With Frederick Douglass, he coordinated travel plans on the Underground Railroad and they gave speeches at anti-slavery assemblies.
Moore worked with Hiram Wilson to identify and make education available for formerly enslaved people who had made it across the United States-Canadian border.
Moore operated private schools in the New York City area and was a superintendent and a teacher at Haverford College.
Lindley Murray Moore was born May 31, 1788, in Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia, Canada into a Quaker family.
Lindley Murray Moore stayed in the United States while his father and siblings moved to Upper Canada (Ontario).
[8][13] Moore delivered a speech entitled Autographs for Freedom at the Independence Day celebration of 1852 in Rochester, New York.
Like other instances, Moore shared the stage with Frederick Douglass, whose topic was What to the slave is the Fourth of July?
[14] Moore wrote the essay "Religious, Moral and Political Duties" in the 1853 collection titled Autographs for Freedom.
[14] Moore raised funds so that Washington could retrieve his wife, but he was captured in the process and was believed to be sold to a slaveholder in the Deep South.
[14] Moore identified formerly enslaved people (in Upper Canada) who were interested in obtaining education and Rev.