Alice Moore was born in
Paris, Illinois, June 18, 1850. Her father, the Gen.
Jesse Hale Moore, scholar, clergyman, soldier and statesman, who died while serving his government as United States Consul in
Callao, Peru, was at the time of her birth, president of the Paris academy. He came of an old
Virginia family whose ancestors were noted for their participation in the wars of
1776 and
1812. Her mother, Rachel (Hines) Moore, a native of
Kentucky, was a daughter of one of Kentucky's prominent families, which included the clergyman, William H. Thompson, and the
Indiana jurist, John W. Thompson. From both sides of her family, she inherited literary taste. From the age of eight, she had her own opinions on social and religious questions, and often astonished her elders with profound questionings, which brought upon her the name of "peculiar". Her aggressiveness as she became older, in clinging to those opinions, even when very unpopular, added to that the opprobrium, "self-willed and headstrong." During the
Civil War, in which nearly all the male relatives and friends, including her future husband, had enlisted for the defense of the
Union, she commenced the study of politics. At that time, she read of the woman's rights movement. While she had not the courage openly to advocate a thing considered and pronounced "unwomanly" by many in her circle, her nature rebelled against the inequality of the sexes. In school, she traded compositions for worked-out mathematical problems, averaging many terms from six to ten compositions weekly on as many different subjects, changing her style so as to escape detection. At fifteen, her ambition to achieve something over-ruled her better judgment, for, thinking there was little opportunity for a
Methodist minister's daughter, her father being then presiding elder of the
Decatur, Illinois, District, to make more of herself or to see the world, she left home one Sunday evening, ostensibly to attend church, but in fact to take the train for
St. Louis to make her own fortune. There she immediately secured a situation in a dry goods store at a week. After one delightful week of complete freedom and self-reliance, she was persuaded to give up her situation and her dream of fighting the world alone and single-handed. Much against her will, she returned and resumed her home life with a feeling of disappointment from which she never entirely recovered, for she inwardly rebelled against the stereotyped, formal and empty life a girl in her social position was compelled to live. Her main solace was in writing stories and poems, many of which were destroyed as soon as written. Others she sent secretly and anonymously to papers and magazines. Her education was finished at
Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, special honors in music and literary composition, prize winner in elocution. ==Career==