Background
Morgan was born in Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury, a son of one John Morgan, and was raised in Smithfield, London.
Morgan was born in Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury, a son of one John Morgan, and was raised in Smithfield, London.
He studied at Eton and Cambridge and graduated from Peterhouse in 1809.
As a young man, he was given an annual income of £300. He established a medical practice in London where the focus of his work was the study of cowpox and smallpox. He was accepted to the Royal College of Physicians of London in 1810.
Their daughter, Anne Hammond Morgan, survived.
Abercorn’s wife, the Marchioness Lady Anne Jane Gore, engineered an introduction to the Irish novelist Sydney Owenson (1776–1859) who had become famous for The Wild Irish Girl (1806). She was several years his senior.
Of his knighthood, Lady Morgan"s biographer wrote:
lieutenant was an act of courtesy on the part of his Grace the Duke of Richmond to Lord Abercorn to confer knighthood on his family physician, who had done nothing to deserve it on public grounds. Morgan, himself, cared nothing about lieutenant
But to please Mission Owenson he would have been content to pass under any denomination.
From 1815 to 1817 the Morgans toured France and Lady Morgan subsequently published two historical works, France (1817), and Italy (1821), to which Thomas wrote appendices. These were popular works. They later shared cr (in 1841) for a two-volume work enigmatically titled The Book without a Name.
lieutenant was a collection of previously published articles and essays.
During Morgan"s residence in Ireland he devoted much of his time and talents to the cause of Catholic Emancipation, which he advocated in the public journals and periodicals. He was a lover of civil and religious liberty, and his homes in Dublin and London were, according to William Munk, "always open to sufferers in that cause from whatever land they came."
His own works included Sketches of the Philosophy of Life (1818), a scientific work, and Sketches of the Philosophy of Morals (1822) which offered a rebuttal to criticism of his first work, notably, that of Thomas Rennell.
He also contributed articles to several magazines including The New Monthly Magazine and The Metropolitan Magazine. In 1835 he was made commissioner of Irish fisheries and in July published a short story called "Glimpses of Other Worlds" that told of a high pressure steam balloon that travels to the moon.
The Morgan’s moved to William Street, Lowndes Square, London.
In England, he was appointed physician to the Marshalsea prison. Thomas Morgan died in London on 28 August 1843.