Francis W. Moore Jr.
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Francis W. Moore Jr. (April 20, 1808 – September 1, 1864) became the second mayor of Houston, Texas, in 1838. He was elected twice more and served as mayor of the city in three consecutive decades, the 1830s, 1840s, and 1850s. He was the co-publisher of the Telegraph and Texas Register, a newspaper in Houston.
Early life
Francis W. Moore Jr. was born on April 20, 1808, in Salem, Massachusetts. His father, Francis W. Moore, studied medicine at Harvard University. The Moores relocated to Livingston, New York, in 1828. The younger Moore lost an arm in his youth. By 1834, he moved to Bath, New York, where he enrolled as a law student and worked as a teacher.<ref name="HTO">Template:Cite web</ref>
Career
Moore volunteered as a Buckeye Ranger, a military unit fighting for Texas Independence from Mexico in 1836.<ref>Benham (1998), p. 61.</ref>
Telegraph and Texas Register
In March 1837, Moore purchased Thomas Borden's shares in the Telegraph and Texas Register. Moore was co-owner with Gail Borden and soon took over as editor-in-chief.<ref name=kokeny289/> At the time, the newspaper was located in Columbia. The 1st Texas Congress had been expected to name Columbia the capital of the new Republic of Texas.<ref name=kemp6>Kemp (1944), p. 6.</ref> Instead, they chose the brand-new city of Houston. The publishers made plans to move the press to Houston. Houston and Columbia were separated by Template:Convert of boggy river bottoms. It was very difficult to transport large loads overland, so publishers made arrangements to ship the printing press via boat.<ref name=mcmurtrie182>McMurtrie (1932), p. 182.</ref> On April 16, 1837, the press arrived in Houston, on the same boat as the executive departments of the Republic of Texas.<ref name=kemp7>Kemp (1944), p. 7.</ref>
The first issue to be printed in Houston appeared on May 2, 1837.<ref name=barker143>Barker (1917), p. 143.</ref> In late June, Gail Borden transferred his shares to Jacob W. Cruger.<ref group=Note>Gail Borden returned to the United States, where he founded Borden Milk Company.</ref> The partnership between Moore and Cruger continued until April 1851,<ref name=kokeny289>Kökény (2004), p. 289.</ref> when Moore bought out Cruger.<ref name="Carroll421">Carroll (1944), p. 421.</ref>
Under Moore's leadership, the newspaper became "the most influential news organ of the Republic of Texas".<ref name=kokeny289/> Although the capital moved to Austin in 1840, the newspaper remained in Houston. When the capital was relocated, Moore and Cruger established another newspaper, The Texas Sentinel, in Austin.<ref name=lee217>Lee (1917), p. 217.</ref> His reporting did not necessarily please politicians. Governor Sam Houston once referred to Moore as that "'lying scribbler of the Telegraph, whose one arm could write more malicious falsehoods than any man with two arms'".<ref name=carrollo421q>quoted in Carroll (1944), p. 421.</ref>
Many of the paper's articles were aimed at attracting immigrants to Texas, or retaining those who had recently arrived. Articles emphasized the good character of recent settlers (as opposed to the widespread belief that residents of Texas were scoundrels) and the advantages of living in the country.<ref name=kokeny294>Kökény (2004), p. 294.</ref> Through much of 1837, Moore wrote a series of articles describing the natural resources of Texas and the geography of various regions of the nations.<ref name=Carroll421/> Moore's series on the geography of Texas was in 1840 compiled into a book Maps and Descriptions of Texas. The book was reprinted in 1844 as Description of Texas.<ref name=Carroll421/> The articles were widely quoted in other newspapers and journals; an 1843 issue of Southern Agriculturist copied at least one Telegraph article in whole.<ref name=Carroll422>Carroll (1944), p. 422.</ref>
Moore included many articles explaining and justifying the Texas Revolution and the very existence of the Republic.<ref name=kokeny292>Kökény (2004), p. 292.</ref> At the same time, as early as 1837, the newspaper advocated annexation to the United States,<ref name=kokeny298>Kökény (2004), p. 298.</ref> even publishing a series of articles explaining that Texas should have been considered part of the Louisiana Purchase.<ref name=kokeny292/> In 1846, not long after Texas was annexed, Moore and Cruger changed the name of the newspaper to Democratic Telegraph and Texas Register, as they explained, "to designate the plotical tenets that we shall advocate".<ref name=kokeny305>Kökény (2004), p. 305.</ref>
Moore designed the Seal of Houston, adopted on February 24, 1840. He was paid $50 for his work.<ref>"City Seal." City of Houston. Retrieved on May 29, 2010.</ref>
In 1854, Moore sold the newspaper to Harvey H. Allen.<ref name=handbook>Template:Citation</ref>
Politics
Moore was elected as mayor of Houston in 1838. The second mayor of Houston established the first municipal police force. Using both the mayor's office and the printing press, he protested the practice of dueling and attempted to mediate disputes in order to prevent duels.<ref>Benham (1998), p. 61.</ref>
Geologist
Despite his opinion of Moore's reporting, in 1860 Sam Houston–now Governor of Texas–appointed Moore the State Geologist, replacing Benjamin F. Shumard.<ref name=Carroll421>Carroll (1944), p. 421.</ref>
Personal life
Moore wedded Elizabeth Mofat Wood in 1840, whom he had known in Bath, New York. The Moores had nine children.<ref name="HTO"/>
Death and legacy
Moore died in Duluth, Minnesota, on September 1, 1864. He is interred in Brooklyn, New York, at Green-Wood Cemetery.<ref name="HTO"/>
Notes
References
Sources
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