Henry Moore (1751–1844) was an English Wesleyan minister and biographer of Wesley and several early Methodists.. Moore was born in a suburb of Dublin and apprenticed to a wood carver.
Impressed by the preaching of John Wesley, he frequented the Methodist meetings and joined a class in Dublin in 1777.
Wesley made him one of his literary executors and appointed him to be, after his death, one of the 12 ministers to regulate the services of City Road Chapel.
Moore rejected ordainment in the Church of England, although he accepted it from Wesley assisted by two Episcopal clergymen; opposed Thomas Coke's Lichfield scheme of 1794 for the creation of a Methodist hierarchy, and also the proposal brought forward in 1834 for the establishment of a theological school; and on the formation of a centenary fund in 1839 objected to the acquisition of land by the Methodist body.
In conjunction with Coke, and under the authority of the conference, Moore published a Life of the Rev.