In the late 19th century, the Adirondacks became a prime summer destination for sportsmen and their families who enjoyed the region’s hunting, fishing, and fresh air. By the 1880s, wealthy businessmen were building permanent camps on even the remotest lakes, including Big Moose, near Old Forge.
Sometime after 1880 local guides Jack Sheppard and Richard C. Crego built a summer camp on South Bay of Big Moose Lake for F. C. Moore of New York City.
Francis Cruger Moore was born in Houston, TX in 1842. After the Civil War, he headed north to the city of New York where he eventually became president (1889-1903) of the Continental Insurance Company.
Moore, along his step-son Henry Evans and their wives, summered at Big Moose regularly. To reach the camp, Moore and his guests had to travel north to Boonville, NY, and then make a tortuous 43-mile journey on primitive roads, a rickety wooden-railed railroad (the Peg Leg Railroad), a riverboat, and finally a guide boat across several lakes. Moore invested heavily in the main camp which stood near the present Big Moose Community Chapel. By 1889, a second camp was built nearby for the Evanses.
In October 1892, the Boonville Herald reported that “F. C. Moore of New York recently returned from a sojourn at Big Moose lake. He had plenty of venison, obtained without the use of dogs.” The mention of dogs refers to the controversial practice, since outlawed in New York, of hunting deer with dogs.
The camp buildings were probably of log construction. An 1889 letter reveals the Evans camp had red doors, red windows, and yellow floors. The interior of the main Moore camp included a wood stove and a sink in the kitchen; the water closet was outside. Furnishings included Shaker rockers and an arm chair. Oil reflector lamps were mounted on the walls. Outside there was moss landscaping. The guides were instructed to build a “moss bed” and “take out the stumps that are not moss covered & leave those that are.” The camps also had an ice house, filled by guides in March, and a garden. On the lake was a dock, a float, and a boat called the Cora, presumably named for Mrs. Moore (Cora W. Taylor Evans Moore, 1841-1912).
Moore and Evans never gained title to the land where they built the camps, and by the late 1890s railroad magnate William Seward Webb had acquired most of the land surrounding Big Moose. The land where the buildings stood was purchased from Webb in 1899 by Edward O. Stanley and others, who renamed the camp Fern Spring. The Moore name, however, lingered on.
In 1906, Marjorie Carey of East Orange, N.J., testified at the famous murder trial of Chester Gillette that she was staying at “the Fern Spring or Moore camp” on Big Moose Lake and heard what might have been Grace Brown’s death cry. The original camp buildings were demolished around 1938 to make way for the Chapel Manse.
F. C. Moore later built a summer home in Atlantic Highlands on the New Jersey coast. Moore also wrote several books on fire insurance and is best remembered as chairman of the committee that published (in 1893) the Universal Mercantile Schedule for uniform rating of risks. He died in Lakewood, NJ, in 1912 and was buried in Green-wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. His wife Cora died six months later.
Photo: Site of the F. C. Moore Camp, Big Moose Lake, 2011. Photo by Roy Crego; and portrait of Henry Evans courtesy Insurance and Investment News, Vol. 16, No. 2, Jun. 24, 1915, p. 52.
Roy, nice piece of Big Moose history, well researched and told, thanks for this. That route from NYC to Booneville, then up via wooden RR, boat, etc., was pretty rugged. Jack Shepherd I wrote about in my piece “Verplanck Colvin’s Survey of Twitchell Lake,” due out soon in this publication. Shepherd was hired as Colvin’s main guide. Interesting about the moss theme in gardening for this rustic camp. Your history even figures into the American Tragedy.
Thanks Noel, I’ll keep an eye out for that forthcoming Colvin article.
A few additions to this interesting story. My great grandfather, Edward O. Stanley, and his friends purchased the camp from Moore knowing that he did not own the land. When they were able to purchase the land from Webb, it gave them clear title to the camp, By 1902 Stanley was bringing his family each summer. His daughter Marjorie was my grandmother and testified at the Gillette trial as you say. Between the murder and trial she married Paul C. Carey, my grandfather. So she was Marjorie Stanley at the time of the murder but Marjorie Carey at the trial. This has led to confusion in some accounts of the murder.
The family sold Fern Spring Camp to Walter Colpitts, a camp owner on Big Moose Lake, in 1938. By that time the buildings were deteriorating and he demolished all but one which survives behind the Lozner camp. Colpitts built a new camp on the property and subsequently donated it to the chapel for use as a manse.
Hi Frank, Thank you for the additional details. Someday, when the lockdown ends, I’d love to get back and take a closer look at that one surviving building.