A keen follower of public affairs, he left Cambridge and entered public service. He undertook a trip to
Sweden in 1653, and in 1655 was sent by
Oliver Cromwell on a mission to
Italy to protest at actions taken against the
Waldensians by the
Duke of Savoy. He remained in
Geneva for some time in an ambassadorial role, and also wrote a book: The History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piemont, published in London in 1658.
Spy
While he was serving as secretary to
John Thurloe, a
Commonwealth official in charge of
espionage, Morland became disillusioned with the Government of the Commonwealth, allegedly after learning of a plot by Sir
Richard Willis, Thurloe and
Richard Cromwell to assassinate the future King
Charles II. As a
double agent, Morland began to work towards the
Restoration, engaging in espionage and
cryptography, activities that later helped him enter the King's service. In the 1660s he may have invented
columnar transposition, an
encryption technique which became very popular in 19th and 20th centuries.
Inventor
On 18 July 1660 he was created a
baronet and given a minor role at court, but his principal source of income came from applying his knowledge of mathematics and
hydraulics to construct and maintain various machines. These included:
"water-engines", an early kind of
water pump. He was, for example, engaged on projects to improve the water supply to
Windsor Castle, during which time he patented (c. 1675) a '
plunger pump' capable of "raising great quantities of water with far less proportion of strength than can be performed by a Chain or other Pump." He also experimented with using
gunpowder to make a
vacuum that would suck in water (in effect
the first internal combustion engine) and worked on ideas for a
steam engine. Morland's pumps were developed for numerous domestic, marine and industrial applications, such as wells, draining ponds or mines, and fire fighting. His calculation of the volume of steam (approximately two thousand times that of water) was not improved upon until the later part of the next century, and was of importance for the future development of a working steam engine.[2]
an 'arithmetical machine' by which the four fundamental rules of arithmetic were readily worked "without charging the memory, disturbing the mind, or exposing the operations to any uncertainty" (regarded by some as the world's first multiplying machine, an example is in the
Science Museum in
South Kensington).
in 1666 he also obtained a patent for making metal fire-hearths
From 1677 he lived in the
Vauxhall area of central London, where he made improvements to New Spring Gardens which later became
Vauxhall Gardens. In 1684 he moved to a house in Lower Mall,
Hammersmith.
Morland married three times:
In 1657 he married the
Huguenot Susanne de Milleville, daughter of Daniel de Milleville, baron de Boissay; they had three children. She died in 1668.
In 1670 he married Carola Harsnett, daughter of Sir Roger Harsnett; they had two children. She died in 1674.
In 1676 he married Ann Feilding of
Solihull, sister of
Beau Feilding. There was no issue, and she died in 1680.[5]
There are monuments to two of Morland's three wives in the nave of
Westminster Abbey.[6]
He began to go blind, losing his sight in about 1692. He died on 30 December 1695 and was buried, on 6 January 1696, in
St Paul's Church, Hammersmith.