The Manor of Morston was owned by Sir
Nathaniel Bacon of Stiffkey in the 16th century. In 1593 his daughter
Anne married Sir
John Townshend (1567–1603) and part of the marriage agreement was that the couple would inherit several manors including Morston. Sir Nathaniel died in 1622 and as Anne's husband Sir John had predeceased him he left the land to her son
Sir Roger Townshend (1596–1637). It remained in the Townshend family until 1911. It was therefore the Townshends who built the first part of Morston Hall in about 1640 and made the later alterations and additions. The Tithe Map of 1838 reveals that
Lord Charles Townshend was the owner of Morston Hall and George Wood was the tenant. The Wood family were residents of the Hall for about one hundred years. George Wood (1796–1865) was born in Morston in 1796. In 1820 he married Elizabeth Wrench whose parents Elizabeth and Jonathan lived in Morston. The couple had six children, three sons and three daughters. This family lived in Morston Hall and farmed the adjoining 2000 acres for about forty years. George died in 1865 and his son William George Wood (1824–1903) took over the farm and lived in the Hall. There is an ornate gravestone in Morston Church for him which can be seen at this reference. In 1857 William married Fanny Page. She was the daughter of Christopher Thomas Page of
Stiffkey. They had seven children, two sons and five daughters. When he died in 1903 his son Robert Wrench Wood (1876–1949) moved into the Hall and continued to manage their large farm until its sale in 1911. In 1910 he married Violet Irene Chamberlin who was the daughter of Sir
George Moore Chamberlin, a prominent
Norfolk businessman. They had two sons. ==Later residents==