Sir Thomas Morgan, 1st Baronet

For other people named Thomas Morgan, see Thomas Morgan (disambiguation).

Major-General Sir Thomas Morgan, 1st Baronet (1604 – 13 April 1679) was a Welsh soldier during the English Civil War, and Commander-in-Chief in Scotland during the Restoration.[1]

Biography

Morgan was born in Wales. At 16, having at that time little knowledge of any language but Welsh, Morgan enlisted in Sir Horace Vere's Protestant volunteer expedition which fought in the Thirty Years' War. Morgan fought in the Low Countries and in particular assisted the Dutch in the decisive victory at the battle of the Slaak in 1631.

He fought under Fairfax in the English Civil War. In 1645 he was appointed parliamentary governor of Gloucester. In 1646 he took Chepstow Castle and Monmouth, and besieged Raglan Castle. From 1651 to 1657 he assisted General George Monck in Scotland and was promoted to major-general. He was second in command in Flanders in 1657 and knighted on his return in 1668. He rejoined Monck in Scotland, and played a conspicuous part in the Restoration in Edinburgh. He was appointed Governor of Jersey in 1665 repairing the Jersey forts and reorganising the militia.[2]

A pamphlet narrating his acts in France and Flanders in 1657 and 1658, said to be by himself was published in 1699.[2]

Notes

References

Attribution

Further reading

Baronetage of England
New creation Baronet
(of Langattock, Monmouth)
1661–1679
Succeeded by
John Morgan
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