He was a lay commissioner on the Appeals Tribunal of the Irish Land Commission from 1934 to 1950.
The process continued well into the 20th century with the work of the Irish Land Commission.
In 1910 he was transferred to the Irish Land Commission in Dublin.
The house was later sold and for most of the twentieth century was the headquarters of the Irish Land Commission.
Moore later sold a large part of the estate to the Irish Land Commission for £25,000.
The estate was sold to the Irish Land Commission in the 1950s and was dismantled by the mid 1970s.
The estate passed to the Irish Land Commission upon the death of George Moore, and a campaign to restore the house has been waged.
The estate was sold to the Irish Land Commission in 1920.
In the early 1950s the castle was acquired by the Irish government's Irish Land Commission and turned into a nursing home.
In the late 1930s the house and estate were bought by the Irish Land Commission.