James Moore Sr. Explained

James Moore Sr.
Office:Governor of Carolina
Term Start:11 September 1700
Term End:March 1703
Preceded:Joseph Blake
Succeeded:Nathaniel Johnson
Death Date: 1706 (aged 66)
Children:James and Mary
Battles:War of the Spanish Succession

Siege of St. Augustine

Allegiance:England

James Moore Sr. (–) was a military officer and colonial administrator who served as the governor of Carolina from 1700 to 1703. He is best known for leading several invasions of Spanish Florida during Queen Anne's War, including attacks in 1704 and 1706 which wiped out most of the Spanish missions in Florida. He captured and brought back to Carolina as slaves thousands of Apalachee.

Early life

James Moore was born . It has been claimed that Moore was a son of Irish military officer Rory O'Moore, a leader of the Irish Rebellion of 1641, and that he had inherited his father's rebellious nature.[1] However, Moore's official seal bore the swan and arms of the Moore family of Devonshire, suggesting his origins were English.[2]

It appears Moore emigrated from England to Barbados, then eventually to mainland North America. He first appears in provincial records in 1675 representing Margaret Berringer Yeamans, widow of Sir John Yeamans, before the provincial council. At about the same time he married her daughter by her first husband, also named Margaret.

Career

In 1677, 1682, and 1683, Moore served on the provincial council. He played a leading role in a 1690 expedition into the Carolina back country, crossing the Appalachians to investigate possibilities of trade with the local Indian population. In 1698 he was elected to the provincial assembly, and was described as the right-hand-man of proprietor Sir John Colleton. The next year he was named chief justice of the province, a post he held until he was named governor in 1700, replacing the deceased Joseph Blake. Moore was a leader of one of Carolina's political factions, called the "Goose Creek Men", after Goose Creek, an outlying area of Charleston.[3]

In 1683, Moore was granted by the lords proprietor. He called his estate "Boochowee". Part of this land is known today as Liberty Hall Plantation.[3]

From 1691, Moore was the acknowledged leader of the Goose Creek Men, the main political opposition to the ruling "Dissenter" faction. Moore's rise to governorship in 1700 signalled a major shift in the politics of the province. The Dissenters contested Moore's "unjust election". But the lords proprietor saw to it that Moore remained governor, and they made it clear that the Dissenters were no longer in favor.[4]

Between 1700 and 1703, Moore was the governor of Carolina, which was then in the process of dividing into the provinces of North and South Carolina. During this period, he led a number of attacks from the Carolinas into Spanish Florida. He relied on allied Indian tribes, especially the Yamasee for most of his military force. On news of the outbreak of Queen Anne's War in 1702, he led 500 colonists, 300 native allies, and 14 small ships on an invasion of Spanish Florida along the coast, destroying the remaining Spanish missionary Indians of Guale and Mocama, and devastating the lands around St. Augustine. While the town of St. Augustine was razed, its central fortress, Castillo de San Marcos, where the Spanish and numerous allied Indians had taken refuge, resisted Moore's siege.[5] [6] The 1702 campaign was viewed as a disaster due to the failure to take the fortress and the expenses incurred, and Moore resigned his post.

In 1704, Moore led an expedition of 50 colonists and 1,000 Muscogee, Yamasee, and other allied Indians, into western Florida, leading to the Apalachee massacre. The Apalachee were the last powerful Spanish-allied Indian nation in the region. Their defeat in 1704 resulted in many Apalachee being enslaved and taken from Charleston to the West Indies. Other Apalachee were relocated (some voluntarily, others not) to the Savannah River to live in semi-serfdom. Another result of the defeat of the Apalachee was the collapse of the final defence of the Indians of Florida. In the following years, Carolinian and Indian slave raiders virtually wiped out the Indian population of Florida all the way to the Florida Keys.

Moore's defeat of the Apalachee in Spanish Florida was hailed as a major victory for Carolina, which had been fighting with the Spanish for control of the region for decades. It also served to strengthen ties between various southeastern Indians and Carolina. The Creek people and the Cherokees became much more closely allied with Carolina. With these two Indian nations as strong allies, the English rose to a position of dominance over the French and Spanish in the American southeast.

Moore died in 1706 of a tropical disease, possibly yellow fever. He was significantly in debt. His son by the same name was elected to the same office in 1719 following the overthrow of the proprietary governor.

Personal life

Moore married Margaret Berringer, daughter of Lady Margaret Yeamans (by a previous marriage).[7] Their daughter, Mary Moore, married Job Howe, another of the "Goose Creek Men".[7] Altogether James and Margaret had ten children, many of whom moved to the Lower Cape Fear region, where they and their descendants became known as "The Family", the most powerful family in the region.[8] Moore was the grandfather of Continental Army Brigadier General James Moore, and great-grandfather of Continental Army Major General Robert Howe.

The Moore family imported over 4,000 slaves into the Carolinas, mostly for its own extensive plantations and farms in and around the Cape Fear area of what later became North Carolina. James Moore also had a house in Charleston and another in the Goose Creek area near Charleston.

Another Moore family descendant, Alfred Moore, became a Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Family tree

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lewis . J.D. . 2007 . Carolina Governors - James Moore, Sr . 12 August 2024 . carolana.com.
  2. Web site: 17 May 2009 . Tilney Coachman . 12 August 2024.
  3. Book: Heitzler, Michael James. Goose Creek, A Definitive History: Volume One, Planters, Politicians and Patriots. 8 October 2011. 2005. The History Press. 978-1-59629-055-6. 275.
  4. Book: Edgar, Walter B.. South Carolina: a history. 8 October 2011. 1998. Univ of South Carolina Press. 978-1-57003-255-4. 93.
  5. Book: Doak, Robin. South Carolina 1540–1776. 8 October 2011. 2007. National Geographic Books. 978-1-4263-0066-0. 48.
  6. Book: Rowland. Lawrence Sanders. Moore. Alexander. Rogers. George C.. The History of Beaufort County, South Carolina: 1514–1861. 8 October 2011. 1996. Univ of South Carolina Press. 978-1-57003-090-1. 88–89.
  7. Book: Heitzler, Michael James. Goose Creek, A Definitive History: Volume One, Planters, Politicians and Patriots. 8 October 2011. 2005. The History Press. 978-1-59629-055-6. 160, 272.
  8. Book: Olwell. Robert. Tully. Alan. Cultures and identities in colonial British America. 8 October 2011. 2006. JHU Press. 978-0-8018-8251-7. 60–61.