- Philip Henry Moore
Philip Henry Moore (
February 22 1799 –November 21 1880 ) was a businessman and political figure inCanada East .He was born in
Rhinebeck, New York , in 1799 and came with his parents to Missisquoi County inLower Canada in 1802. He studied at an academy inSt. Albans, Vermont , and became a merchant at Bedford after spending some time farming. In 1829, he was named commissioner of small causes for the seigneury of Saint-Armand and a registrar for Missisquoi County. He served in the local militia and took part of the defence of Moore's Corner (later Saint-Armand-Station) during theLower Canada Rebellion . He was named to theLegislative Council of the Province of Canada after the Union Act of 1840 united Upper and Lower Canada. Moore chaired the commission to compensate residents of Lower Canada for losses suffered during the rebellion. He also worked at rebuilding the parliamentary library after the parliament buildings were burnt in 1849. He ran unsuccessfully as an independent Conservative candidate in Missisquoi for a seat in the House of Commons following Confederation. Moore helped establish theMontreal and Vermont Junction Railway and served as its president.He died in Saint-Armand-Station in 1880.
External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5171 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.