Asa
H. Moore
Asa Harvey Moore was born
on October 20, 1820 in Rutland, Westchester County, Massachusetts.
He was the oldest child of Asa and Sabra Lovell Moore, both of Royalston, Massachusetts.
Asa H. went to boarding school in Worcester, Massachusetts,
where he received training in industry, however, he was a farmer until
he was
19 years old. He then began his career in the railroad business as a
freight
house employee for the Boston and
Worcester
Railroad Company at Grafton,
Massachusetts. By
1845, he became
the conductor of the Old Colony Railroad running from Boston
to Springfield, Massachusetts,
and also was the conductor to make the first Boston
to Plymouth
passenger train run. He worked for the Western Railroad for about 11
years.
In May of 1848, he married Nancy B.
Washburn in Plymouth,
Massachusetts. Nancy was born
in January 1829 and was the
daughter of John Washburn. Her family was direct descendants of
Governor
William Bradford, who came to America
on the Mayflower and was governor of
the colony at Plymouth,
Massachusetts. They
had three children: Thomas W., born in
1856 and died in a hotel
fire on November 13, 1888, Mary C. Moore Maxwell, born on July 1858,
and an
unnamed child who probably died at birth on October 1872.
In
1850, he and his wife moved west to LaPorte,
Indiana, where he was made an
engineer on the Michigan
Southern Railroad for the route running from Chicago,
Illinois to White Pigeon, Michigan. He
also held the position of
Assistant Superintendent of the Michigan Southern Railroad until 1854
when, he
and his family moved to Bloomington,
Illinois.
When Asa and Nancy came to Bloomington
in 1854, Asa became the train master and
eventually the general superintendent of the Chicago-Alton Railroad
route through
Bloomington.
Asa
also became heavily invested in real estate, having owned three lumber
yards in
the towns of Shirley, McLean, and Bloomington.
He also owned considerable amounts of land in Shirley and McLean, where
he
built stations on the Alton
railroad line. After a time, he sold most of his property outside of Bloomington and began to focus more on various
enterprises
within Bloomington.
One of his best pieces of property was his own home, an Italian-style
villa,
which was located on North
Main Street. He and his family lived there
from 1870
until his death in 1901.
From 1859 to 1860, Asa became one of the
incorporators and first president of the Bank of Bloomington. He sold
his
interests in the bank to Isaac Funk, who renamed the bank First
National.
The event Asa is most well known for was
in 1869, when he purchased approximately $50,000 of shares of the Horse
Railroad from Judge David Davis in Bloomington.
The line he purchased extended from Grove Street to Normal, Illinois.
On January 1, 1870, he
took possession of the company officially and renamed it the
Bloomington/Normal
Horse Railway Company.
Asa did much for the horse railway and
also spent much of his own money to upgrade and add to the existing
horse
railway tracks in Bloomington/Normal. His biggest contribution to
improvements
in street railways was in 1872. Asa eliminated the street car
conductors’
position and made the street cars operated only by the driver. He
accomplished
this by placing patented money boxes on the front platform of each car
next to
the driver. Passengers were expected to place their fares in the box
upon
boarding. If they neglected to do this, the driver would either ring
his bell
to remind them to pay the fare or he would start the mules and go back
into the
passenger compartment and personally collect the fare. This new
innovation was
being implemented on street railways throughout the country during this
time. It
was with the advent of the coin boxes and lack of a conductor which may
have
contributed to the famous accident involving the electric streetcar
driver
David Law on March 17, 1893, (six years after Asa Moore had already
sold his
horse railway company).
The horse railway was a daily topic in the
Daily Pantagraph, which commented on
track conditions, accidents, run away mules and horses, upgrades,
community
needs and concerns, and maintenance of the streetcars. Regardless of
the
hazards and accidents that did occur, Asa’s horse railway company was
considered one of the best railway systems of its kind outside of Chicago. He was
such a
prominent horse railway owner that another local resident, Frances
Mueller Sr.
composed a song called “Street Car Gallop” in 1887. Asa is the only
known
streetcar owner in Bloomington/Normal to have ever inspired a musical
selection.
Asa was not only a horse railway owner,
but he also owned considerable amounts of real estate throughout the
Bloomington and Normal area and owned shares in other business
ventures, such
as in the Blue Monday Gold Mine in Arizona. While he was a prominent
business
man, he never had any political aspirations.
After owning the horse railway for 17
years, from 1870-1887, Asa sold his entire street railway system in
Bloomington/Normal to a Pennsylvania
syndicate comprised of Judge John Graham, Judge W.F. Sadler, and J.B.
Hursh on
May 19, 1887. Asa sold 6 miles of track, 51 head of mules, 10 cars, a
truck
barn on Park Street, tools, feed on hand, and other miscellaneous
items. It is
estimated that Asa got somewhere between $125,000 and $150,000 for the
railway
system, which would be the equivalent of almost $2.9 million.
In the last years of his life, Asa and his
wife Nancy moved to Chicago and lived
near his
daughter and her family on Lake
Avenue in the suburb of Hyde
Park. Asa died on August 14, 1901 at his Hyde Park residence at the age of 80. The cause
of his death was listed
as softening of the brain. It was estimated that his estate was worth
$300,000
and in today’s economy would have been the equivalent of almost $6.9
million. In
1890, he had purchased a large family monument made of Barre Granite
from Vermont.
He placed this
on the family plot in Evergreen
Memorial Cemetery
in Bloomington, Illinois, where he was buried. His
wife
Nancy, who died in November 1908, was also buried at the family plot.
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