Colonel Edward Crozier Sibbald Moore, R.E. (c.1844 â 1904) was an author, architect and army officer. He wrote the book Sanitary Engineering, which discusses the principles of public health and sanitation of the late nineteenth century. Moore also commanded the Royal Engineers in Bermuda, serving as acting governor on several occasions, and designed the Royal Engineers Museum, Gillingham, Kent.
Colonel Moore was born around 1844 and baptised in Plymouth, Devon. He was the eldest son of Thomas Edward Laws Moore, a polar explorer and Governor of the Falkland Islands, and his wife, Emma Jane Taplen.
Moore joined the army on 17 April 1866 and became a captain in 1878, advancing to the rank of colonel in 1896. He was an instructor at the school of Military Engineering between 1890 and 1893. He then went on to command the Royal Engineers in Bermuda, serving as acting governor on three occasions up until 1897.
In 1898, he wrote Sanitary Engineering: A Practical Treatise on the Collection, Removal, and Final Disposal of Sewage, and the Design and Construction of Works of Drainage and Sewage, etc.'. He was one of the first engineers to "recognise the possibilities of the new methods of purification of that day", his book went on to become one of the key works in the field.
In his final years, he designed the Ravelin Building, Gillingham, Kent, to serve as the Electrical Engineering School for the Corps. The building's construction, which cost ã40,000, represented a major investment in technical training for the Corps. However, he died in 1904 and never witnessed its construction and opening. The building became the Royal Engineers Museum.