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Louise W. Moore Pine

Louise Pine Obituary

Louise W. Moore Pine
Louise W. Moore Pine, 90, of Easton and Kintnersville, died Saturday, December 26, 2009 in her home in Kintnersville. Born September 20, 1919 in Newark, NJ she was a daughter of the late Dr. Willoughby Sidney Wilde, conductor and organist and Louise Bailey Wilde Perry also a musician and opera coach. She was a native of Rutherford, NJ, but lived with her family in Montclair, NJ where she attended Montclair College, majoring in music. She later studied piano in New York City with concert pianist Grace Castagnetta for 20 years. She participated with her piano partner in several two-piano programs. In 1947 she married Hugh Moore founder of the Dixie Cup Company of Easton. Mr. and Mrs. Moore lived at Slate Post Farm, Easton and also maintained an apartment in Midtown Manhattan. At that time she served as one of the first volunteer guides at the New United Nations Building. She also joined the Board of the Association for Volunteer Sterilization of NYC. She traveled around the world with Mr. Moore following his interest in population planning. She participated in the Hugh Moore Fund and assisted in the publication of Breeding Ourselves to Death by Lawrence Lader, an account of Mr. Moores work. She was a vice president of the Society for the Right to Die, NYC, an early proponent of the Living Will and was honored as a long-time member of the Population Institute, Washington, DC. Mr. Moore died in 1972 and one year later she deeded the 120-acre Slate Post Farm and its accompanying endowment to Northampton County for a public park and recreation facility. In accordance with Mr. Moores wishes the facility was named Louise W. Moore Park. The County Commissioners created a Northampton County Park Board which she chaired for ten years, overseeing the development of the farm fields into a passive park. She credited George Patton Associates of Philadelphia with the master plan which made this transformation possible. In 1974 she married Professor Joseph Van Vleck, Jr., sociologist of a prominent Montclair family. The wedding took place at the VanVleck house and gardens, now a public facility administered by the Montclair Foundation. The VanVlecks lived in Montclair, NJ and Easton, also at Captiva, FL and the Forest Lake Club, Hawley, PA. She traveled widely with Dr. Van Vleck particularly in the Middle East and followed him on the Board of Trustees of the American University in Cairo, Arab Republic of Egypt. Dr. VanVleck died in 1985 and in 1988 she married International Lawyer Roswell Dean Pine of Kintnersville, Bucks County and divided her time between Slate Post Farm and Mill House, Bucks County. In 1985 she became one of the first women invited to become a member of the one hundred year old Pomfret Club of Easton. In 1989 she received the Presidents Award of the Sales and Marketing Executives of the Easton Area. In 1994 she made a gift of the Dixie Cup Papers dating back to 1910 to Lafayette Colleges David Skillman Library. She was Vice-Chairman of the Hugh Moore Historical Park and Museums for many years and was a principal in the Louise and Hugh Moore Population Project of the Methodist Church, Washington, DC. She was a life member of the Womens National Republican Club, NYC, and member of the Northampton Country Club, the Forest Lake Club, Hawley, PA, YR Club, and on the Board of the Sun Inn Preservation Assoc. and Womens Board of Easton Hospital, She was an Episcopalian who later converted to Unitarian. Survivors: A brother, Dr. Robert W. Wilde of Williamsburg, VA; eight nieces and nephews; several step-children and great-nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husbands; a brother, Stuart W. Wilde and sister, Beatrice S. Logan. Services: As per her wishes there will be no services; the Ashton Funeral Home, 14th & Northampton Sts., Easton is in charge of arrangements. Interment will be private. Memorials: may be made to the Division of Parks and Recreation, Northampton County or to the Hugh Moore Historical Park and Museums, Easton, PA.

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Published by Morning Call on Dec. 30, 2009.

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3 Entries

esther bent

January 13, 2010

She was our neighbor and dear friend.
We loved her.
Peter and Esther Bent

Mrs. Jane L. Halteman

January 3, 2010

We shared many engaging and delightful conversations about "the farm." Louise was fascinated with the history of Slate Post Farm. We had not finished our anecdotal account but I know she would encourage us to do so. After the Great Depression and in a Recession @ 1933 Alice and George Halteman sold their dairy farm to the late Hugh Moore. The original deed came down from the William Penn family...through generations of Haltemans who still live on Hecktown Road. We shared a common interest in the land and its importance in the townships both Bethlehem and Lower Nazareth. We met about 25 years ago and enjoyed kite festivals , house visits, and a dinner together this past summer. Rest in peace, Louise, with the knowledge that the History of Slate Post Farm will continue through generations. Not only all the thousands of people who enjoy the trails, tennis, gardening, etc. of Louise Moore Park but particulary, our children, the descendants of the Halteman/Lawall Family. I missed your Christmas card this year and am sad to miss your quiet, intellectual, 'First Lady" personality. Surely, God, is your partner now in the Heavenly Kingdom. Thank you for the memories and for caring about family 'roots.'

Pat Peoples

December 30, 2009

I will never forget Louise Moore Pine. I had the awesome privilege of telling her what I know about eternal riches through Christ and about how God sent his Son into the world not to condemn the world but to save the world through him. We discussed the simple transaction of telling God that we know we fall short despite our best efforts, we believe that his son Jesus paid our sin debt on the cross, and accept this free gift of grace. Mrs. Pine prayed this prayer and it is with confidence & joy I tell you that she is in paradise ,God's presence. I look forward to meeting her there for the greatest adventure yet! Pat Peoples

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