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・ John Alexander Magee
・ John Alexander Mathieson
・ John Alexander McClernand
・ John Alexander McCreery
・ John Alexander McCullough
・ John Alexander McDonald (politician)
・ John Alexander McDougall
・ John Alexander McGillivray
・ John Alexander Merkley
・ John Alexander Moore
・ John Alexander Morrison
・ John Alexander Porteous
・ John Alexander Robertson
・ John Albert Mathews
・ John Albert Messervy
John Albert Morris
・ John Albert Nordberg
・ John Albert O'Toole
・ John Albert Raven
・ John Albert Sexsmith
・ John Albert Sheppard
・ John Albert Southwood
・ John Albert Taylor
・ John Albert Vasa
・ John Albery
・ John Albion Andrew
・ John Albok
・ John Albrechtson
・ John Albro
・ John Albro (settler)


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John Albert Morris : ウィキペディア英語版
John Albert Morris

John Albert Morris (July 1836 – May 25, 1895) was an American businessman widely known as the "Lottery King" and a prominent figure in the sport of thoroughbred horse racing. A native of New Jersey, he benefited from a large inheritance and added substantially to his fortune through a majority interest in the Louisiana State Lottery Company.
In 1857, he married Cora Hennen, the daughter of Alfred Hennen, a wealthy and prominent judge in New Orleans. The couple had four children:
* Francis Morris (c. 1864–1880)
* Alfred Hennen Morris (1864–1959) — a Vice-Chairman and steward of The Jockey Club
* David Hennen Morris (1872–1944) — lawyer, diplomat, United States Ambassador to Belgium (1933–1937), and co-founder of the International Auxiliary Language Association
* Isabel Morris — married Lewis Cass Ledyard, a grandson of statesman and politician Lewis Cass
==Thoroughbred racing==
His father, Francis Morris, was also involved in horse racing, and notably owned Ruthless, the winner of the 1867 Belmont and Travers Stakes. John Morris inherited his father's ranch in Gillespie County, Texas, fourteen miles (21 km) from the town of Kerrville, where he established a horse breeding operation.〔(DiBrino, Nicholas. ''The History of the Morris Park Racecourse and the Morris Family'' (1977) The Bronx County Historical Society ISBN 0-941980-27-8 )〕
John Morris owned a large racing stable in the United States and another in Europe. With Leonard W. Jerome as his minority partner, in 1889 he opened Morris Park Racecourse in what was then Westchester County, New York. The racetrack hosted the Belmont Stakes from 1890 through 1904 as well as the Preakness Stakes in 1890. A few days before he died in May 1895, he leased the racecourse, with an option to purchase, to the Westchester Racing Association. The Morris heirs sold the property to real estate developers in 1905.
John Albert Morris suffered a stroke and died at age 59 in 1895 while at his Texas Ranch. His remains were sent by train to New Orleans where he was interred in the Metairie Cemetery.
The neighborhood of Morris Park in the Bronx, New York, a large part of which covers the site of Morris Park Racecourse, is named in his memory.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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