Career
While Morgan was from Glasbury, her story has been associated with Presteigne since her execution in 1805. Morgan was working in the kitchens in the early hours of a Sunday in September 1804 when she became unwell. She later went to her room in the servant"s quarters of the castle.
Early that evening the cook went to her room and accused Morgan of having given birth to a baby, which at first she strongly denied.
Later, according to the evidence given by the cook, Morgan "owned that she had delivered herself of a child which was in the underbed cut open, amongst the feathers with the head nearly divided from the body, and the severely damaged intestinal system removed and placed underneath the child."
The inquest on the baby was held at Glasbury two days later, and the Coroner"s Jury found that:
Mary Morgan, late of the Parish of Glazebury, a single woman on the 23rd day of September being big with child, afterward alone and secretly from her body did bring forth alive a female child, which by the laws and customs of this Kingdom was a bastard. Mary Morgan.. moved and seduced by the instigation of the devil afterwards on the same day, feloniously, wilfully and of her malice aforethought did make an assault with a certain penknife made of iron and steel of the value of sixpence.. and gave the child one mortal wound of the length of three inches and the depth of one inch.
The child instantly died. Morgan was too ill to travel to Presteigne, where the Assizes were held, until 6 October.
On 13 April Morgan was hanged, and was buried in what was then unconsecrated ground near the church later that same afternoon.
Her public execution attracted large crowds, who watched as she was taken by cart from the gaol to the execution at Gallows Lane. She was subsequently commemorated by two gravestones in the churchyard at Presteigne. Although this theory is broadly discredited today, it has been key in cementing the popular characterisation of Mary Morgan as the helpless victim of an unscrupulous aristocrat.
The father is now generally agreed to have been one of her fellow servants at the castle.
Since her execution, there has been a concerted effort to redeem Morgan"s reputation. Her case became a causes célèbre for feminists who have presented her trial as a miscarriage of justice and suggested the Judge and jury were misogynistic, although it has never been disputed that the murder happened and there is no reason to believe the verdict or punishment could have been different.