In 1818 Morgan, who was groomed to inherit the family’s 40,000-acre estates in south-east Wales and his father’s Monmouthshire seat, had relinquished the representation of their borough of Brecon with a view to recapturing Breconshire for Tredegar, but he had been defeated there by the foreign secretary Lord Castlereagh’s* brother-in-law Thomas Wood*.
I hear Mr. Morgan and T.P. are not very good friends - that Mr. M. hates him. I can scarcely believe it, as the good quality of an agent is to bring in the rents, no matter how, and I know Mr. M. never intends to give himself any trouble about representing the county, therefore will care very little what enemies P. makes on that score.
NLW ms 17104 D, A.M. Hawkins to T. Cooke, 12 Aug. 1829.
As Member for Brecon in the 1830 Parliament, Morgan was listed among the Wellington ministry’s ‘friends’, but he failed to vote on the civil list when they were brought down, 15 Nov. 1830. He presented anti-slavery petitions, 17 Nov., and accompanied his father to difficult meetings in Newport and Brecon when industrial unrest coincided with clamour for parliamentary reform in 1830-1.
A diehard Conservative popular at Queen Victoria’s court, Morgan contested Brecon successfully in 1835, helped his brother Charles Octavius (1803-88) to victory in Monmouthshire in 1841, his eldest son Charles Rodney Morgan (1828-54) in Brecon in 1852, and his second son Godfrey Charles Morgan (1831-1913) in Breconshire, which he recaptured in 1858.
