The “Aunts & Uncles” series of biographical sketches are Artificial Intelligence (AI) compiled narratives of selected individuals from my Genealogical database. The selected AI will used the RootsMagic Individual Summary from my Genealogical Software, Roots Magic. All genealogical data is my research material acquired over the past 46 years of research. Today's Biography of The John Georgr Dry Family was compiled with the assistance of Claude Sonnett 4 and is entitled:
From German Roots to Carolina Soil
The Story of John George Dry and His Family
23 April 1799 – 6 January 1857
Cabarrus County, North Carolina · Palestine, Stanly County, North Carolina
Overview
John George Dry was a farmer, father of nine, and a man of deep Lutheran faith who spent his life rooted in the red-clay piedmont of North Carolina. He was born in 1799 — the same year George Washington died and just a generation removed from the German-speaking immigrants who first carried the Dry (Dürr) name to the Carolina backcountry. By the time he died in January 1857, he had weathered the birth of a nation, raised a large family through hard frontier conditions, and left behind a community of descendants who fanned out across the Carolinas and beyond.
His story is one of ordinary American life in an extraordinary era — plowing fields and raising children while the country itself was still figuring out what it wanted to be.
Early Life and Family Background
John George Dry was born on 23 April 1799 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, the son of Johan Martin Dry (1759–1836) and Catherine Keppel (1767–1836). He was baptized just a few months later, on 4 August 1799, at St. John's Lutheran Church in Concord — the same congregation that served many of the German Lutheran families who had settled the region in the mid-1700s. His baptismal sponsors were Peter Keppel and his wife Barbara, almost certainly relatives of his mother's Keppel family.
The Dry family name was originally German — likely spelled Dürr or Duerr — and had arrived in North Carolina through the great wave of German and Scots-Irish immigration into the Appalachian piedmont during the colonial era. By George's childhood, the family had been in America for at least two generations and was well established as part of the German-Lutheran farming community of Cabarrus County.
George grew up in a world where the American Republic was brand new. He was born the year John Adams was president, and the United States was still working out the details of what nationhood actually meant. North Carolina in 1799 was a rural, largely agricultural state, with most families — like the Drys — living on farms and relying on the land for everything they had.
The World George Was Born Into
The early 1800s brought rapid change to the young United States. The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 doubled the size of the nation. The War of 1812 — sometimes called America's Second War of Independence — saw British forces burn Washington, D.C., while American forces fought both on the frontier and at sea. Closer to home, North Carolina's piedmont was being carved into new counties as population grew, and German-Lutheran communities like the one George grew up in were well-established anchors of their local economies. Cotton and tobacco farming defined much of the Southern agricultural economy, and small family farms like the one George would eventually run were the backbone of rural life.
Marriage to Mary "Polly" Sides
On 11 November 1822, George Dry married Mary "Polly" Sides in Cabarrus County. The marriage bond — a standard legal document of the era essentially guaranteeing the marriage would take place — was witnessed by Daniel X. Sides, almost certainly a relative of Polly's. The bond number (000007747) survives in the North Carolina State Archives.
Polly was born around 1808 in Cabarrus County, the daughter of Christopher Sides (1765–1847) and Mary Esther Lipe (1772–1847). The Sides and Lipe families were also part of the German Lutheran community in Cabarrus County, making George and Polly's match a natural one in both faith and background. Polly was considerably younger than George — roughly a teenager at the time of their marriage — which was not unusual for the era.
Polly outlived her husband by many years. She appears in the 1860 census as head of her own household in Stanly County, and was still alive as late as 1870, when she was living with her daughter Sara Ann's family. She likely died sometime after 1870.
In November 1849, both George and Polly executed a formal Power of Attorney authorizing Preston W. Woolly to collect money due them from the sale of lands belonging to Polly's father Christopher Sides. Notably, the document includes a separate certification from Justice of the Peace William Levasingane confirming that Polly signed the document "freely and voluntarily and not from any fear or compulsion of her husband" — a standard legal protection for married women under the law of the time.
Life on the Farm: Cabarrus and Stanly Counties
George and Polly began their family in Cabarrus County, where all of their children were born. The 1830 census shows George, then about 30 years old, living in Cabarrus County with his wife (listed as one female, aged 20–29) and two young boys under the age of five — almost certainly Moses and Adam.
Sometime in the 1830s or early 1840s, the family relocated to Stanly County, which had been carved out of Montgomery County in 1841. This was part of a broader westward and southward movement of families from the older Cabarrus settlements as land grew scarcer and families sought new opportunities. By the time of the 1850 census, George and Polly were firmly established in the Harris Township area of Stanly County.
The 1850 census paints a vivid picture of the household: George (age 51), listed as a farmer; Polly (age 42); and six of their children still at home — Daniel (22), Christopher (19), Martin (17), "Alexs" (Alexander, 13), Elizabeth (8), and Eva (7). George's occupation is simply listed as "Farmer," which tells us everything and nothing — it meant he was responsible for feeding and clothing his family from the land, managing livestock, tending crops, and navigating the seasonal rhythms that governed rural life in the antebellum South.
Children of John George Dry and Mary "Polly" Sides
George and Polly had nine children together. Their lives ranged from tragically short to remarkably long, and several of the boys would be caught up in the Civil War that erupted just four years after their father's death.
1. Moses M. Dry (10 March 1824 – before 1850)
Moses was the eldest child, born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 9 May 1824. He died young, before the 1850 census, and does not appear in that household — he was likely in his early twenties when he passed. The cause and exact date of his death are not recorded.
2. Adam Dry (20 September 1826 – 19 January 1914)
Adam was the family's long-liver, surviving to the remarkable age of 87. He was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 11 February 1827 at Dutch Buffalo Creek Meeting House. His father named him executor of his estate in the 1856 will, a sign of trust and of Adam's standing as the responsible eldest surviving son.
Adam served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, enlisting on 12 March 1863 in Company A of the 27th North Carolina Regiment. He was slightly wounded in the arm. After the war, he married Elizabeth Layton (1821–1905) around 1850, and the couple appears together in the 1900 census in Albemarle, Stanly County, with a granddaughter named Louetta Dry living with them. After Elizabeth's death, Adam — at the age of 79 — married again on 11 September 1906 to Sarah A. Burleson (1848–1916).
Adam died suddenly of heart disease on the evening of 19 January 1914, at the home of his son Moses in Palestine, Stanly County. His obituary in The Monroe Journal described him as having eaten supper and appeared in his usual health before he was "seized with pain" and passed away within hours. He is buried at Palestine Methodist Church Cemetery.
3. Daniel Dry (23 November 1828 – 12 November 1862)
Daniel was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 30 August 1829. He appears as a 22-year-old in the 1850 household census. He married Margaret Smith (1827–1880). Daniel died on 12 November 1862, killed while in camp in Franklin, Virginia — a casualty of the Civil War, though he appears to have died of illness or accident in camp rather than in battle. He was 33 years old.
4. Christopher Dry (27 March 1831 – 3 July 1863)
Christopher was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 19 August 1831. He married Martha Ann Littleton (1837–1910) on 2 February 1853 in Stanly County, and by 1860 had three young children. Christopher enlisted in the Confederate Army and served with the 52nd North Carolina Infantry. He died on 3 July 1863 at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — one of the bloodiest days of the entire Civil War, the final day of Pickett's Charge. He was 32 years old. Military records note he was "left on the battlefield at Gettysburg" and that a fellow soldier was "satisfied that he was killed or died from wounds received at Gettysburg while in enemy's hands."
5. Martin Dry (6 November 1833 – 5 January 1851)
Martin was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 16 February 1834. He appears in the 1850 census at age 17, living at home with his parents. Tragically, he died just months after that census was taken, on 5 January 1851, in Cabarrus County. He was only 17 years old. A Find A Grave memorial (#62256116) has been created in his honor.
6. George Alexander Dry (9 July 1836 – 22 December 1863)
George Alexander — named for his father — was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 24 September 1836. By the 1860 census, after his father's death, he was living with his mother Polly in Stanly County as a 24-year-old. Like his brothers Christopher and Daniel before him, George Alexander was caught up in the Civil War. He died on 22 December 1863 at Fort Delaware, a Union prisoner-of-war facility in Delaware City, Delaware. He was 27 years old. Within a span of roughly fourteen months — from November 1862 to December 1863 — Polly lost three of her sons to the Civil War.
7. Esther Catherine Dry (2 May 1839 – 7 February 1844)
Esther Catherine was born in Cabarrus County but died in Stanly County on 7 February 1844, just a few months shy of her fifth birthday. Her brief life is memorialized on Find A Grave (#62256108). Her death, followed by young Martin's in 1851, brought early grief to the Dry household.
8. Sara Ann Elizabeth Dry (16 June 1841 – 10 July 1913)
The youngest daughter, Sara Ann Elizabeth, was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 23 October 1841. She appears in the 1850 and 1860 censuses at home with her parents. She married Turner W. Ingram (1806–1880) on 13 February 1868 in Stanly County and was living with him and her aging mother Polly in the 1870 census in Albemarle. After Turner's death, she married William S. Redwine (1823–1918) around 1880, and the couple is found together in Gaston County in both 1900 and 1910. Sara Ann died on 10 July 1913 in McAdenville, Gaston County, and was buried the following day at Ebenezer United Methodist Church Cemetery.
9. Eva Caroline Dry (22 May 1844 – 7 December 1932)
The youngest child and the longest-lived, Eva Caroline was born in Cabarrus County and baptized on 3 August 1844. She first married James Hall (born 1838) on 7 February 1864 in Stanly County, and later married Archie A. Adcock (1842–1907) on 20 December 1898 in Gaston County. Her obituary — published in the Gastonia Daily Gazette on 8 December 1932 — described her as "greatly loved and revered in her community" and noted she had been "a loyal member of the Baptist church since early girlhood." She died at the home of her daughter Mrs. Beulah Cashion in Belmont, Gaston County, at the age of 89, survived by three daughters and seventeen grandchildren. She is buried at Lowell Cemetery.
George Dry's Will and Final Years
On 26 December 1856 — just eleven days before his death — George Dry dictated his last will and testament in Stanly County. The document opens in the traditional manner of the era, recommending his soul to God and his body "to be buried in a Christian like manner."
In the will, George directed that his tract of land be sold to pay his debts. He gave his youngest son Alexander his "young bay mare" (with the colt excepted). He left the remainder of his property to his wife Polly for her lifetime or widowhood. At Polly's death, he directed that his two daughters, Elizabeth and Eva, each receive fifty dollars, with any remaining balance to be divided equally among his six surviving children: Adam, Daniel, Christopher, Alexander, Elizabeth, and Eva. Notably, neither Moses (who had already died) nor Martin (who died in 1851) is mentioned — a quiet reminder of the losses the family had already endured.
George named his son Adam as executor — a fitting choice for the eldest surviving and most dependable son. The will was probated at the February 1857 session of Stanly County Court, just weeks after George's death. Adam sold the estate lands on 10 March 1859, conveying 65 acres to B. H. Carter for $259.
George Dry died on 6 January 1857 in Palestine, Stanly County, North Carolina. He was 57 years old. He is buried at Palestine Methodist Church Cemetery in Albemarle, Stanly County. His tombstone survives and has been documented on Find A Grave (Memorial #62256119).
George Dry's Life in Historical Context (1799–1857)
George Dry's 57 years spanned one of the most turbulent and transformative periods in American history. Here is a brief look at the major events of his lifetime:
The Early Republic (1799–1812)
George was born the year George Washington died (December 1799) and grew up in a nation that was still very much an experiment. He would have been a teenager during the War of 1812, when British and American forces clashed along the Canadian border, the Great Lakes, and at sea. The war stirred tremendous patriotic feeling and helped define a distinctly American national identity.
The Age of Jackson (1820s–1840s)
George married Polly in 1822 and began raising his family during the era of Andrew Jackson, himself a North Carolinian by birth. The 1830s and 1840s brought the Indian Removal Act, the forced relocation of the Cherokee and other tribes along the Trail of Tears, and the heated political debates over states' rights and the expansion of slavery that would eventually tear the nation apart. North Carolina remained a generally moderate Southern state during this period, with a large non-slaveholding farming class — people very much like the Dry family.
The Mexican-American War (1846–1848)
When George was in his late forties and his oldest sons were young men, the United States fought Mexico for control of the Southwest. The resulting territories — including California, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona — reignited the slavery debate and set the stage for the sectional crisis that would explode in 1861.
The Coming Storm (1850s)
The final years of George's life saw the country lurching toward civil war. The Compromise of 1850, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and the violent clashes in "Bleeding Kansas" all played out while George was farming in Stanly County. The publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1852 electrified public opinion on slavery. George died in January 1857, just three years before Lincoln's election and four years before the guns opened fire at Fort Sumter. Three of his sons would not survive the war that followed.
Legacy
John George Dry lived and died as an ordinary man in extraordinary times. He never held public office, never led an army, and never made the history books. But he cleared fields, built a home, planted crops, buried two of his children in childhood, raised six others to adulthood, and left his community a little better than he found it.
The family he and Polly built scattered widely after his death. His sons Daniel, Christopher, and George Alexander gave their lives in the Civil War — a staggering loss for a single family. His surviving son Adam lived nearly sixty years beyond his father, long enough to see the 20th century. His daughters Sara Ann and Eva Caroline lived into their seventies and late eighties respectively, watching North Carolina transform from a farming frontier into a modern state.
George is buried at Palestine Methodist Church Cemetery in Albemarle, Stanly County, alongside at least some of his children and grandchildren. His grave is a quiet but enduring testament to a life well and faithfully lived.
Quick Reference: At a Glance
Born: 23 April 1799, Cabarrus County, North Carolina
Baptized: 4 August 1799, St. John's Lutheran Church, Concord, NC
Died: 6 January 1857, Palestine, Stanly County, North Carolina (age 57)
Buried: Palestine Methodist Church Cemetery, Albemarle, Stanly County, NC
Occupation: Farmer
Father: Johan Martin Dry (1759–1836)
Mother: Catherine Keppel (1767–1836)
Wife: Mary "Polly" Sides (c. 1808 – after 1870)
Married: 11 November 1822, Cabarrus County, NC
Children: Moses M., Adam, Daniel, Christopher, Martin, George Alexander, Esther Catherine, Sara Ann Elizabeth, Eva Caroline
John George Dry is my 3rd Great GrandUncle
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1. St. Johns Lutheran Baptism Records, 1797-1847: John George Dry born 23 April 1799; baptized 4 August 1799., St. John's Lutheran, Mt. Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina.
2. 1830 U S Census, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, population schedule, Cabarrus, North Carolina, Page: 195;, George Dry, George Dry; digital images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com : online July 2025); citing National Archives Microfilm M19, Roll 119.
3. Stanly County, North Carolina, Deed Book 2: pages 265 and 266, George Dry & wife to Preston W. Wooly Power Attorney; 20 November 1849, Register of Deeds, Albemarle, Stanly County, North Carolina.
4. 1850 Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Harris, Stanly County, North Carolina, Page: 19A(stamped); Line 20, Dwelling 273, Family 274, Household of George DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 10 February 2016); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, Roll 645.
5. Stanly County, North Carolina, : Vol I, page 161 George Dry Will; Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
6. Find A Grave, Inc., Find A Grave, database and digital images, (http://www.findagrave.com : accessed 3 February 2015); Memorial page for George Dry; (23 April 1799–6 January 1857); Find a Grave memorial # 62256119, Citing Palestine Methodist Church Cemetery; Albemarle, Stanly County, North Carolina, USA.
7. 1850 Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, Population Schedule, Harris, Stanly County, North Carolina, Page: 19A(stamped); Line 20, Dwelling 273, Family 274, Household of George DRY.
8. "Index to North Carolina Marriage Bonds, 1741-1868," database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : Viewed 3 February 2015), George M. Dry & Mary 'Polly' Sides Marriage Bond; North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977; Bond #: 000007747, dated 11 Nov 1822.
9. Stanly County, North Carolina, Deed Book 2: pages 265 and 266.
10. 1860 U. S. Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Stanly, North Carolina, Page: 82 (stamped); Line 6, Dwelling 1164, Family 1180, Household of Mary DRY; online database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 10 February 2016); citing National Archives Microfilm Publication M653, Roll 914.
11. 1870 U S Census, Stanly County, North Carolina, population schedule, Albemarle, Stanly, North Carolina, Page: 3A(stamped); Line 32, Dwelling 50, Family 50, Household of T. W. INGRAM; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : viewed 3 November 2017); citing National Archive Microfilm M593, Roll 1160.
Prepared by Charles Purvis · Thomasville, NC 27360 · CPurvis1@gmail.com