Moore was born in Ireland in 1804. After establishing himself as a merchant in London, he became head of Charles Moore and Company of Water Street, Liverpool, a large firm of shipowners which pioneered the commissioning of iron vessels. He purchased an 800 acre estate at Kilross, co. Tipperary in 1852, and subsequently became one of the most extensive landed proprietors in the county, owning more than 10,000 acres.
Moore converted to Catholicism in the 1850s and was a generous benefactor to the Church, the marriage of his daughter to the nephew of the earl of Lisburn in 1862 being celebrated by the archbishop of Cashel.
Possessed of ‘strong common sense’ and considerable ‘practical ability’, Moore was also credited with ‘admirable social qualities’ and was popularly regarded as a ‘trustworthy and faithful’ representative.
A false report that Moore had been kicked to death by his horse briefly circulated in November 1868, but, having been ill for some months, he died of rheumatic fever at his London residence in August 1869. He was buried at Lattern Church, co. Tipperary, the construction of which he had largely sponsored.
