Early life John Morris was born on 15 July 1745. He was the son of Robert Morris (died 1768) and Margaret Morris (née Jenkins) who in later life lived in
Tredegar. Robert was a
Shropshire entrepreneur who had come to
Swansea in 1724 to supervise the Llangyfelach Copper Works, founded in 1717, and had taken control of the works when the owner, John Lane, was declared bankrupt in 1726. John Morris had four older siblings: Robert (a barrister born 1743, a supporter of the radical politician,
John Wilkes, who died unmarried c. 1797), Bridget, Jane and Margaret, He was
High Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1803 and in 1806 he was created a baronet, of Clasemont in the County of Glamorgan. Clasemont was their home in the
Clase or Clâs part of Morriston which had been taken down before 1849 when the locality was summarised by topographer
Samuel Lewis.
Family His father died in 1768. , 1777. In 1774 John married Henrietta Musgrave, one of five daughters of
Sir Philip Musgrave, 6th Baronet. In 1776 his sister
Margaret Morris married the Frenchman, Noel Joseph Desenfans; they and
Francis Bourgeois would eventually build up an art collection which became the basis of the collection at
Dulwich Picture Gallery in London. Morris had five daughters, three of whom survived into adulthood and each married: • Henrietta ∞
Sir Nathaniel Levett Peacocke. • Caroline ∞ Rev. George Fauquier • Matilda ∞ Mr.
Edward Jesse. Their children included historian
John Heneage Jesse and author and activist
Matilda Charlotte Houstoun. His younger son gained an M.A. but is not recorded by ''
Burke's Peerage'' as having had any children. His older son married the daughter of the 5th
Lord Torrington and continued the male line - he had a Navy Commander and General among the less senior of his four sons and the title devolved from one branch to another to a Morris descendant of the Commander living in
Georgetown, Ontario. He died on 25 June 1819, aged 73. ==Arms==