Norman S Moore

Person ID
7920
About
White Male born in 1901 died in 1995
Census Records
YearNameRelation to HeadAddressAgeRacePOBMarriageOccupation
1910Moore, Norman SSon914 E State St9WhiteNew YorkSingleNone
1920Moore, Norman SSon914 E State St18WhiteNew YorkSingleStudent
1930Moore, Norman SSon914 E State St27WhiteNew YorkSinglePhysician
1950Moore, NormanHead128 Pleasant Grove Rd48WhiteNew YorkMarriedDirector of Medical Services
Relatives in 1910 US Census
NameRelation to HeadAddressAgeRacePOBMarriageOccupation
Moore, Veranus AHead914 E State St51WhiteNew York1st MarriageProfessor
Moore, Mary LWife914 E State St45WhiteNew York1st MarriageNone
Moore, Erwin VSon914 E State St16WhiteDistrict of ColumbiaSingleNone
Moore, Mary EDaughter914 E State St13WhiteNew YorkSingleNone
Hoyt, Helena HBoarder914 E State St35WhiteNew YorkSingleClerk
Relatives in 1920 US Census
NameRelation to HeadAddressAgeRacePOBMarriageOccupation
Moore, Veranus AHead914 E State St60WhiteNew YorkMarriedTeaching
Moore, Mary LWife914 E State St54WhiteNew YorkMarriedNone
Moore, MaryDaughter914 E State St24WhiteNew YorkSingleStudent
Haight, Helena HBoarder914 E State St50WhiteNew YorkSingleClerk
Relatives in 1930 US Census
NameRelation to HeadAddressAgeRacePOBMarriageOccupation
Moore, Veramus AHead914 E State St71WhiteNew YorkMarriedProfessor
Moore, MaryWife914 E State St65WhiteNew YorkMarriedNone
Haight, Helena HLodger914 E State St60WhiteNew YorkSingleClerical
Johannsson, Neljon HLodger914 E State St38WhiteIcelandSingleNone
Relatives in 1950 US Census
NameRelation to HeadAddressAgeRacePOBMarriageOccupation
Moore, Bernice BWife128 Pleasant Grove Rd48WhiteIowaMarriedNone
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Add Source/NarrativeSources & Narratives
Cornell Memorial Statement for Professor Norman Slawson Moore,
April 17, 1901 — April 3, 1995


Norman Slawson Moore was born in Ithaca, the son of Veranus A. Moore, M.D., a pathologist who became the second Dean of the Cornell Veterinary College. Norm was an Ithacan and Cornellian all the way. As his steadfast friend Deane Malott pointed out, he lived in only two houses for his entire life: the one he was born in and the gracious home on Pleasant Grove Road where he died.

He was graduated, cum laude, from Cornell in 1923 and from its Medical College in 1926. He served as House Physician at Bellevue Hospital in New York City 1926-28 and as a Research Fellow at the Rockefeller Institute for the following two years.

Norm then returned to Ithaca and opened a practice in internal medicine, the first internist in the area. He also brought with him the first electrocardiograph instrument in Ithaca. He quickly developed a busy practice here; he became a Fellow of the American College of Physicians in 1938 and one of the early Diplomates of the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1947.

Very active in the medical and general community, Norm was one of the founders and the first chairman of the Tompkins County Board of Health and in 1952 the founder of the County Mental Health Clinic. In his role with the Board of Health and with the connections he had developed with the State Health Department, he was instrumental in converting the New York State Biggs Tuberculosis Hospital to the Tompkins County Hospital in 1960, thus replacing the antiquated community hospital on South Quarry Street.

In 1939, there was increasing uneasiness about the arrangements for health care provided to the Cornell students. The system was poorly organized, quite dependent on the local practitioners, and not oriented to the needs of the student population. Several cases of serious and even fatal illness in the previous year aroused concern in the campus community. President Day expressed his concerns to Dr. Moore, his personal physician; more than that, he implored and finally convinced Norm to give up his practice and to reorganize the University Health Services and become the department’s full time Director. A new Department of Clinical and Preventive Medicine, later called the Department of University Health Services, was established with Norm as Professor and Chairman.

After the busy days of the wartime period with its shortages of staff and resources, Norm’s department began to mature in the immediate post-war years. The idea of a comprehensive service oriented to the special needs of university students was conceived and implemented. Included were not only direct medical care of high quality but preventive medicine, health education, sports medicine, and psychiatric and psychological care. In addition, the department was made responsible for monitoring occupational and environmental health on campus. A new and expanded staff was assembled; the reliance on local practitioners was reduced to consultation for surgical and certain subspecialty problems. The need for a modern and convenient facility was defined, and Dr. Moore was instrumental in persuading the Gannett Foundation to fund the Clinic building. Always interested in teaching, he also developed a medical residency program which made use not only of the Clinic for outpatients but of both the old Sage Infirmary and the Tompkins County Hospital for hospitalized students.

Dr. Moore’s involvement with the University was not confined to clinical care or even the usual kinds of clinical research. Early in his tenure, he became interested in research in clinical nutrition, which was not a prominent area of study at that time. He worked with Leonard A. Maynard, Ph.D., to persuade President Day and Mr. Howard E. Babcock, Chairman of the Cornell Board of Trustees, to support the establishment of the School of Nutrition in 1941. 
...
In 1954, he was appointed to the New York State Public Health Council, the most important health policy group in the State Government, by Governor Dewey, who had come to know him during discussions in regard to the School of Nutrition. He remained as a member during the Harriman administration, and in 1968, was appointed Chairman by Governor Rockefeller. "

1995

Obituary for Norman S. Moore, M.D.
The Ithaca Journal, Apr 8 1995

"Norman S. Moore, M.D., 93. of 128 Pleasant Grove Rd.. died Monday, April 3, 1995. at his home. Born April 17. 1901 in Ithaca, he was a son of the late Mary Slawson Moore and Dr. Veranus A. Moore, former dean of the N.Y. Veterinary College at Cornell. In 1923, he received his bachelor of arts degree from Cornell and the doctor of medicine degree from the Cornell Medical College in 1926.
...
Dr. Moore was the husband of the late Bernice Barkee Moore, who died April 14. 1993."

April 8, 1995

Advertisement in The Ithaca Journal, Aug 19 1995
Tag sale for the estate of Dr. Norman Moore at his former 1816 Federal Home, 128 Pleasant Grove Rd.

Sale conducted by Brianwood Sales Service on Sunday Aug. 20th from 2 to 7pm and on Monday Aug. 21st from 2 to 6 and that evening from 7 to 9.

"Included in this fine sale will be: Important paintings by local artists Olaf Brauner and Walter Stone King, period tambour secretary desk Stickly windsor chair, tilt-top candlestand with carved paw feet, oriental rugs, American swing-leaf inlaid card table, brass woodbox, Victorian foot stool, kidney-shaped love seat, student lamp, early wall barometer, Whiting-Winchester tall clock, 1 dr. cherry and tiger-maple stands, framed etchings, English sporting prints, fine glass, including Steuben (animals), Aurene sherbert, heisey, cut glass, Bristol, painted MG Hen, MPO satin butterscotch vase, good china, including early blue transfer, Floblue soup tureen, Staffordshire, white Haviland, Wedgwood, Royal Copenhagen, cloisonne, Meisen, Imari, brass and Sheffield candlesticks, 14 drawer apothecary chest. appliqued quilt, decoys, jewelry, many books. Modern chest-on-chest, twin beds, dressing table, floor and table lamps, drop-leaf dining table, tuck-away table, chaise lounge, custom-made coffee table, TV, maple drop-front desk, maple chest, wrought-iron patio furnishings, trunks, tools, file cabinets, and the usual linen, knick-knacks, pots and pans.

Parking Sunday only, 'A' Parking Lot on Pleasant Grove Rd, North of Jessup Rd."


Aug 19, 1995

Dr Norman Slawson Moore

DoB: 17 Apr 1901
PoB: Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York
Died: 3 Apr 1995, Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York
Buried: East Lawn Cemetery, Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York