On his death Moor was remembered as the ‘first veritable Tory’ to break ‘through the Liberal traditions of Brighton’, yet he had frequently taken an independent line, both on the hustings and during his brief spell in the Commons.
After attending Greenwich School Moor had trained as a solicitor, and from 1832 to 1841 worked in partnership with John Simpson at Furnival’s Inn, London. In February 1842 he arrived in Port Phillip (Melbourne), where he established a practice at Stone Cottages, Little Flinders Street East, dealing mainly in unpaid debts, commercial arbitrations, conveyancing and mortgages.
A close associate of superintendant Charles LaTrobe, in July 1849 Moor was elected to represent Port Phillip’s Geelong district in the New South Wales Legislative Council, where he unsuccessfully attempted to bring in bills increasing the powers of the Anglican Church and was accused of assisting wealthy occupiers of crown lands (squatters) in the run-up to separation. Following the creation of the state of Victoria, he stood for Portland in the first elections to its legislative council in October 1851, but was defeated. He departed for England early the following year, returned to Australia in December 1853, and in March 1854 left permanently.
Moor, who had made ‘a large fortune’ in Australia from his business and pastoral holdings, settled in Brighton’s fashionable Kemp Town and took up philanthropic and charitable endeavours, notably as president of the Brighton Institute, which had reading rooms in Church Street.
Moor generally opposed the Palmerston ministry in the lobbies, but had no qualms about charting his own course, telling the House that he did not ‘belong to any party; he was an independent Member’, 29 May 1865. He voted with his radical colleague for public buildings to be rated, 5 Apr., but against the opposition’s criticism of the schools inspectors’ reports, 12 Apr., 12 May 1864. He divided against the county franchise, 13 Apr., and borough franchise bills, 11 May 1864. In his maiden speech, 18 Apr. 1864, he endorsed calls for greater police supervision of released convicts, ‘whilst transportation was kept in its present suspended state of animation’. He agonised over the abolition of university tests, 1 June 1864, explaining that although he backed the admission of Dissenters and Catholics to Oxford and Cambridge, he could not support their obtaining electoral rights in university governance on graduation. He divided against repeal of the malt duty, 7 Mar. 1865, but was in the Liberal minority for inquiry into the Irish Church, 28 Mar., and their majorities on the Catholic oaths bill, 30 May, 12 June 1865. On 18 May 1865 he unsuccessfully moved an amendment to the partnership bill, noting that its object ‘was to encourage loans of money to traders’, but that its clauses about repayment in cases of bankruptcy made it doubtful that providers ‘would lend money on such conditions’. On 29 May 1865 he raised the issue of a pension for his friend Latrobe in respect of his service as Port Phillip’s superintendant, and in his last known intervention moved unsuccessfully for one to be bestowed, 22 June 1865.
At the 1865 general election Moor offered again for Brighton, where a reunited Liberal party attacked his ‘liberal-conservatism’ and pushed him into third place.
