The imposing former mansion at 1746 Massachusetts Avenue was
commissioned by local stock broker Clarence Moore, who would only enjoy his
residence for less than three years, having booked a journey on the fateful
maiden voyage of the Titanic in 1912.
The mansion has served as an embassy since 1927. The
Louis XV styled mansion was designed by Jules Henri de Sibour in 1906, and was
completed in 1909 at a cost estimated at $200,000.
Clarence Bloomfield Moore was born in Clarksburg, West
Virginia on March 1, 1865. After
graduating from Dufferin College, he partnered with Senator Stephen Elkins and Henry
Gassaway in developing several successful mineral mines in West Virginia. His first wife, Alice McLaughlin, died in
1897, leaving two children; Frances Sarah Preston and Samuel Preston
Moore. Three years later, he married
Mabelle Swift with whom he had two additional children, Jasper and Clarence,
Jr.
In 1900, Moore moved to Washington, when he became a member
of the Washington, DC firm of William B. Hibbs and Co, stock brokers, who paid
him an annual salary of $25,000. At the
time, the typical government worker earned less than $2,000. Moore also owned a farm in Montgomery County,
Maryland, where he raised cattle and horses, and had interests in real estate
near Leesburg, Virginia.
Moore had been in England to shop for fox hounds for the
Loundon Hunt. He purchased fifty pairs although they did not return with Moore
on the Titanic despite them
being portrayed in the recent movie Titanic.
Just three years after completing the house at 1746 Massachusetts Avenue, Moore boarded the Titanic at Southampton as a first class passenger with ticket number 113796, costing £42 8s in April of 1912. His manservant Charles Harrington, age 37, accompanied him. At the time of the collision Moore was playing cards in the smoking room with his compatriots and dining companions Major Archibald Willingham Butt, Harry Widener, and William Carter.
Interior Staircase 1747 Mass Ave (HABS/HAER) |
Moore, Harrington, and Major Butt were all residents of
Washington at the time of the sinking, three of just five residents aboard the
fateful trip traveling in first class.
The others included Archibald Gracie IV (1859-1912) and Helen Churchill
Candee (1858-1949) - Candee survived (see blog entry below).
Gracie was an American writer, amateur historian, real
estate investor, and survived the sinking by climbing aboard an overturned
collapsible lifeboat, and wrote a popular and valuable book about the disaster
which is still in print today. Candee was
an American author, journalist, interior decorator, feminist and geographer who
resided at 1621 New Hampshire Avenue who joined the “unsinkable Molly Brown” in
lifeboat No. 6. She is famous for
writing "There were no more boats, water was swirling around the upper
deck, people were beginning to panic.....and the band continued to play."
Major Butt (1865-1912) was an influential military aide to
U.S. presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft. Before becoming an
aide to Roosevelt, Butt had pursued a career in journalism and served in the Spanish-American
War.
Following the sinking on April 14, 1912, Mrs. Mabelle Moore
made a claim of $500,000, for loss of future income and $10,500 for loss of
property, including $3,000 for pearl studs and $2,500 for pearl cuff links. She also claimed for loss of personal effects
and other jewelry and for legal costs.
The Washington Times April 22, 1912 edition included a story
about the last moments of Moore’s life, gleaned by a survivor named Robert
Daniels. It read:
Original Facade Drawing for 1746 Mass Ave (HABS/HAER) |
“Robert W. Daniels Says Banker Went to His Death Like a Man. Stories of the heroism and resignation with
which Clarence Moore, the well-known local banker and horseman of international
repute, went to his death on the deck of the Titanic as she sank to her grave
two miles beneath the Atlantic, are being told by several survivors of the
disaster today who arrived in Washington to attend the Senatorial hearing.
Clarence Moore died beyond a doubt at the side of his friend and fellow-hero, Major Archibald Butt. They remained together while lowering woman and children into the lifeboats, and jumped at the eleventh hour when the boilers of the giant ship bursted.
Repeatedly, Moore refused to take a place in one of the boats, the survivors who saw him say. His friend, Butt, knew that he was an oarsman, in fact, he realized that Clarence Moore could do most anything any true sportsman could, so he requested Moore to man an oar in one of the last lifeboats to leave the ship.
“No, major, I’ll stay and take my chances with you; let the women go,” Moore said to his companion according to Robert William Daniels, one of the survivors, who is stopping at the New Willard. “And he evidently stuck with Butt until death took them both,” said Mr. Daniels. “The two men jumped at the eleventh hour and were lost.”
J. Bruce Ismay, Col. Archibald Gracie and Miss Vera Dick, of Calgary, Canada, all of whom knew the banker, corroborate Daniels’ story regarding the last moments of Moore, and say that, with Major Butt, he went to his death in the waters like a true man.
Clarence Moore died beyond a doubt at the side of his friend and fellow-hero, Major Archibald Butt. They remained together while lowering woman and children into the lifeboats, and jumped at the eleventh hour when the boilers of the giant ship bursted.
Repeatedly, Moore refused to take a place in one of the boats, the survivors who saw him say. His friend, Butt, knew that he was an oarsman, in fact, he realized that Clarence Moore could do most anything any true sportsman could, so he requested Moore to man an oar in one of the last lifeboats to leave the ship.
“No, major, I’ll stay and take my chances with you; let the women go,” Moore said to his companion according to Robert William Daniels, one of the survivors, who is stopping at the New Willard. “And he evidently stuck with Butt until death took them both,” said Mr. Daniels. “The two men jumped at the eleventh hour and were lost.”
J. Bruce Ismay, Col. Archibald Gracie and Miss Vera Dick, of Calgary, Canada, all of whom knew the banker, corroborate Daniels’ story regarding the last moments of Moore, and say that, with Major Butt, he went to his death in the waters like a true man.
As for 1746 Massachusetts Avenue, the house was sold by
Moore’s (remarried) widow to the newly sovereign Canadian government in 1927, which before
that year had been represented in diplomatic circles by the British government,
who would continue to own it until the 1980s.
The former mansion is today the Embassy of Uzbekistan.
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