Morel was born in
London on 17 November 1840 (recorded as 1841 on his gravestone). He studied civil engineering at
King's College London. In 1863 Morel was in Melbourne, Australia (see his letters) and between 1862 and 1863, Morel was involved in railway construction in New Zealand followed by a period in Australia between 1864 and 1865. In 1867, Morel was active in British
North Borneo for the Labuan Coal Company, building railways and sinking mining shafts, Morel suffered from
tuberculosis before his arrival in Japan, and as his condition worsened he resigned his post with the intention of going to India. He received a 5,000 yen reward from the Japanese government, a tremendous amount at the time. However, he died in Yokohama on 5 November 1871, shortly before the opening ceremonies for the railway. His grave in the
Foreigner's Cemetery in
Naka-ku, Yokohama is designated as a "national railway memorial". Morel's wife was long reported to have been Japanese, but this was made up by a novelist to make Morel's story more interesting: he married Harriett Wynder, an Englishwoman, on 4 February 1862 at St Pancras Church in London. She died in Yokohama on 6 November 1871, the day after Morel, from acute nervous or respiratory disease. ==See also==