
a 
GRADUATES CLASS OF 1908 195 

Moore, Harvard ’o8. A cousin, Benjamin B. Moore, graduated from 
Yale in 1899. 
He was prepared at St. Mark’s School, Southboro, Mass., at Craigie’s 
School and at the Morristown School, Morristown, N. J. In 1906 he 
graduated from Yale College, where he received a Junior dissertation 
appointment and engaged in football and track athletics. His fraternity 
was Alpha Delta Phi. During the summer after his junior year in college 
he worked as student assistant in the United States Forest Service in 
North Carolina. 
He was married December 20, 1910, in New York City, to Miss Muriel 
Hennen Morris of New York City, daughter of Thurlow Weed Barnes 
and Isabel (Morris) Barnes. They have a son, Clement C. Moore, born 
May 12, 1913, in Washington, D. C. 
Moore is forest examiner in the United States Forest Service, 
being engaged in the construction of working plans at the Wash- 
ington office. He has been engaged in this work since July, 1909. 
Of his life since graduation from the Forest School, he wrote 
in 1911: “The year following graduation I spent studying 
forest problems in all the important foreign countries where 
forestry is practiced. The trip was interesting, not to say 
exciting in spots, particularly the four months in India, where 
I tried conclusions with a wild buffalo and a tiger, successfully 
in the case of the latter. On my return to the United States, 
July 1, 1909, I entered the United States Forest Service and 
was sent to District 3, the Southwest headquarters, Albu- 
querque, N. Mex. My work has been almost entirely what is 
called reconnaissance—mapping and estimating timber for the 
future management of the forests.” 
He is a member of the Protestant Episcopal church. He is 
a member of the Yale Club and Chevy Chase Club. 
He has published: (With R. L. Rogers) Notes on balsam fir, For. 
Quart., Spring, 1908; Notes on forests of northern India and Burma, 
Indian Forester, April and May, 1909; Forestry in Japan, Am. For., 
about Aug., 1909; Forestry problems in the Philippines, Am. For., about 
March and April, 1910; Some methods of regulating the cut in the 
coniferous forests of the Himalayas, For. Quart., 1910; Checking the 
floods in the French Alps, Am. For., about April, 1910; (With R. L. 
Rogers) A method of assessing fire damage, For. Quart., Summer, IQII; 
Nomenclature of divisions (or areas) in forest working plans, For. Quart., 
Fall, 1911; Management of western yellow pine in the. Southwest, For. 
Quart., ist no., 1912; Essentials in forest working plans, Proc. Soc. Am. 
Foresters, V1, No. 2; Methods of regulating the cut for national forests, 
Proc. Soc. Am. Foresters, VII, No. 1. 
