


This site is dedicated to the history of and preservation of an historic home built by Dr Volney L Moore in 1877. Features: Cream city brick, Italianate villa massing, including corner tower, brick pilasters and rounded arched windows with corbelled lintels. The photos depict the building's current appearance in the initial phase of the renovation project.

*Source: Medical History Data compiled by Woman's Auxillary of the Waukesha County Medical Society for the State Medical Society of Wisconsin.
Born September 10, 1836, in Ulysses, NY. Attended public schools in Watertown, Wisconsin. Studied medicine under Dr Flannigan, of Watertown.1
"He matriculated at the Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania (became Hahnemann) from Watertown, Wis, Nov 1, 1858, and graduated March 3, 1859....He was a member of the Alumni Association, (and) the Wisconsin Homeopathic Medical Society...."2
His father's name was Alexander R Moore. He married Elizabeth Jane Phillips (b 1836, d 19 Nov 1891), daughter of Enos Phillips, of Reading, PA.1 Volney and Eliza Jane had one child, Alice Mary ( b 1859, d 4 Sept 1926), who married Harry N. Simmons 3 and went to Philadelphia. They later lived at Colfax, Washington.1
Dr Volney L Moore 1836 - 1886
Sources:
1. Medical History Data compiled by Woman's Auxillary of the Waukesha County Medical Society for the State Medical Society of Wisconsin.
2. Ms. Barbara Williams, Archives and Special Collections, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA. From her June 5, 2006 e-mail.
3. Regarding the name Harry N. "Simmons," other sources spell the name "Sims," including Alice's grave marker, and Harry's signature in the cemetery record.

View from 3rd story tower window. The tower was originally constructed with a 4th floor which was dismantled for materials to build Jimmy's Grotto around 1946. It's hard to imagine how massive the 4 story tower must have been in relation to the building. In 1991 the restaurant moved across the street to a new building, and the old store was demolished.