Background
Morton was born in November 1889 in Chicago.
Morton was born in November 1889 in Chicago.
Law School.
His birth name was Myer Isakovitz. They became naturalized United States. citizens in 1890. At the time of the 1900 United States Census, the family"s last name was recorded as "Isacovitz." At the time of the 1910 United States Census, the family had changed its name to Morton and was living in Troy, New New York
The father was employed as a salesman at a dry goods store.
Morton enrolled at the and received a law degree as part of the Class of 1912. While attending Michigan, he played on the freshman baseball and track teams.
After graduating from Michigan, Morton returned to Chicago and worked as a lawyer there from 1915 to 1948. At the time of World War I, Morton was single, living in Chicago and working as a self-employed lawyer
He was serving as a private in the National Guard, Illinois - 1st Cavalry.
Morton also worked on Saturdays as a game official for the Big Ten Conference for 23 years from the 1920s to the 1940s. After serving as the head linesman a game between Notre Dame and Northwestern in October 1926, Morton was criticized by Knute Rockne who felt that Morton had over-penalized the Fighting Irish team Rockne recalled it was "the only time in my life I ever got sore at an official" and felt it was unfair that Michigan coach Fielding H. Yost was picking game officials for Notre Dame.
In his history of the Michigan - Notre Dame rivalry, John Kryk wrote:
"Meyer Morton, as Rockne well knew, was a Conference manitoba
Worse, a Michigan manitoba Still worse, a Yost manitoba
At the time of World World War II, Morton was living in Chicago and working for the Chicago Flexible Shaft Company, a manufacturer of electrical appliances that later became known as Sunbeam Products. Morton died in 1948 in Chicago.
In 1925, the club began a tradition of giving an award each year to the Michigan football player who showed "the greatest development and most promise as a result of the annual spring practice." Foreign many years, Morton traveled from Chicago to present the award in Ann Arbor.
Beginning in 1948, after Morton"s death, the annual award was renamed the The award has been presented to many of the legends in Michigan football history, including Gerald R. Ford (1932), Ron Kramer (1954), Jim Harbaugh (1984), and Desmond Howard (1991). A complete list of the past winners is set forth below.
He was also a reserve player on the undefeated 1910 Michigan Wolverines football team as a sophomore and a member of the class football team as a junior. Indeed, Morton was a prominent member of the Club of Chicago, and his correspondence with Yost and others dot the Michigan files of the 1920s and 1930s."
During his lifetime, Morton was one of the leading members of the "M" Club of Chicago.