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Roger Moore

Also Known As: "(King Roger)"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Goose Creek, Berkeley County, South Carolina, British Colonial America
Death: October 20, 1759 (65)
Orton mansion, Brunswick County, North Carolina, British Colonial America
Place of Burial: Brunswick County, North Carolina, British Colonial America
Immediate Family:

Son of Governor James Moore, Sr. and Margaret Moore
Husband of Mary Moore; Catherine Smith; Mary (Sarah) Moore and Catherine Moore
Father of Two sons Moore; Three daughters Moore; George Moore; Maurice Moore; had 11 children Moore and 5 others
Brother of Colonel Maurice Moore; Reverend John Moore; Joseph Berringer Moore, Sr.; Nathaniel Moore; Charles Moore and 6 others

Occupation: http://www.gencircles.com/users/jcfoster/1/data/6299; South Carolina Historical Society Magazine, Volume 4, page 38
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Roger Moore

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/moore-roger

Roger Moore, colonial official, was born in the Goose Creek section of Berkeley County, S.C., one of ten children of the prominent planter James and Margaret Berringer Moore, the stepdaughter of Sir John Yeamans. One of his brothers, James, served as governor of South Carolina. As befitted his station in life, Roger married a daughter of William Rhett, a leader in South Carolina society.

In 1724 Roger Moore began taking a notable interest in development of the Lower Cape Fear region of North Carolina, joining with his brothers, Colonel Maurice and Nathaniel, to seek land grants in the area. By 1727 Roger had accumulated more than seven thousand acres and had built a fine plantation house called Kendall on the Cape Fear River; four years later he owned nearly twenty-five thousand acres. Moore was instrumental in the establishment of Brunswick town and was a staunch supporter of that community in its struggle with Newton (later Wilmington) for supremacy as a port of entry on the Cape Fear. As a member of the royal Council, he engaged in the fierce political intrigue that surrounded this matter in the late 1730s.

Moore held a number of provincial and local offices in the colony. He was assistant justice of the General Court in 1732, a justice of the peace for New Hanover County in 1734, a commissioner for the boundary with South Carolina in 1735, and a member of the royal Council from 1734 until his death. Because of his grand manner and his reputation as a generous host, Moore was often referred to as "King Roger." By 1748 he had built a one-story plantation house called Orton at a magnificent site overlooking the river near Brunswick town. He was buried on the grounds.

At his death in 1751 (his will was probated in May), Roger owned more than 250 slaves and nearly 60,000 acres of land. He was survived by his wife and five children.

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James and Margaret (Berringer) Moore had six sons and four daughters per abstract of his will:

3rd son. Roger Moore, in an old record purported to be copied from an ealry Bible into a later one, gives "Roger Moore, b. 24 Aug. 1694, d. 20 Oct. 1759". He m.1 Mary Rayner, a daughter of Capt. George Rayner. He m.2, in 1721, Katherine Rhett, b. 1705, d. 1745, a daughter of Col. William Rhett.

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Roger Moore's Timeline

1694
August 24, 1694
Goose Creek, Berkeley County, South Carolina, British Colonial America
1714
1714
Orton Plantation
1716
November 10, 1716
Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, United States
1721
October 12, 1721
1722
1722
1728
August 7, 1728
New Hanover,South Carolina
1730
May 10, 1730
1732
September 15, 1732