Background
William J. Le Moyne (sometimes spelled Lemoyne or Le Moyne College) was born on April 29, 1831 in Boston, Massachusetts where he began performing in amateur theater productions at around the age of fifteen.
William J. Le Moyne (sometimes spelled Lemoyne or Le Moyne College) was born on April 29, 1831 in Boston, Massachusetts where he began performing in amateur theater productions at around the age of fifteen.
Le Moyne may have briefly supported himself as a silversmith before his professional stage debut on May 10, 1852 at Portland, Maine playing an officer in The Lady of Lyons, a romantic drama by Edward Bulwer-Lytton. Later that year Le Moyne joined the repertory company at Peale"s Museum in Troy, New York, as a $6 a-week "utility man" (bit player) that was later increased to $8 after he demonstrated an ability to play "old man roles". The play was an immediate hit and had a run of one hundred performances, remarkable at the time for a community the size of Troy.
Le Moyne"s tour with Uncle Tom"s Cabin the following year paved the way for his one-day becoming an actor of national standing.
At the outbreak of the American Civil War Le Moyne enlisted as a first lieutenant with Company Bachelor of the 28th Massachusetts Volunteers under the command of fellow actor Lawrence Barrett. At some point Barrett resigned and Le Moyne assumed command only to witness over half his men killed or wounded in a string of Northern defeats in South Carolina and Virginia.
In September 1862, Le Moyne himself was severely wounded during the Battle of South Mountain and was unable to return to military service. He was later granted by congress a retroactive promotion to the rank of captain dating back to the point he assumed command of company B.
In 1863 Le Moyne returned to the stage where he remained active until the dawn of the twentieth century.
He appeared in a number of plays based on the works of Charles Dickens playing such characters as Fagin, Captain Cuttle, Uriah Heep, Squeers, Plummer, Dick Swiveller and Caleb.
In Shakespeare"s Hamlet Le Moyne is said to have played every major male role except that of the prince himself. Over his career Le Moyne performed with companies headed by legendary actors Edwin Booth, Edwin Forrest and Charles Fletcher, and in producer Daniel Frohman"s Lyceum Theatre Company. Heart trouble forced Le Moyne to retire from the stage in 1901 after supporting James K. Hackett in Don Caesar"s Return.
Le Moyne was an eclectic collector whose house was adorned with paintings of Chinese actors, old plaques, a variety of smoking pipes, an idol from a Chinese temple, antique children"s shoes, artifacts from several ancient American and Asian cultures and works by contemporary American artists.
He had also gathered a large assortment of horseshoes, his favorite being one he found in New York City on Thirteenth Street one Friday with seven nails still attached. Le Moyne"s most valuable collection would come from a lifelong passion for obtaining old and rare books
Offstage Le Moyne was also known as a painter in the medium of water colors.