Daniel Killian Moore was born in
Asheville, North Carolina, on April 2, 1906 to Fred Moore and Lela Enloe. His father was a superior court judge. Upon his death two year's after Dan's birth, the family moved to
Jackson County. Moore earned a bachelor's degree in commerce in 1927 from the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a law degree in 1929 from the
University of North Carolina School of Law where he was a member of the
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity and was selected to Phi Beta Kappa. He practiced law in
Sylva, North Carolina and served a term in the
North Carolina House of Representatives in 1941 before entering the
U.S. Army in 1943 during
World War II. While in the army, he served in the medical and judge advocate departments, with 13 months of service in Europe. He was discharged in October 1945 as an enlisted soldier. After the war, Moore served as a
North Carolina Superior Court judge from 1948 to 1958. Subsequently, Moore served as counsel for the Champion Papers company in
Canton, North Carolina, while also serving on the state Board of Water Resources. He left Champion to run for
Governor in
1964. He was seen as the moderate in the Democratic primary, between the conservative
I. Beverly Lake Sr. and the more progressive
L. Richardson Preyer. Moore won a primary runoff with Preyer. He was sworn in on January 8, 1965. After serving one term as governor (North Carolina governors were not then eligible to be re-elected), Moore's successor, Governor
Robert W. Scott, appointed him to the
North Carolina Supreme Court, the first governor of North Carolina to be so honored. He served on the Court from November 20, 1969 until December 31, 1978. As a judge and justice, he was noted for the breadth of his legal experience, common sense, and compassion. At the
1968 Democratic National Convention Moore received 17½ votes for president on the first ballot, finishing fifth behind
Vice President Hubert Humphrey (1,760½), Senator
Eugene McCarthy (601), Sen.
George McGovern (146½), and Rev. Channing E. Phillips (67½). Moore received 12 of North Carolina's 59 votes, 3 from
Virginia, 2 from
Georgia and ½ vote from
Alabama. In May 1986, the last year of his life, Moore had a section of
Interstate 40 named after him. (citation in next section) ==Death and memorial==