Anthony Morgan of Kilflgin


Sir Anthony Morgan of Kilflgin, Monmouthshire, was a Royalist officer during the English Civil War.

Biography

Morgan was the son of Sir William Morgan, of Tredegar, Monmouthshire, and Bridget, daughter and heiress of Anthony Morgan of Heyford, Northamptonshire. He seems identical with the Anthony Morgan who was appointed by the Spanish ambassador Cardenas, on 9 June 1640, to levy and transport the residue of the two thousand soldiers afforded to him by King Charles I.
On 21 October 1642 Morgan was knighted by Charles at Southam, Warwickshire, and two days later fought at the Battle of Edgehill. By the death of his half-brother, Colonel Thomas Morgan, who was killed at the Battle of Newbury 20 September 1643, he became possessed of the manors of Heyford and Clasthorpe, Northamptonshire; and had other property in Momouthshire, Warwickshire, and Westmoreland. He subsequently went abroad, but returned in 1648, when, though his estates were sequestered by the parliament by an ordinance dated 5 January 1646, he imprisoned several of his tenants in Banbury Castle for not paying their rent to him.
Morgan tried to compound for his property in May 1650, and took the covenent and negative oath, but being represented as a "papist delinquent", he was unable to make terms with the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents. In August 1658 he obtained leave to pay a visit to France.
Settled in Darby Township, PA in 1680.
Ancestry.com. Genealogy of the descendants of John Kirk, born 1660, at Alfreton, in Derbyshire, England . Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Roberts, Miranda S. Kirk,. Genealogy of the descendants of John Kirk, born 1660, at Alfreton, in Derbyshire, England, died 1705, in Darby Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. unknown: unknown, 1912-1913.