Lindley Murray Moore
Lindley Moore, was a Canadian-American abolitionist, educator, and farmer. With Frederick Douglass, he coordinated travel plans on the Underground Railroad and they gave speeches at anti-slavery assemblies. Moore worked with Hiram Wilson to identify and make education available for formerly enslaved people who had made it across the United States-Canadian border.
Moore operated private schools in the New York City area and was a superintendent and a teacher at Haverford College. In Rochester, New York, he operated a 170-acre farm in the 1830s and then returned to teaching. His wife, Abigail Mott Moore was the niece of Lucretia Mott.
Early life
Lindley Murray Moore was born May 31, 1788, in Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia, Canada into a Quaker family. His parents were Rachel Stone and Samuel Moore. His father, born in New Jersey, named him after his friend Lindley Murray.Before Lindley's birth, Samuel Moore, his wife, and their children had lived in the United States. During the American Revolutionary War, the family became concerned about being attacked by American soldiers and left their New Jersey home for New York City. Lindley's father was considered a loyalist and his property was confiscated by the patriots. Samuel's wife and children were taken from their residence and sent to the British line at Amboy under a flag of truce. From there, they moved to Nova Scotia. After living in Canada, the family visited New Jersey. Lindley Murray Moore stayed in the United States while his father and siblings moved to Upper Canada.
At about the age of 17, Lindley attended a school in Sandwich, Massachusetts. He then worked as a teacher so that he could save money to pay for further education.
Marriage and family
Lindley married Abigail Lydia Mott on August 19, 1813. Their son Edward Mott Moore, who became a physician, was born on July 15, 1814, in Rahway, New Jersey. He died on March 3, 1902, in Rochester, New York. Gilbert Hicks Moore was born in 1816 and died in 1868. Their daughter Ann Mott Moore was born in 1818.After living and working in the New York City area, the Moores moved to Rochester, New York in 1830. The following year, they bought a farm and built a two-story Greek Revival style house on it. Moore and his wife were members of the Orthodox Farmington Quarterly Meeting by November 1836. In addition to his anti-slavery efforts, Moore was vice-president of the Rochester Temperance Society.