- Sir Thomas Morgan, 1st Baronet
Major-General Sir Thomas Morgan, 1st Baronet (1604 –
13 April 1679 ) was a soldier during theEnglish Civil War , and Commander-in-Chief in Scotland during the Restoration.Early career
The son of a minor Welsh landowner in Monmouthshire, Morgan gained military experience in the
Netherlands andGermany during the 1630s. He returned to England on the outbreak of theFirst Civil War to serve as a Captain ofdragoon s under the Fairfaxes inYorkshire . He was promoted to Major after distinguishing himself at theBattle of Nantwich in January 1644 and the following year was made a Colonel on the recommendation of Lord Fairfax.Further responsibilities
In June 1645, Morgan succeeded
Edward Massey as governor ofGloucester , an isolated Parliamentarian stronghold in the RoyalistWelsh Marches . Morgan succeeded in gaining the respect and co-operation of Massey's unruly troops and of the citizens of Gloucester. He became active in reducing Royalist strongholds, assistingColonel Thomas Rainsborough at thesiege ofBerkeley Castle in September 1645, capturing bothChepstow andMonmouth during October, and collaborating withColonel Birch in a surprise attack to seizeHereford in December 1645. WhenLord Astley marched forOxford with the last Royalist field army in March 1646, Morgan joined forces with Birch and Sir William Brereton to intercept and defeat Astley atStow-on-the-Wold , the final pitched battle of the First Civil War.In April 1646, Morgan was appointed commander of Parliament's forces in
Gloucestershire ,Herefordshire and Monmouthshire with orders to reduce remaining Royalist strongholds in the region. Although he was driven back fromWorcester , Morgan capturedHartlebury Castle in May andRaglan Castle in August, after a bitter three-monthsiege . As the war drew to a close, Morgan's troops became mutinous over Parliament's proposals for disbandment without settling arrears of pay, and Morgan himself seems to have fallen from favour. He was superseded as governor of Gloucester in January 1648 and was not given a command in the army sent toIreland . He retired to the Yorkshire estate of his wife Delariviere, daughter ofJohn Cholmondeley , whom he had married in August 1644.Scotland
Morgan returned to military service in 1651 when he joined
Oliver Cromwell 's expedition toScotland , remaining withGeneral Monck when Cromwell pursued Charles II's army into England. Morgan was present when Monck captured and sackedDundee in September 1651. When Monck returned to England to recover his health early in 1652, Morgan stayed in Scotland. He took over command at the siege ofDunnottar Castle , defended by SirGeorge Ogilvy, 2nd Lord Banff with just 70 men. Ogilvy surrendered to Morgan in May 1652 but the Scottish royal regalia — the crown, sword and sceptre that had been stored at Dunnottar Castle when Cromwell invaded Scotland — were smuggled out and hidden. Morgan was based atInverness during Glencairn's Uprising (1653-4) commanding all Commonwealth forces north of theRiver Tay . He co-operated with Monck, who returned to Scotland in April 1654, to intercept Major-General Middleton's Scots-Royalist army in the Highlands. Morgan defeated Middleton at theBattle of Dalnaspidal nearLoch Garry on19 July 1654 bringing the insurrection to an end. On Monck's recommendation, Morgan was promoted to Major-General in February 1655. Despite his short stature, explosive temper and distinctive high-pitched voice, Morgan was popular with his troops. He was almost illiterate, but was praised as a courageous, loyal and efficient officer by Monck.Flanders
In April 1657, Morgan was appointed second-in-command to Sir John Reynolds in the English force sent to co-operate with the
French army against theSpaniards inFlanders . After Reynolds' death in December 1657, Morgan was appointed governor ofMardyke in his place, but he was considered too blunt and argumentative to take overall command of the English contingent in the Anglo-French army, where diplomacy was often needed in dealing with the French commanders. SirWilliam Lockhart , Cromwell's ambassador to France, was appointed commander, which resulted in Morgan bearing a lasting grudge against Lockhart and sometimes attempting to thwart his plans. Morgan led a successful attack on Spanish forts aroundGravelines in April 1658 and effectively commanded the English contingent at thebattle of the Dunes on4 June . After the capture ofDunkirk on25 June , Morgan led the four English regiments that continued to serve with the French army throughout the summer of 1658.Pinnacle of his career
Upon his return to England in November 1658, Morgan was
knighted for his services byRichard Cromwell , who had succeeded Oliver asLord-Protector . Morgan returned to Scotland as Monck's deputy in 1659. He supported Monck during the political manoeuvring that brought about the Restoration in 1660, keeping command of the army in Scotland while Monck marched on London. Morgan was granted abaronetcy byKing Charles II of England in February 1661. He commanded the infantry in an English expeditionary force to assist the Portuguese against Spain in 1662 and was appointed governor ofJersey in 1665. He died atSt Helier in April 1679.References
This article incorporates text under a
Creative Commons License by David Plant, the British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/morgan.htm
* [http://yba.llgc.org.uk/en/s-MORG-THO-1604.html The biography of Sir Thomas Morgan, 1st Baronet : National Library of Wales, Dictionary of Welsh Biography]
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