William Morgan Crompton (1811 – 27 December 1886) was a New Zealand politician.

Early life and career

Crompton was born in Birmingham, England, in 1811, and received his education at an academy in Bristol run by Lant Carpenter. Crompton's father was a merchant trading with Brazil. He lived in northern France for some years and held a scholastic appointment. During this time, he took on the Catholic faith. He emigrated from England on the Lord William Bentinck and arrived in New Plymouth on 6 January 1852, and took land in nearby Omata. Later in 1852, he was the Taranaki Heralds first editor, but resigned after nine editions had been printed over a disagreement with the owners of the newspaper. He was ill in 1855 and initially feared that he could not attend the parliamentary session in Auckland, but he did go in the end. His ongoing illness prevented him from declaring his intentions prior to the and when it appeared that the Omata electorate would not have a representative, Alfred William East stepped forward and became a candidate. In the end, the election was contested by Crompton, but East had a majority of six votes. and Stratford-upon-Patea (later renamed simply Stratford), after Stratford-upon-Avon, the birthplace of William Shakespeare.