Donald R. Morris

Donald Robert Morris (November 11, 1924 – December 4/5, 2002) was an American naval officer, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer, novelist, military historian and foreign affairs writer. He joined the navy in 1942 and after World War Two studied electrical engineering at the United States Naval Academy. Morris served in the Korean War before joining the CIA in 1956, for whom he carried out anti-espionage duties in Berlin, Paris, Kinshasa and Vietnam. Morris had published a novel, China Station, in 1951 and in 1957 published Warm Bodies, based on his naval service; this was made into the film All Hands on Deck in 1961. In 1965 he published The Washing of the Spears, a history of the 1879 Anglo-Zulu War, a book he had worked on mainly during a five-year posting in Berlin. Morris retired from the CIA in 1972 and became a foreign affairs column writer for the Houston Post. He later published his own foreign affairs newsletter.

Donald Robert Morris
BornNovember 11, 1924
New York City, United States
DiedDecember 4/5, 2002 (age 78)
Houston, Texas, United States
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branchU.S. Navy and U.S. Navy Reserve
Years of service1942-1976
RankLieutenant commander
Battles/warsWorld War Two, Korean War, Cold War
AwardsNavy Commendation Medal
Other workCIA officer, novelist, military historian, foreign affairs writer

Early life and career

Donald Morris was born in New York City on November 11, 1924, to S. Fred and Vera D. Morris.[1] He attended Horace Mann School until 1942 when he joined the United States Navy.[2][1] After the war Morris entered the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.[2][1] He graduated with a degree in electrical engineering in 1948.[1] Morris stated that he was ranked first in his class for naval history, second for English and 409th (out of 410) for electrical engineering.[2] Morris served aboard several destroyers before attending the navy's Intelligence School and learning Russian.[3] He earned two Korean War battle stars and a Navy Commendation Medal.[3] In 1951 he published a novel China Station.[4]

Morris joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1956, though he remained in the United States Navy Reserve, retiring as a lieutenant commander in 1972.[3] Morris spent 17 years in the CIA serving mostly in a Soviet-facing anti-espionage role.[3] His service included a five-year stint in Berlin, including the period in which the Berlin Wall was constructed, and postings to Paris, Kinshasa and Vietnam.[3][2] In 1957 he published another novel, Warm Bodies, based on his wartime naval service.[4][2] The work was adapted into the 1961 film All Hands on Deck.[2]

The Washing of the Spears

In 1955 Morris met the author Ernest Hemingway in Cuba, the chance encounter gave him the idea of writing a history of the 1879 Anglo-Zulu War. This would be published as The Washing of the Spears in 1965.[4][2] Morris spent eight years writing the book, with the majority of the work being completed during his posting in Berlin. He carried out the research mainly by correspondence with British and South African museums and libraries. It became a standard reference work for later historians and has never been out of print, selling 200,000 copies in 17 languages. It was the first work to attempt to show the Zulu perspective of the war and, although Morris' understanding of that aspect was incomplete, led to him earning the respect of modern Zulu leaders. The historian Ian Knight regards the publication of The Washing of the Spears as marking the modern era of the study of the Anglo-Zulu War.[2]

Retirement and death

Morris lived in Houston, Texas from 1972. He was news analyst and writer on foreign affairs for the Houston Post from 1972 to 1989.[4][3] In 1989, he founded the Trident Syndicate which published its own foreign affairs periodical, the Donald R. Morris Newsletter, until 2002.[4][3] Morris was also a commercial pilot and a Certified Flight Instructor for instrument flight.

He was twice married and had four daughters and one son.[1]

Morris died in Houston of complications from heart disease in December 2002, his New York Times death notice states December 4 but Knight's obituary states December 5.[1] His papers, including manuscripts and correspondence, are held by the California Digital Library's Online Archive of California.[4]

References