Moore, Ruth

From collection Person List - History Trust

<div>Moore, Ruth</div>
Ruth Moore—author, poet, great story teller, and Tremont native—was well known in the national literary world of the mid-20th century. Her novels were often on the New York Times best seller list and her writing has been compared to the likes of William Faulkner.

Moore was born July 21, 1903, at Gotts Island (pop. place) on Great Gott Island in Tremont, Maine. She was proud to be a direct descendant of Daniel Gott, Jr., whose family had settled on the island in 1789. Philip Moore, her father, was a fisherman and maintained a herring weir in the island’s pool; he and Ruth Moore’s mother, Lovina Moore (Joyce), ran the island store and post office. Moore attended the island elementary school and Ellsworth high school, and graduated in 1925 from New York State College for Teachers in Albany.

Summer residents living at Gotts Island during Moore’s youth had a lasting effect on her. The Holmes, Davidson, and Ovington families introduced Moore to literature, encouraged her to attend college, and guided her to private secretarial/assistant jobs with prominent New Yorkers.

Her first novel, The Weir, was published in 1943. Moore's second, Spoonhandle (1946) was made into a movie, Deep Waters, by 20th Century Fox. Moore was hired as screen writer but quit when the book’s story was drastically changed. The proceeds from selling the book, however, enabled Moore and her life partner Eleanor Mayo to buy property in the village of Bass Harbor on Mount Desert Island, and build a home where they lived out the remainder of their lives. Mayo died in 1981.

Moore published 12 more novels and three books of poetry. At her death in 1989, she left behind a single sheet in her typewriter with a single line: “I have seen horizons…..”
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