Anthony Morgan of Kilfigin

Sir Anthony Morgan (died 1665) of Kilfigin, Monmouthshire, was a Royalist officer during the English Civil War.

[2] He seems identical with the Anthony Morgan who was appointed by the Spanish ambassador Cardenas on 9 June 1640 to levy and transport the residue of the two thousand soldiers afforded to him by King Charles I.

By the death of his half-brother, Colonel Thomas Morgan, who was killed at the Battle of Newbury 20 September 1643, he became possessed of the manors of Heyford and Clasthorpe, Northamptonshire; he had other property in Monmouthshire, Warwickshire, and Westmoreland.

He subsequently went abroad, but returned in 1648, when, though his estates were sequestered by the parliament by an ordinance dated 5 January 1646, he imprisoned several of his tenants in Banbury Castle for not paying their rent to him.

[7] One Anthony Morgan was ordered to be arrested and brought before Secretary Bennet on 5 June 1663, and his papers were seized (ib.