Career
As a manager, he led a team whose members included the first African-American players in Major League history. After retiring from the major leagues, Morton served intermittently as an official and went on to become an influential minor league baseball executive. Morton played for, and managed in, the American Association, with the Toledo Blue Stockings in 1884 and the Detroit Wolverines in 1885.
He played one season prior to managing, 1882, and managed the 1890 Toledo Maumees after his playing career was over.
He compiled a career managerial record of 121 wins and 153 losses. He was the manager for the 1884 Toledo Blue Stockings, who had transferred into the American Association from the Northwestern League after the 1883 season.
On August 10, 1883 before a scheduled exhibition game, Cap Anson and his Chicago White Stockings had told Morton that his team would not play on the same field as the Walker brothers. Even though he had initially given Walker the day off due to injuries, Morton then re-inserted Moses in the game.
He did this to force Anson to either play or lose his portion of the gate receipts.
Anson decided to play that day, but when Chicago came to town the following year, they had already signed an agreement that the Walker brothers would not play. By the end of its seven-year lifespan, the league had enlisted the membership of no less than 40 ball clubs based in over 20 cities. Morton also served as an official, umpiring a number of games during the 1886 season.
He died in Massillon, Ohio at the age of 67, and was buried at Glendale Cemetery in Akron, Ohio.