thumb|200px|right|Harriet Jane Moore c. 1860s

Harriet Jane Carrick Moore (1801 – 6 March 1884) was a British watercolour artist who is best known for her drawings of Michael Faraday's work at the Royal Institution. She documented his apartment, study, and laboratory in a series of watercolour paintings in the early 1850s. Letters between Faraday and Moore survive at the Institution of Engineering and Technology.

She, and her family, were close with the Swiss-born artist Henry Fuseli.

She was the eldest of the five children of James Carrick Moore (1762–1860) and Harriet Henderson (1779–1866). She was the niece of Sir John Moore, a British army general in the Peninsular War, and the granddaughter of the actor John Henderson.

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File:Royal Institution - Michael Faraday's study.jpg|Michael Faraday's Study on the second floor at The Royal Institution, 1850–1855

File:M Faraday Lab H Moore.jpg|Michael Faraday in his laboratory. c. 1850s

File:Michael Faradays Flat at Royal Institution.jpg|Michael Faraday's flat at the Royal Institution, between 1850 and 1855

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References

  • Harriet Jane Moore gallery at artchive.com Accessed February 2010.