By Romona Baxter- As Guyana observes Black History Month, we pause to recognise and celebrate distinguished sons and daughters whose lives of service have shaped our national story. Among them stands Stanley Alfred Moore — a jurist whose 50-year legal career embodied intellectual excellence, public duty, and unwavering integrity across Guyana, the Caribbean, and Africa.
When he left the legal profession, he left a 50-year legacy — a legacy imbued with intellectual rigor and judicial integrity, etched across courtrooms, classrooms, and countries.
A servant of the law.
A jurist of uncommon breadth.
A Guyanese son whose legal mind travelled the Caribbean and Africa — yet remained anchored in humility and service.
From an early age, the pull of the law was unmistakable. His journey began humbly — first as a pupil-teacher after leaving Tutorial High School, then as a Customs Officer — but the call of the legal profession proved irresistible. Studying as an external student of the University of London, he persevered with discipline and purpose. He credited much of his professional formation to the guidance of distinguished mentors like Sir Frederick Wills and Rex McKay, whose influence he held in the highest regard.
He was called to the Bar in July 1970, launching a legal career that would span more than five decades — one marked by intellectual rigor, judicial service, and deep commitment to public duty.
His philosophy was simple but profound: public office is an act of service.
That principle guided him through an extraordinary professional journey. He served as Minister of Home Affairs in Guyana and later carried Guyana’s legal imprint abroad — first as Principal Crown Counsel in Montserrat, then as Attorney General in 1992. Two years later, he ascended to the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, serving with distinction in Grenada, the British Virgin Islands, and St. Kitts and Nevis. His judicial voice was also heard in The Bahamas, Botswana, and Swaziland, now the Kingdom of Eswatini.
A Master of the Bench at Lincoln’s Inn and prize-winning advocate, he combined courtroom brilliance with scholarly depth. Yet those closest to him remember not only the jurist — but the teacher, mentor, and lifelong student of the law.
Beyond the courtroom, he was a man of wide cultural and sporting interests. He served as President of the Guyana Amateur Boxing Association, officiated at international boxing events, and once guarded the goalposts for Northern Rangers Football Club. He loved classical music, sang calypso, and carried, by all accounts, a deeply romantic spirit. He was a perpetual student of life. He loved his family.
Stanley Moore’s devotion to the law never waned. He believed a lawyer’s work continues as long as the mind remains engaged.
Today, on this eighteenth day of Black History Month (Guyana), I present Stanley Alfred Moore — jurist, mentor, and distinguished son of Guyana’s legal tradition.
In honouring Stanley Alfred Moore, we honour a generation of Caribbean legal minds who proved that excellence rooted in service can transcend borders. His life reminds us that Black history is not only about struggle — it is also about scholarship, leadership, discipline, and enduring contribution. May his legacy continue to inspire young Guyanese to pursue excellence with integrity and to serve with purpose.
