John Morgan (of Dderw)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_Morgan_(of_Dderw) an entity of type: Thing

John Morgan (18 February 1742 – 27 June 1792) was a Welsh politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1769 to 1792. Morgan was the youngest son of Sir Thomas Morgan and his wife, Jane. He entered the House of Commons in 1769 as Member of Parliament for Brecon, succeeding his brother Sir Charles Morgan. In 1771, he accepted the Stewardship of the Manor of East Hendred in order to enter the by-election at Monmouthshire, replacing his late brother Sir Thomas Morgan. Unusually, given the immense Morgan influence in Brecknockshire and Monmouthshire, the election was contested, albeit unsuccessfully, by Valentine Morris. rdf:langString
rdf:langString John Morgan (of Dderw)
rdf:langString John Morgan
rdf:langString John Morgan
xsd:date 1792-06-27
xsd:date 1742-02-18
xsd:integer 13791167
xsd:integer 1058015815
rdf:langString James Rooke 1785–92
rdf:langString John Hanbury 1771–84
rdf:langString Viscount Nevill 1784–85
xsd:date 1742-02-18
xsd:date 1792-06-27
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Brecon
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Monmouthshire
xsd:integer 1769 1771
rdf:langString John Morgan (18 February 1742 – 27 June 1792) was a Welsh politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1769 to 1792. Morgan was the youngest son of Sir Thomas Morgan and his wife, Jane. He entered the House of Commons in 1769 as Member of Parliament for Brecon, succeeding his brother Sir Charles Morgan. In 1771, he accepted the Stewardship of the Manor of East Hendred in order to enter the by-election at Monmouthshire, replacing his late brother Sir Thomas Morgan. Unusually, given the immense Morgan influence in Brecknockshire and Monmouthshire, the election was contested, albeit unsuccessfully, by Valentine Morris. His elder brothers having died without issue, John Morgan inherited the Tredegar Estate in 1787. Finding himself in urgent need of an heir, he married Louisa Pym Burt, a woman who was more than twenty-five years his junior. Unfortunately, the marriage did not result in any children, and when John Morgan died in 1792, the Tredegar Estate passed by arrangement to his sister Jane and her husband Sir Charles Gould, on condition they changed their name to Morgan.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3944
xsd:gYear 1742
xsd:gYear 1792

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