ALBERT WESTON MOORE Albert Weston Moore, son
of Hugh Kelsea and Mary Ann (Connor) Moore, was born August 29, 1842, at Boston, Massachusetts. He fitted for college
at the private school of A. K. Hathaway, in Medford, Massachusetts, and entered Dartmouth at the beginning of the Fall
term, August 24, 1860.
After graduation, he received the promise of an appointment in the U. S. Army Engineer Corps, and waited for it with
commendable patience until March, 1865, when, failing to receive it, he accepted a position as bookkeeper for the
American Steam Gauge Company, of Boston, Massachusetts, where he remained until September, 1869. During this time, he
had given up the intention of studying law, or any other profession; but he gradually came to a resolution to study
for the ministry, and accordingly entered the Andover Theological Seminary in the Fall of 1869, and graduated from
that Seminary in June, 1872. In November, 1872, he accepted an invitation to preach for one year in the Congregational
Church at Blackstone, Massachusetts. He was ordained January 22, 1873, and made a more permanent arrangement with the
same church. He remained there until July, 1874, when he resigned, and took up his residence at Malden, Massachusetts,
only preaching occasionally until July, 1875, when he accepted the pastorate of the Congregational Church at Bristol,
New Hampshire, where he remained until May, 1877. For the next two years he had no permanent charge, but resided at
Malden, Massachusetts, and supplied pulpits as the opportunity offered.
In April, 1879, he was called to the Congregational Church at Farmington, Maine, over which he was installed as pastor
February 2, 1881. He resigned his pastorate there in order to accept a unanimous call to the Central Congregational
Church at Lynn, Massachusetts, where he was installed November 8, 1882. He has continued his labors there with much
success up to the present date.
On October 1, 1883, he read before the Boston Ministers' Meeting an elaborate and exhaustive paper on "The true
Sources of Religious Confidence,'' which was published entire in the Congregationalist of the following week. That
paper says editorially, "that no paper before the Ministers' Meeting for a long time has awakened so large interest,
and given such deep gratification by its boldness, firmness, and strong grasp of its subject. In many respects, it is
a model of research, discrimination and force."
He received the degree of Master of Arts in course.
In politics, he is an Independent Republican.
He was married July 20, 1869, to Miss S. Fanny Norton, of Malden, Massachusetts. They have had seven children: Walter
Goodenow, born November 29, 1870; Hugh Kelsea, born January 3, 1872; Alice Wood, born November 7, 1873; Mary Wilson
Lane, born January 21, 1875; Horace Dwight, born August 14, 1877; Clara Abbott, born January 30, 1879; and Mabel
Cutler, born December 6, 1880.
Alice Wood died October 2, 1874; Clara Abbott died September 30, 1879; Mary Wilson Lane died May 13, 1880.
Source: "Memorialia of the Class of '64 in Dartmouth College" complied by John C.
Webster, Shepard & Johnston, Printers, 1884, Chicago
Submitted by Deborah Crowell |