Moore arrived at Ellis Island from County Cork, Ireland, aboard the Guion LinesteamshipNevada on January 1, 1892. Her brothers, Anthony and Philip, who journeyed with her, had just turned 15 and 12, respectively.[2][4] As the first person to pass inspection at the newly opened facility, she was presented with an American $10 gold piece from an American official.[4]
Family
Moore's parents, Matthew and Julia, had come to the United States in 1888 and were living at 32 Monroe Street in Manhattan. Annie married a son of German Catholic immigrants, Joseph Augustus Schayer (1876–1960), a salesman at Manhattan's Fulton Fish Market, with whom she had about eleven children. She died of heart failure on December 6, 1924, at age 50[1] and is buried in Calvary Cemetery, Queens. Her previously unmarked grave was identified in August 2006.[5] On October 11, 2008, a dedication ceremony was held at Calvary which celebrated the unveiling of a marker for her grave,[6] a Celtic Cross made of Irish Blue Limestone. She had 11 children of whom five survived to adulthood, and three of them had children. The rest all died before the age of three.[7]
Mistaken identity
A woman named "Annie Moore" who died near Fort Worth, Texas, in 1924 had long been thought to be the one whose arrival marked the beginning of Ellis Island. Further research, however, established that the Annie Moore in Texas was born in Illinois.[4][8]
Legacy
Annie Moore is honored by two statues sculpted by Jeanne Rynhart. One stands near Cobh Heritage Centre (formerly Queenstown), her port of departure, and another at Ellis Island, her port of arrival. The image is meant to represent the millions who passed through Ellis Island in pursuit of the American dream.[9][10]
Things named in honour of Moore include the Annie Moore Award, presented annually by the Irish American Cultural Institute,[15] a utility vessel operated for the National Park Service,[16] and a software program developed at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, Lund University in Sweden, and the University of Oxford in Britain which uses a "matching algorithm" to allocate refugees with no ties to the host country to their new homes.[17]
Gallery
Statue of Annie Moore and her brothers on the quayside in Cobh, Ireland.
Annie Moore's Passenger Arrival at Ellis Island in 1892.
^Roche, Barry (March 18, 2016). "Generation saga: Relatives of Annie Moore traced". irishtimes.com. Irish Times. Retrieved April 16, 2022. she had eleven children but five of them died before the age of three – all from different causes
^"Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears". Star Of The Sea: A Postcolonial/postmodern Voyage Into The Irish Famine. University of Southern California. Retrieved April 16, 2022.