Bob:
Muster rolls of "Over Mountain Men" are pretty hard to come by. If any
such exist, they should be in NC State Archives, Raleigh. The records of
most militia units were indifferently kept - probably more so among the
groups raised in the Watauga Settlements.
There is considerable information about the activities of Captain (later
Major) Moses Cavitt himself - much of it from the 1834 pension
application of his eldest son, Richard (denied) - but nothing to my
knowledge mentioning personnel under his command.
It is my understanding that the warrants for bounty land in the
Cumberland basin which North Carolina issued went only to residents who
had NC units of the Continental Line. I don't think the state rewarded
militia service at all. The first federal legislation which recognized
militia service was not passed until 1832 - when the Congress could
finally be sure that most militia veterans were dead and that federal
largesse would not be too costly. The thousands of applications for a
few bucks a month (and accompanying depositions outlining military
service) are on file in the National Archives, Washington. They are
indexed by name and the state in which they served. Maybe if you read
through a few thousand North Carolina applications you might find some
men who served under Moses Cavitt. I know of no other way to do it.
Jack Bryan