Polly Bryson was born November 24, 1813, in the Mills River section of Henderson County, NC. Her parents were William Bryson and Sarah Jones.
Polly married John Covington Moore. The couple reared six children:
Johnny C. and Polly first lived in Macon County, NC. Later, however, they moved one county west to what was then Cherokee County. They were the first people of European descent to live in the southeastern portion of the county, which, in 1861, would become the separate county of Clay. Local historians, therefore, consider Johnny C. and Polly Moore to be the first white settlers of present-day Clay County, North Carolina.
At first, relations between the Moore family and the native Cherokee Indians were uneasy, to say the least. Nonetheless, the new settlers and the Cherokee eventually became good friends. Language lessons were exchanged, and the natives would often demonstrate their ceremonial dances to Johnny C., Polly, and the children. The Indians even taught Polly how to make hominy, or "conee-henee." Johnny C. and Polly were particularly close to a Cherokee woman named Sarah "Grandma" Peckerwood, who often took care of the children when the parents made a trip to check on their Macon County land.
Polly Bryson Moore died November 12, 1887, and was buried in the Baptist-Presbyterian Cemetery in Clay County, NC.
| Gr-Grandparents | William Bryson -------- born ca. 1732 |
Isabella "Jennie" Holmes |
| Grandparents | William M. Bryson -------- 1758-1817 |
Susannah Bogle |
| Parents | William Bryson -------- born 01/26/1779 |
Sarah Jones |
Source: "The Bryson Family."