Dayton Daily News

THIS MAN’S WORK ‘BUILDS PEOPLE UP’

Unsung Hero has knack for giving, encouragin­g others to do same.

- ByThomasGn­au

So involved has John Moore been in Dayton charitable endeavors, his work defies easy summary. No single story can capture all Moore has done.

But Mike Parks, president of the Dayton Foundation — which nominated Moore as a Dayton Daily News Unsung Hero — offers this: “John gives a voice to the voiceless.”

“I think it’s kind of wrapped up in my journey, my faith journey,” Moore said. “It’s a faith journey.

With a smile, he added, “I guess I haven’t learned how to say ‘No’ often enough. I got a weak heart, or something.”

Born in Birmingham Ala., John Moore will be 93 on Jan. 11. He first became involved as a volunteer with the Dayton Foundation in 1972.

That’s 43 years of involvemen­t, if you’re counting.

“That’s a ‘wow’ when you do the math, right?” Parks said with a laugh.

Moore is the first African-American board member for the Dayton Foundation. He served as chair of the foundation in 1989.

One area of Moore’s focus that stands out: Encouragin­g others to give.

In 1991, Lloyd Lewis Jr. and Moore co-led and formed the African American Community Fund, or the AACF, at the Dayton Foundation.

“This was really a nationally recognized and literally a groundbrea­king initiative to engage African-Americans in philanthro­py in a new way,” Parks said. “Today, that fund ... has over 170 fundholder­s, 170 different individual­s who have establishe­d funds within the (AACF).”

The fund is a subset of the Dayton Foundation that focuses on encouragin­g African-Americans to contribute, to become involved in philanthro­py, to establish charitable funds within the AACF for “issues and organizati­ons they care about,” Parks said.

Today, the fund collective­ly totals more than $5 million. Over the past 24 years, it has given out more than $3 million.

“I felt the African-American community has come a long way,” Moore said. “Some of us have been able to put a little bit into a fund. So we started with an idea. And this foundation supported us.”

Moore’s involvemen­t extends well beyond the foundation. He has been a trustee and chair of Sinclair Community College’s board of trustees, a co-founder of Parity Inc., a trustee of the United Way of the Greater Dayton Area, a trustee and chair of the Self Sufficienc­y Task Force, a member of the Montgomery County Job Center Governing Board, a member of the MedAmerica Health Systems Corp. — and more, including supporting the Mary Scott Nursing Center’s capital campaign.

Parks noted that Moore is a WorldWar II veteran and a former chief of civilian employees atWright-Patterson Air Force Base. He also was a Montgomery County citizen of the year in 1997.

Montgomery County Commission­er Dan Foley has long been impressed with the range of issues on which Moore has made an impact. His work is done in a “way that doesn’t tear people down, but rather, it builds people up,” he said.

“We should all be more like John Moore,” Foley said. “He’s kind, he’s humble and he works really hard.”

Deb Feldman, chief executive of Dayton Children’s Hospital, has known Moore close to 20 years.

“I think John has a vision, and he is absolutely committed to working tirelessly, not only himself, but in any way he can to inspire, cajole, encourage others to consistent­ly give time and effort to that vision,” Feldman said.

Moore was instrument­al in the creation of Montgomery County’s human services levy, created from the merger of six human services-oriented levies to two.

Moore is also a founding supporter of the Dayton-Montgomery County Scholarshi­p program. That program raised $25,000 in the first year and $35,000 the second year.

A $1 million donation from Dayton philanthro­pist and industrial­ist Jesse Phillips was instrument­al in sustaining the program.

Since then, from the fund, scholarshi­ps have been granted to 600 or 700 students each year, with scholarshi­ps averaging about $1,000 each.

Moore and his late wife, Hester, have two grown children.

Being a grandfathe­r of four and a great-grandfathe­r to four have also kept him busy in his 37 years of retirement.

But Moore really isn’t not the retiring type.

“Since I’ve retired from Wright-Patt, I’ve simply volunteere­d around the community in one way or another, and I tried to be helpful,” he said.

TheHistory­makers. com, a web site which bills itself as the nation’s largest collection of African American oral history videos, identifies Moore as a civic leader, and a 2006 profile of Moore can be found at that site.

“I just know that I’ve been blessed,” Moore said.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Unsung hero John E. Moore Sr., honored this year as anUnsung Hero, sayswith a smile,“I guess I haven’t learned howto say‘No’often enough. I got aweak heart, orsomethin­g.”
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Unsung hero John E. Moore Sr., honored this year as anUnsung Hero, sayswith a smile,“I guess I haven’t learned howto say‘No’often enough. I got aweak heart, orsomethin­g.”
 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? John E. Moore Sr. is an Unsung Hero who has had a decadeslon­g commitment to break down barriers of race and class in the community throughwor­k with the Dayton Foundation and other civic organizati­ons.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF John E. Moore Sr. is an Unsung Hero who has had a decadeslon­g commitment to break down barriers of race and class in the community throughwor­k with the Dayton Foundation and other civic organizati­ons.

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