people - above stairs
 

Go to Home page

Learn about the building

Learn about the people


Get married at Tredegar House

Visitor information

List of events

Information for schools

The Friends of Tredegar House

Useful links

Sir William Morgan KB

In 1719, after a long illness, John Morgan of Tredegar died. He was succeeded by his 19 year old son William.William Morgan reaped the benefits of the expanding estate built up by his father and grandfather, and by the inheritance of his wealthy great-uncle John, a merchant from London.
Young William was a flamboyant character and proceeded to cut quite a dash in society. His spending was extravagant. As early as 1721 he was paying for 2 French horns, for dice and drinking horns and for the services of a French peruke (wig) maker, for a new chaise and for a great silver punch bowl costing over £60. The following year he built a racecourse in Cardiff and a cockpit in Newport.
This spending made him a noticeable figure in society, and in 1724 he married Lady Rachel Cavendish, the daughter of the 2nd Duke of Devonshire. This glittering match enhanced William’s prospects. Lady Rachel came with a dowry of £20,000 and her father, the Duke, was one of the most influential Whig peers of the day. It is surely no coincidence that a year after this marriage, William was created a Knight of the Bath.
It appears that married life did not temper Sir William’s extravagance, for his expenditure for the year 1725 was no less than £37,418! A ‘gold snuff box’ and ‘a pair of pistols’ being just a couple of the items that the Tredegar Papers record having being purchased. At Tredegar House guests would have been entertained by Sir William's own harpist (paid £5 a year) and by two clarinettists. The Morgans had never been so fashionable! More payments were made to further Sir William's sporting aspirations: he modelled his stables on those of his father-in-law; owned 75 horses (including a very successful racehorse 'Lamprey') and indulged in the rather bloodthirsty sports of cockfighting and bear-bating.
Sir William was a Whig MP, on good terms with the most powerful politician of the day, Walpole, and had the Duke of Devonshire as a father-in-law. It has been speculated that a peerage was soon to follow; but with the world at his feet, and the future looking bright, Sir William died in 1731, aged 30.
He left behind a young widow, 4 children, and an ambiguously worded will, which was to cause the Morgan family much conflict in the years to come.

people - above stairs
This website is owned by The Friends of Tredegar House.
Copyright 2000 Friends of Tredegar House.
Design and Administration by Cottage Industries