Brian Morgan Edwards
Brian Morgan Edwards (August 1934 – December 2002) was an expert computer salesman, a prominent supporter of Plaid Cymru and a Welsh businessman who sponsored the first Welsh-language recording studio for popular music.
He was born in Swansea and won a place at the London School of Economics, where he was a joint founder of the Tankard Club, a dining club for LSE graduates. His first job was as a computer salesman with IBM, and his friendly and honest character, combined with an extrovert nature, soon won him success in that field. In 1961 he was appointed lead salesman for the 3000 series, a new computer system which used a novel small-sized punched card and was designed for the smaller business. By spending his weekends driving around the industrial estates of west London, and on Monday mornings presenting a list of company names to his secretary, he rapidly built up a strong following of prospective customers.
He met his wife Rona, who like himself was a native of Wales, whilst they were both living in London, and soon after their marriage the pair moved back to their native land, eventually settling in Pwllheli on the Lleyn Peninsula. Morgan Edwards had been a vociferous supporter of the Conservative Party, at the time of the Harold MacMillan government and the 1964 General Election, which brought Harold Wilson into government for the first time. The Sunday after that General Election he took over (by consent!) a Communist party stand at Speaker's Corner at Hyde Park Corner and announced "Welcome to the first meeting of Hyde Park Tories - we will speak here every Sunday until the Conservatives are returned to power". Supported by John Goss, Michael Brotherton, William List, Christopher Horne and others the Hyde Park Tories became a leading campaign organisation inside the Conservative Party. But the combination of marriage to Rona and residence in Wales soon turned him into a fervent Welsh Nationalist, and he supported that cause for many years. He stood as a candidate in a later General Election, but he did not win a seat.
In pursuance of his Welsh patriotic interest, in 1969 he supported the formation of the first Welsh language record label, Sain (Recordiau Sain, Sound Records) in partnership with the Welsh singers Dafydd Iwan and Huw Jones.[1] Sain remains the foremost Welsh recording studio for popular music to the present day. Morgan Edwards was also involved in setting up Cymdeithas tai Gwynedd, the first rural Housing Association in Wales, a charity providing affordable housing for people in need, especially the elderly and young low-income families.
Brian Morgan Edwards died in December 2002, and his wife Rona, President of the Welsh Bridge Union and Chairman of the North Wales Bridge Association, died only a month later in January 2003. Her obituary appeared in Newsletter 78 (February 2003) of the Welsh Bridge Union.