Inky Moore Selected for 2000 Abele Award
The Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award for the year 2000 is awarded to Enoch S. "Inky" Moore, Jr. Inky Moore distinguished himself in the cause of conservation in Pennsylvania through a lifetime of dedicated volunteer service. He invested countless hours in the education of Pennsylvania youth on conservation issues.
Enoch S. ("Inky") Moore died on October 15, 2000
at his home in Newville. He was seventy-five years old. Each year the Fish
and Boat Commission confers its highest honor, the Abele Award, on a
Pennsylvanian who has dedicated his time and energy to the conservation of our
state’s natural resources. For the year 2000, the Commission had several
fine nominees for the award. Inky Moore was a member of the award committee, and
he spent part of the day before his death reviewing the nominations with great
care and rating the nominees. Inky himself would not have been eligible for the
award prior to his death, nor would he have sought such recognition for himself.
After his death, however, the award committee met and decided unanimously to
confer the 2000 Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage as a posthumous honor on
Enoch S. ("Inky") Moore. The first criterion for the Abele Award is to find an
individual who has "personally invested heavily in the long-term education of
Pennsylvania’s youth on conservation issues vital to an improved aquatic
environment." No one better epitomizes the criteria for the Abele Award then
Inky Moore.
Inky Moore was one of Pennsylvania’s conservation heroes. He was part of a generation of leaders that included Ralph Abele, Maurice Goddard, Lenny Green and Ken Sink. Inky repeatedly demonstrated his love for fishing, hunting and Pennsylvania’s outdoors through his teaching and his service in conservation organizations.
Inky was one of the last of the self-proclaimed "Old Bastards" or "OBs" for short. This was a group of conservation leaders from across Pennsylvania. They would gather a couple of times each year at a hunting or fishing camp. Here they could get away from the phones and distractions of everyday life and have a chance to concentrate on the big conservation issues that sometimes get overlooked in the details of day-to-day operations. They talked about conservation legislation and conservation funding. They developed a set of conservation principles that Ralph Abele brought to the then Fish Commission under the heading of "Resource First."
A natural teacher, blessed with a keen sense of
humor and the ability to relate to young people, Inky was the founder or
co-founder of several conservation schools and camps. In 1995, Inky joined with
fellow conservationists and fly fishers to start the Rivers Conservation and Fly
Fishing Youth Camp. Each summer, as many as forty young people gathered at
Allenberry Resort near Boiling Springs for a one-week school in the conservation.
Inky anchored an outstanding group of instructors,
which included members of the PFBC staff, and brought his unique blend of
knowledge and expertise to each class.
Both before and after his retirement from employment as a motor carrier transportation consultant and as an management employee of Daily Express, Inc., Inky was a joiner and a doer. The list of the organizations to which he belonged included national, statewide, regional and local conservation and sportsmen’s organizations. And wherever Inky went, he left his mark. The Fish and Boat Commission, Trout Unlimited, Pennsylvania Trout, Carlisle Fish and Game Association, Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs, Pennsylvania Wildlife Federation, Cumberland County Junior Conservation School, Ralph W. Abele Conservation Scholarship Fund, Scott Eckert Memorial Conservation Scholarship Fund, Citizens for Letort Environmental Action and Restoration, Brotherhood of the Jungle Cock. These were just some of the organizations for which Inky served not just as a member but as a leader. Inky always somehow found time to go fishing or hunting, to tie flies or to make one his prized hand-made fly rods.
The Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award is the highest recognition the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission can confer on persons who distinguish themselves in the cause of conservation. The PFBC established the Abele Award to recognize citizens of Pennsylvania who have made outstanding contributions to the protection, conservation and enhancement of the aquatic resources of the Commonwealth. The award serves as a memorial to Ralph Abele for his steadfast and courageous work in protecting and conserving our natural resources. The Abele Award is presented to a Pennsylvanian who has dedicated his or her time and energy to the conservation of the state's natural resources, specifically the aquatic resources, through one or more of the following accomplishments:
Ralph W. Abele Scholarship Award -- PFBC Home
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