Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Kenyon Pascoe Vaughan-MorganOBE (27 October 1873 – 21 August 1933) was a British military officer and politician, who served as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Fulham East from 1922 until his death.
Vaughan-Morgan was educated at Charterhouse School, and then studied abroad in France and Germany. He joined the family firm, the Morgan Crucible Company in Battersea, and rose to become director and vice-chairman. He married Muriel Collett in 1897; the two had three children.[1]
Following the outbreak of the First World War, Vaughan-Morgan was commissioned in the Royal Army Service Corps in 1915,[1] with a temporary commission as a lieutenant dating from 13 January 1915.[2] He became a member of the General Staff at the War Office in 1917, and retired in 1919 as a lieutenant-colonel. Following the war, he became the honorary colonel of the 64th Field Brigade RA in the Territorial Army.[1]