Moore was born to yeoman
farmer John Moore at
Horningsea,
Cambridgeshire,
England in 1790. Not much is known about Moore's early life, until, on 25 December 1813, he was drafted into the Royal South Lincoln Militia and trained at Weden Barracks. By August the following year, he was promoted lieutenant, and in September he was transferred to the 14th Regiment of the Militia. It was this regiment which accompanied him in battle at
Waterloo. Soon after, however, when he was placed on half-pay, Moore decided to accompany his brother in law,
John Wylde, who had recently been appointed Judge advocate of
New South Wales, to
Sydney, They arrived on 5 October 1816, on a ship called the
Elizabeth, with Wylde making his official landing in the Governor's barge under a salute of thirteen guns on October 12. Moore was thereby appointed Registrar of the Governor's Court and a clerk to Wylde, at a salary of £80. In 1824 the
Supreme Court of New South Wales was formally established, and Moore spent some time acting as a
prothonotary, until the following year, when his post was abolished. Among other later occupations, Moore became a pastoralist, and a great owner of land. Moore married his first wife, Sarah Elizabeth, née Hollands (born to David Hollands of Bermondsey, Surrey, a shipowner and shipwright) on 29 March 1825. She, however, died, in 1839, aged 53. Survived by Moore and their only son, Frederick Thomas, Elizabeth was buried at Liverpool, where the two had married. Two years later, Moore married Ann Augusta, daughter of Lieutenant John James Peters, with whom he had four children: two girls and two boys. Moore died on 27 July 1864, at
Baw Baw. ==Land ownership==