,
listed at Grade II* showing the
reredos designed by Temple Moore Moore's main contributions to architecture were his churches; he designed about 40 new churches, and
All Saints' Cathedral, Nairobi. He also restored older churches, and made alterations and additions to others. In addition he designed fittings and items of furniture for the interiors of churches. In other fields, he designed and altered
country houses, and other buildings including schools, vicarages, parish halls, a court house, and memorial and churchyard crosses. Moore's career spanned the closing years of the Gothic Revival, but he developed the style rather than merely continuing it. In his entry in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography the author states that his "artistic destiny was not to preserve an attenuating tradition but to bring to maturity a development which otherwise would have remained incomplete", and also expresses the opinion that he was "England's leading ecclesiastical architect from the mid-Edwardian years". Moore was an
Anglican in the
Anglo-Catholic tradition, which prefers its churches to have beautiful surroundings and fine fittings to enhance worship; Moore's designs reflect this. The
National Heritage List for England shows that at least 34 of Moore's new churches are designated as
listed buildings. Two of these,
St Wilfrid, Harrogate, and
All Saints,
Stroud, are listed at Grade I, and at least 16 of the others are at Grade II*. For his secular works, Moore received praise from his contemporaries for remodelling
South Hill Park in Berkshire, and for restoring the
Treasurer's House and
St William's College in
York. ==See also==