Anderson and Lucinda Moore, for whom the town is believed to have been named, were a pioneer family in the area; according to one source, they were former
slaves. In 1876 they donated a plot of land for a
Methodist church and for a school. The church and school made up the original Moore Station. Many freed slaves moved to the area from nearby
Fincastle after slavery to purchase land and enjoy their newfound freedom. From the 1870 census the following were residents of the area: • Ralph Calhoun, Martha Calhoun, with children Harriath Calhoun, William Calhoun, Mahalia Calhoun, Sallie Calhoun • Anderson Moore, Lucinda Moore, with children Rovana and Susan Moore • Hannah Moore, grandchildren George Peet, John Mills, Alzera Mills • Flora Dickinson, with children Joshua and Sara Dickinson • James and Ghana Brownfield, with children Lucinda, Mattie and Nettie • Addison Cofer and Mary Jane Larkin, with children Addison Cofer Jr., Norton Cofer, and Omega Cofer After emancipation freedman began to
sharecrop with their former masters in communities like Fincastle, Pleasant Ridge and
New York. Around 1872 they soon began to leave behind former plantations like Crossroads, Flat Creek, Stockard and such, and former masters such as Ratliff, Faulk, Wofford and Coleman. They began to purchase land in the Moore Station area, including the Andersons, Cofers, Douglases and Hightowers. These slaves were brought into Texas from
South Carolina,
Alabama and
Georgia by the pioneer families. These pioneer families were descendants of
Huguenots who were escaping religious persecution in Europe. Some were descendants of the
founding fathers, families like John O. Bullard, William Weatherford, Lachlan Durant, the Faulk brothers and others who migrated into the
Deep South, which was
Native American in the 1700s, to uproot tribes like the
Creek and
Seminole people. In order to get a foothold into the deep South, some married into the tribes and began to raise families. They established outposts like
Fort Mims and Little Tallassee in Alabama. This action later led to the infamous
Trail of Tears. Most of the population of present-day Moore Station are descendants of their slaves such as Lousia Durant, Addison/Adderson Cofer and Ralph Calhoun. ==Geography==