Biography
George was born at Bridgend, Glamorganshire, Wales, second son of William Morgan, physician, and his wife Sarah, who was a sister of Dr. Richard Price the philosopher - another of their sons was William Morgan (1750 - 1833). From Cowbridge school he went up, in 1771, to Jesus College, Oxford, intending to take Anglican orders, but he changed his theological views and went to Hoxton Academy. He was minister at Norwich (1776-85) and at Yarmouth (1785-6); then he became assistant to his uncle Richard Price at Hackney Academy. He resigned in 1791 and became a private tutor; he won some fame as a lecturer on science. Like his uncle (whose biography he began to write), he was a Radical, and he visited France in 1789 accompanied by three friends. He was in Paris at the storming of the Bastille, its fall being the flashpoint of the French Revolution, and is supposed to have been the first to communicate the news to England.
Source: [Dictionary of Welsh Biography](https://biography.wales/article/s-MORG-CAD-1754?query=biography&field=content)
Source: [Dictionary of Welsh Biography](https://biography.wales/article/s-MORG-CAD-1754?query=biography&field=content)
Books by George Cadogan Morgan
Lectures on Electricity / by G
Lectures on Electricity / by G. C. Morgan; V. 1
Travels in Revolutionary France and a Journey Across America
Directions for the Use of a Scientific Table: In the Collection and Application of Knowledge
The following speech, was deli
The following speech, was delivered by the Rev. G.C.M. at an assembly of the freemen, freeholders, and other inhabitants of the city and county of the city of Norwich