier's, The Saturday Evening Post, Metropolitan, The Smart Set, and Harper's Bazaar, and many were collected in book form.


    Film and music



    American composer Carolne Holme Walker (1863-1955) used Morris’ text for her song “Your Kiss.”
    Several of his works were adapted into films, including The Penalty (1920) with Lon Chaney, Sr.
    Other film adaptions of his novels include:


    Partial bibliography


    Tom Beauling (1901)
    Aladdin O'Brien (1902)
    The Pagan's Progress (1904)
    Ellen and Mr. Man (1904)
    The Footprint and Other Stories (1908)
    Putting on the Screws (1909)
    The Spread Eagle and Other Stories (1910)
    The Voice in the Rice (1910)
    Yellow Men and Gold (1911)
    It, and Other Stories (1912)
    If You Touch Them They Vanish (1913)
    The Penalty (1913)
    The Incandescent Lily and Other Stories (1914)
    The Goddess (1915)
    When My Ship Comes In (1915)
    The Seven Darlings (1915)
    We Three (1916)
    His Daughter (1919)
    The Wild Goose (1919)
    Keeping the Peace (1924)
    Tiger Island (1934)


    References




    External links



    Works by Gouverneur Morris at Project Gutenberg
    Works by or about Gouverneur Morris at the Internet Archive
    Works by Gouverneur Morris at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
    Gouverneur Morris at the Internet Broadway Database
    Gouverneur Morris at IMDb

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