Career
Moule"s cricket career was short, and though he played a few times for Victoria, most of his first-class appearances were on the 1880 tour of England with the Australian team under Billy Murdoch. He played in the one Test match of the tour, a hastily arranged match at The Oval which was the first Test in England, mainly because Fred Spofforth was injured. He batted at Number 11 and was the sixth bowler tried.
That seems to have done little justice to his abilities, for with three wickets for 23 runs he was the most successful bowler in England"s first innings and his 34 in Australia"s second innings helped in a last-wicket partnership of 88 with his captain that avoided an innings defeat.
Moule resided at Clarence House now known as the old Mansion nightclub in 1876 whilst being educated at Melbourne Grammar School and took a law degree at Melbourne University, being called to the bar in 1879 and going into practice the following year. Moule had a short-lived but sensational career as a politician.
Standing on a free trade platform in the Victoria state election of 1894, he beat the sitting member, the long-time minister and future premier of Victoria, Sir Thomas Bent. Bent was accused of various forms of corruption, and there had been some difficulty finding a candidate who would stand against him.
Moule married Jessie Osborne in 1885.