[1] In 1951, while at an Ottawa dinner party, Eric Morse challenged the diplomats and businessmen to learn about the real Canada and get out on the land.
[2] In 1984, he was one of four persons that year (the others including Chuck Yeager and Sally Ride) conferred Honorary Memberships in the Explorer's Club.
[3] In 1977, Canadian Geographic magazine published an eight-page article by Morse titled Recreational canoeing in Canada; its history and its hazards.
and over the continental divide through McDougall Pass, the lowest point on the western cordillera, into Yukon Territory and down the Porcupine River.
[7] In 1985, the Morse River was named (Topo Map 66F) by a group of Canadian paddlers from the Hide-Away Canoe Club.