Education
He was educated at Eton and served as a Captain in the Grenadier Guards in the Second Boer War between 1900 and 1902, where he was wounded.
He was educated at Eton and served as a Captain in the Grenadier Guards in the Second Boer War between 1900 and 1902, where he was wounded.
Lord Morley"s father was Albert Edmund Parker, 3rd Earl of Morley. He was Aide-de-camp to GOC Germiston District, South Africa in 1902 and to GOC Home District in 1903. Lord Morley led the "Parker Expedition", which carried out excavations searching for treasure from Solomon"s Temple between 1909 and 1911.
Neil Asher Silberman described the expedition as "Conceived in folly, but planned with cunning, the Parker Mission had come to Jerusalem with a single goal: to locate and unearth the fantastic treasure of Solomon’s Temple buried beneath the Temple Mount."
Lord Morley died at the age of 83 in 1962.
The first expedition map documented the location of tunnels and artifacts discovered in and on the bedrock in the areas around Warrens Shaft on the eastern slopes of the mountain above the Spring Citadel over the Gihon Spring. In recent years many of the map elements were verified by archaeologists Ronny Reich and Eli Shukron.