Born in Richmond the second of
six children of Henry Moore an early officer of the Victorian police force
(1852-56), and his wife Jane née Hull, Notley joined the Crown Law
Department in December 1877 and soon gained prominence for his role as clerk
of courts at Beechworth in the preliminary trial of the notorious Kelly Gang
on 6 August 1880 where “he took the whole of the voluminous
dispositions…this was a stupendous task, and he was subsequently
complimented on the legibility and accuracy with which he accomplished it”;
sadly, Moore's role has been overshadowed by others and his part in the
Kelly story is largely unknown. Described as “one of the ablest magistrates
the State has had”, in 1902 he was promoted as a police magistrate stationed
at Bendigo (1902-16) until the death of P. J. Dwyer led to his transfer and
promotion as chairman of the City Court Bench (1916-22) at a time of the
rise of the larrikin crook; various shady associates of
Leslie ‘Squizzy’ Taylor (q.v.)
came before his bench including John William Heaney in March 1922 who put up
a £300 bond against Taylor only for the artful dodger to abscond bail in
August 1921 alluding police for a year. On his death from heart disease on
14 August 1922, a year to the day of the death of his wife, contemporaries
praised Moore as “a keen judge of human nature, and his faculty for
appraising evidence was reflected in his decisions…recognised as being an
impartial magistrate, with a sound knowledge of the law…he did not sit in a
court to administer the law, but to try to adjust things in a common sense
way…who inclined a merciful ear to the plea of the first offender”, but did
not hesitate to impose a sharp sentence on habitual criminals. On 5
September 1910, Moore chaired the Parliamentary Board of Inquiry that sat
for twenty days into the Richmond Railway accident of 18 July which killed
nine and injured some 475 others; he found human error contributed to the
accident, not the least the action of the Elsternwick train driver, John
Melville who in dense fog, failed to exercise extreme caution. Chairman of
numerous wages boards and member of the board of examiners for police
magistrates, Moore resided at 16 Glassford Street, Armadale; two sons died
in the Great War which greatly affected him (Edmund Fox, Capt 38th
Battalion, d 4 Oct 1917; Joseph Tregellis, Gnr 6th Brigade Aust Field Art, d
27 Nov 1918). In 1883, he married Josephine née Fox. |

(above) Beechworth court
house (2004)

(above) Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |
Source:
The Age 16 August 1922.
The Herald 15 August 1922.
The Argus 16 August 1922.
Anderson, H., “Larrikin Crook. The rise and
fall of Squizzy Taylor” (1971).
Pearce, K., "Australian Railway Disasters"
(1994). |
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