Background
Morgan was born in Baton Rouge to Thomas Gibbes Morgan and the former Eliza Ann McKennan. He was named for Colonel Philip Hicky.
Morgan was born in Baton Rouge to Thomas Gibbes Morgan and the former Eliza Ann McKennan. He was named for Colonel Philip Hicky.
He was educated locally and then at the University of Paris in France from 1841 to 1846.
He was called a "traitor" in his home state. He was fluent in modern languages, including French and Spanish. He was a first lieutenant in the Mexican-American War.
He joined his father"s law practice in Baton Rouge in 1848.
In 1853, he relocated his practice to New Orleans and continued there until the 1870s. The couple had nine children, but only five survived past childhood.
Morgan was a judge of the 2nd District Court of Louisiana from 1853 to 1857. United States. President Andrew Johnson nominated him as the United States. attorney in New Orleans in 1866, in part because of Morgan"s refusal to side with the Confederacy, but the United States Senate did not approve the nomination.
The appointment was made again by Johnson"s successor, President Ulysses South. Grant in 1869.
The Senate concurred, and Morgan served as United States. attorney during Grant"s first term. Under temporary Republican Party rule in Louisiana from 1873 to 1876, Morgan was a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. In 1876, he became judge of the International Tribunal in Alexandria, Egypt, an appointment that bridged the Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes administrations.
President Hayes named him envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Mexico, a position that he held from January 26, 1880, to June 6, 1885.
That position survived the administrations of Hayes, James A. Garfield, and Chester A. Arthur, but quickly ended when the Democrat Grover Cleveland became President. After the assignment to Mexico, Morgan practiced law in New York City from 1885 to 1900.
He died in New York City and is interred in Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh.