Background
The son of the 1st Baron Moran and Dorothy (née Dufton), he was educated at Eton College in Berkshire and King"s College, Cambridge, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in history.
The son of the 1st Baron Moran and Dorothy (née Dufton), he was educated at Eton College in Berkshire and King"s College, Cambridge, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in history.
He was educated at Eton, the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, and the Royal Agricultural College.
He was one of the ninety hereditary peers elected to remain in the House of Lords after the passing of the House of Lords Acting 1999. Wilson served in the Royal Naval Reserve from 1943 to 1945. He was first Ordinary Seaman on HMS Belfast, later Sub-Lieutenant on Motor Torpedo Boats (MTB 684) and Destroyer HMS Oribi.
In 1945, Wilson entered the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and held various minor offices in Ankara, Tel Aviv, Rio de Janeiro, Washington, District of Columbia and South Africa.
From 1968-1973, he was Head of the West African Department of the Foreign Office, and from 1970-1973 concurrently non-resident British Ambassador to Chad. Wilson was British Ambassador to Hungary between 1973 and 1976 and British Ambassador to Portugal from 1976-1981.
In 1981, he was appointed High Commissioner to Canada and held this post until 1984. On leaving his post of High Commissioner to Canada in 1984, Moran penned a frank final telegram to the British Foreign Secretary in which he was critical of Canadian politicians and public policies.
The telegram became public in October 2009 after a British Broadcasting Corporation columnist, Matthew Parris, made a freedom of information request for the foreign office"s valedictory despatches.
From 1990-1995, Wilson was chair of the Wildlife and Countryside Link, from 1988 to 1995 vice-chairman of the Atlantic Salmon Trust, and from 1989-1994 served as chairman of the National Rivers Authority Regional Fisheries Advisory Committee for the Welsh Region. Foreign RSPB, he was council member from 1992-1994, and vice-president from 1996-1997. He was president of the Radnorshire Wildlife Trust (1994-death) and Chair of the Fisheries Policy and Legislation Working Group ("the Moran Committee".
From 1997 until his death).
In 1997 he was appointed chair of the Salmon and Trout Association, remaining until 2000, when he became executive vice-president Having been president of the Welsh Salmon and Trout Angling Association from 1988-1995, he was renamed as president in 2000.
He died in February 2014 aged 89.
In 1973, Wilson wrote a biography about Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, for which he received the Whitbread Award for Biography. Having been made a Companion of the Order of Street Michael and Street George in 1970, he was raised to a Knight Commander in 1981. In 1978, he received also the Grand Cross of the Portuguese Order of Infante D. Henrique.