Henry Morgan (died 23 December 1559) was a Welsh lawyer and churchman, Bishop of St Davids during the reign of Mary I of England.
He was admitted at Doctors' Commons 27 October 1528, and for several years acted as moderator of those who performed exercises for their degrees in civil law at Oxford.
On the deprivation of Robert Ferrar he was appointed by Queen Mary bishop of St. David's in 1554.
He then retired to Wolvercote, near Oxford, where some relatives, including the Owens of Godstow House, resided.
John Foxe in his Acts and Monuments of the Church[1] and Thomas Beard in his Theatre of God's Judgments state that Morgan was 'stricken by God's hand' with a malady; Foxe gives some gruesome details; but Anthony à Wood could find no tradition to that effect among the inhabitants of Wolvercote.