Biography:William Usborne Moore

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Short description: British naval commander, researcher and spiritualist
William Usborne Moore
William Usborne Moore spiritualist.jpg
BornMarch 8, 1849
DiedMarch 15, 1918
NationalityBritish
OccupationNaval surveyor, spiritualist

Vice admiral William Usborne Moore (March 8, 1849 – March 15, 1918) also known as W. Usborne Moore was a British naval commander, psychical researcher and spiritualist.[1]

Career

Moore worked as a naval surveyor, serving in Fiji and the SW Pacific in HMS Alacrity and HMS Dart between 1876 and 1885; in China with HMS Rambler between 1885 and 1889; in Australia with HMS Penguin between 1889 and 1893; and in home waters with HMS Research between 1895–1900.[2][3] In 1877, he married Maria Gertrude in Sydney, New South Wales.

In the South China Sea, Moore and Percy Bassett-Smith, the surgeon of HMS Rambler, spent a week on a scientific survey of the Tizard and Macclesfield Banks. This work was carried out at the request of Captain Wharton, Hydrographer of the Navy, who was a member of the Coral Reef Committee of the Royal Society.[2] They ran sections to determine the shapes of the reefs, and dredged to establish the type of coral growing, and the depths at which live coral could be found.[4] Later that year, while surveying the Zhoushan Archipelago and Hangzhou Bay in 1888, Moore took time to investigate the tidal bore of the Qiantang River, the largest in the world. He provided the first detailed description of the bore by a western observer.[5] On a subsequent visit, he was able to obtain photographs of the bore.[6]

Moore continued to pursue the scientific opportunities presented by surveying voyages on his next command, HMS Penguin. Bassett-Smith was again appointed surgeon, and the engineer was J.J. Walker an established entomologist. Between 1890-1893 they collected widely, providing the material for a series of published papers.[7][8][9][10][11][12]

Spiritualism

Moore retired in 1904 with the rank of Rear-Admiral.[13] He developed an interest in spiritualism[1] and had a long history of defending fraudulent mediums as genuine. He endorsed the direct voice medium Etta Wriedt.[14] He defended the Bangs Sisters and even stated that the psychical investigator Hereward Carrington had never visited their house or exposed their tricks. After Carrington gave incontrovertible evidence that he had visited their house and caught them in fraud, Moore had to retract his charges.[15]

In 1906, Moore attended a séance with the British materialization medium Frederick G. Foster Craddock. A small electric torch used to produce 'spirit' lights was discovered in a drawer during a séance by Moore. Despite admitting the fraud of the incident, Moore still endorsed the mediumship of Craddock, stating that his trance control "Graem" was a malicious spirit.[16]

Moore also endorsed the American materialization medium Joseph Jonson from Toledo, Ohio. He claimed to have observed materialized spirits emerge from the cabinet during a séance in his book Glimpses of the Next State (1911). Jonson was later exposed as a fraud by James Hewat McKenzie who discovered that Jonson's daughter had dressed up as a spirit.[17] In 1907, Hereward Carrington attended séances with Jonson at Lily Dale, New York and concluded "on several occasions, the fraud was very apparent, and that I was enabled to follow the process of materialisation and dematerialisation with ease. Everything was the most obvious and simple trickery, and seen to be such."[18]

The spiritualist Arthur Conan Doyle described Moore as "among the greatest of psychic researchers".[19] However, Moore was heavily criticized by psychical researchers. Science historian William Hodson Brock has described Moore as a "credulous spiritualist".[20]

Publications

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Maria Gertrude". Usborne Family Tree.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Ritchie, G.S. (1967). The Admiralty Chart. London: Hollis & Carter. pp. 364–365. 
  3. Tizard, T.H. (1900). Chronological List of the Officers Conducting British Maritime Discoveries and Surveys: Together with the Names of the Vessels Employed from the Earlier Times Until 1900. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 32–34. https://archive.org/details/tizard-1900-chronological-list-of-the-officers-condu. 
  4. Moore, W.U.; Bassett-Smith., P.W (1888). China Sea: Reports of the Results of an Examination by the Officers of H.M.S. "Rambler" of the Slopes and Zoological Condition of Tizard and Macclesfield Banks, 1888. London: Hydrographic Office. https://archive.org/details/moore-1888-china-sea. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Moore, W.U. (1888). Report on the bore of the Tsien-tang kiang. London: Hydrographic Office. https://archive.org/details/cu31924023274164. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Moore, W.U. (1893). Further report on the bore of the Tsien-tang-kiang. London: Hydrographic Office. https://archive.org/details/cu31924023274172. 
  7. Pocock, R.I. (1893). "Report upon the stomatopod crustaceans obtained by PW Basset-Smith, Esq., Surgeon RN, during the Crusie, in the Australian and China Seas, of HMS "Penguin", Commander WU Moore". Annals and Magazine of Natural History 11: 473–479. doi:10.1080/00222939308677559. https://archive.org/details/pocock-1893-s-6annalsmagazine-11londuoft. 
  8. Walker, J.J. (1893). "Entomological notes from the Eastern Archipelago". The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine 29: 24–30; 57–61. https://archive.org/details/walker-1893-entomologistsmon-291893oxfo. 
  9. Walker, James J. (1893). "On the genus Halobates, Esch., and other marine hemiptera". The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine 29: 227–232. https://archive.org/details/walker-1893b-entomologistsmon-291893oxfo. 
  10. Walker, James (1894). "A visit to Damma island, East Indian Archipelago. With notes on the fauna, by R. B. Sharpe, G. A. Boulenger, E. A. Smith, R. I. Pocock, C. O. Waterhouse, C. J. Gahan, W. F. Kirby, and F. A. Heron". Annals and Magazine of Natural History 14: 98–110. doi:10.1080/00222939408677775. https://archive.org/details/walker-1894-s-6annalsmagazine-14londuoft. 
  11. Champion, G.C. (1895). "On the heteromerous Coleoptera collected in Australia and Tasmania by Mr. James J. Walker, RN, FLS, during the voyage of HMS "Penguin", with descriptions of new genera and species. Part II". Transactions of the Entomological Society of London 1895: 213–276. https://archive.org/details/champion-1895-transactionsofen-1895ento. 
  12. Pocock, R.I. (1895). "Report upon the Chilopoda and Diplopoda obtained by P. W. Bassett-Smith, Esq., Surgeon R.N., and J. J. Walker, Esq., R.N., during the cruise in the Chinese Seas of H.M.S. "Penguin", Commander W.U. Moore commanding". Annals and Magazine of Natural History 15: 346–369. doi:10.1080/00222939508677895. https://archive.org/details/pocock-1895-s-6annalsmagazine-15londuoft. 
  13. "William Usborne Moore". http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org/tfs/index.php/William_Usborne_Moore. 
  14. Levine, Allan. (2011). King: William Lyon Mackenzie King: A Life Guided by the Hand of Destiny. Douglas & McIntyre. p. 250. ISBN:978-1553655602
  15. Tabori, Paul. (1972). Pioneers of the Unseen. Souvenir Press. pp. 47-48. ISBN:0-285-62042-8
  16. Frederick G. Foster Craddock. (ca. 1920). Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology.
  17. "Mr. Jonson (1854-?) and Mrs. J. B. Jonson". Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology.
  18. Carrington, Hereward. (1913). Personal Experiences in Spiritualism. T. Werner Laurie Ltd. p. 30
  19. Doyle, Arthur Conan. (1975 edition, originally published in 1926). The History of Spiritualism. Volume 2. Arno Press. p. 206
  20. Brock, William Hodson. (2008). William Crookes (1832-1919) and the Commercialization of Science. Ashgate Publishing. p. 206. ISBN:978-0754663225

Further reading

  • Anonymous. (1906). Exposures of Mr. Craddock. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 12: 274-277. (Contains statements by Moore).