Howland, Morris

born:  January 30, 1823, Saatoga County, New York
married:  Susan Maquis on January 22, 1845; Jane Gentle on February 22, 1854
died:   
buried: 
 
 
 
 
Mr. Howland, who is the grandson of Elisha Howland, and the son of Powell Howland, was born on the 30th of January, 
1823, in Saratoga County, N. Y., where he resided until sixteen years of age, and received such advantages of education 
as the neighboring schools afforded. His father having determined to leave the Empire State for the unsettled West, his 
son Morris started on the 25th of September, 1839, with a pair of horses and a wagon for Indianapolis, reaching his 
destination after a journey of forty-two days. The family on their arrival located in Centre township, where Morris 
remained four years, after which he engaged in flat-boating at points between Cincinnati and New Orleans. In 1844 he 
embarked in business near Evansville, Ind., and on abandoning this enterprise made an extensive tour by steamboat 
and on horseback through many of the States of the Union, with a view to pleasure and an intelligent comprehension of 
the extent and resources of the country. On returning in 1845, he, on the 22d of January of that year, married Miss 
Susan Marquis, of Perry township, Marion Co., and settled in the last-named township, where he became a farmer. 
The children of this marriage are Sarah (Mrs. F. S. Turk) and Mary (Mrs. John Epler).  Mrs. Howland died in August, 
1852, and he was again married on the 22d of February, 1854, to Miss Jane Gentle, who was of Scotch descent, and a 
resident of the same township. Their children are Powell, Lida, and Minnie. Mr. Howland has principally engaged in 
farming and stock dealing, in which he has been signally successful. He has been actively interested in developing the 
resources of his county and township, and constructed the first gravel road in the county, of which he is still president. 
He is a member of the Wool-Growers' Association, and of the Short-Horn Breeders' Association, and actively interested 
in the subject of horticulture. He was in politics a Democrat until the introduction of the Kansas-Nebraska bill in 1854, 
when a disapproval of the measures adopted by the party induced him to cast his vote with the Republicans. He has been 
actively interested in the success of his party, and participated in various local campaigns, though not an aspirant for the 
honors which it confers. Though repeatedly declining official positions of importance, he has held various offices in the 
township, among which may be mentioned that of justice of the peace. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, and 
connected with Southport Lodge, No. 270, of that order.  Mr. Howland is an active member and one of the founders of the 
Southport Methodist Episcopal Church, in which he has been successively steward, class-leader, and trustee. His 
influence and active labor in the cause of temperance have accomplished a salutary work in Perry township, and given it 
a decided moral strength in the county. 

Sulgrove, B. R., History of Indianapolis and Marion County, Indiana, Philadelphia:  L.H. Everts & Co., 1884, 785 pgs., 
pgs. 595-59