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    1. Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline
    2. Alta Mitchem Durden
    3. According to cemetery survey attributed to Mr. W. D. Floyd, on the Lincoln County webpage, the following persons are buried in the Old White Cemetery in downtown Lincolnton: German - Can't Read February 16, 1801 Cline, Jacob 26y ??m, 10 d January 11, 1823 Cline, Henry November 3, 1765 December 24, 1843 - same dates given below for another cemetery. Cline, Elizabeth March 16, 1767 August 27, 1839 - same dates given below for another cemetery. Cline, Jane Elizabeth 17y 23d August 12, 1842, c/o John and Elizabeth Cline, John June 13, 1796 April 12, 1857 Cline, Elizabeth December 18, 1793 November 4, 1874 Alta Mitchem Durden -----Original Message----- From: Robert Carpenter <rcarpenter2@charter.net> To: nclincol@rootsweb.com Sent: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 9:34 pm Subject: Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline I list Henry Cline as being buried at Emmanuels Lutheran Church Cemetery with the following statistics: b. Nov 3, 1765; d. Dec. 24, 1843. Elizabeth is buried beside him with b. Mar 16, 1767; d. Aug 27, 1839. It has been a very long time but I believe there was another Henry Cline of similar age. Robert Carpenter ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alta Mitchem Durden" <altamdurden@aol.com> To: <nclincol@rootsweb.com>; <dlamel@sw.rr.com> Cc: <yoderj6@charter.net>; <refgcpl@hotmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 9:26 PM Subject: Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline > Jerry -? Was wondering how long before you'd chimed in!? Thanks.? > > The sources I read, giving information about Heinrich Klein's having been > born in Germany ... then coming?to Pennsylvania, and finally migrating to > North Carolina ... seemed to be reliable and authentic.? Perhaps Henry > "Hog" Cline is not the same person as that buried in the Old White > Cemetery in Lincolnton, thought to have been the father of Thomas Cline b. > abt. 1800, who was married in Lincoln County in 1825? > > There's a Cline?surname folder in the Jonas Library at Lincolnton, (704) > 735-8044.? Perhaps a reference librarian ---??refgcpl@hotmail.com --- > could let us know tomorrow the dates for the?man named Henry > Cline/Heinrich Klein?buried in the Old White Cemetery in Lincolnton?? > Maybe other family members are buried nearby.? I've seen a printed survey > of that cemetery online, but have not looked for it tonight. > > Alta > > > -----Original Message----- > From: JLLYNN@aol.com > To: nclincol@rootsweb.com; dlamel@sw.rr.com > Cc: yoderj6@charter.net > Sent: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 9:00 pm > Subject: Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline > > > > > > Alta and Debra: > > Henry "Hog" Cline was not born in Germany but what was to become Lincoln > County. His son John T Cline who married Elizabeth Cathey became a > "hatter" > learning the trade from his Uncle John Butts who married a sister of > Henry > Cline. > John T owned a shop in Lincolnton and obtained substantial assets before > passing 12 April 1857 leaving a Will in the Lincolnton Courthouse. John > was > only > 61 but the life and sanity of hatters was impacted by the use of mercury > to > construct the hats, hence "the Mad Hatter" story. A person that was > responsible for the Cline Association of Western North Carolina was John > Yoder > at > _yoderj6@charter.net_ (mailto:yoderj6@charter.net) in 2002. He most > likely is > the person that has documented much of the Cline Family. Cicero Cline has > a > paper in the Newton Library piecing together some of the extensive Cline > Family > > with Sebastian (Bostian) Cline being the progenitor. I spent countless > time > in attempting to link the Lincolnton Clines with the Catawba County > Clines but > was not very successful. I do have lots of descendants of John T and > Elizabeth Cathey since they are my ancestors. The name Hog Henry stems > from a > story > related by Cicero Cline which I have not documented but had to do with > his > "Dutch" in using another word rather than hog. As I recall Cicero's > document > was not too successful in forming the exact families but had interesting > information regarding the Clines. John T Cline was well educated with > excellent > > penmanship. I descend from his daughter Nancy Caroline who married Alfred > Lewis > > Hoke. These two are buried at St Luke Episcopal in Lincolnton although > one > child is buried at the Old White Church. I went through the Cline Estates > at > NC Archives but information regarding Henry is lacking. I have Sebastian > Cline > with five sons and six daughters with the first born in 1738. There would > be > multiple Heinrich Kleins from these five sons born before 1770. Hog Henry > was more of an established Cline in Lincolnton and I do not suspect he > would > have had a son to migrate to Illinois. IBM migrated me to Chicago for two > years and, although Chicago is a beautiful city, I knew I was migrating > back to > > North Carolina! Getting off the subject with some bull so will close. > Regards, > Jerry Lynn > PS: Copied John Yoder but suspect it will be returned to me. > > > > > In a message dated 2/13/2008 8:00:23 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, > altamdurden@aol.com writes: > > > This information is likely to be found?in Lorena Shell Eaker's book, > "German-Speaking People West of the Catawba - (Years)".? I've loaned my > copy to > > someone; otherwise, I would look it up for you.? Also, Lorena has recently > changed e-mail addresses and I do not have the most current one.? Perhaps > someone > on this list will kindly forward this request to Lorena. > > Alta > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Debra LaMel <dlamel@sw.rr.com> > To: nclincol@rootsweb.com > Sent: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 7:53 pm > Subject: Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline > > > > > Thanks Robert a bunch > > Thomas Cline came from the moon! I guess! LOL > > Debra > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Robert Carpenter" <rcarpenter2@charter.net> > To: <nclincol@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 6:34 PM > Subject: Re: [NCLINCOL] Cline > > >> Debra, >> >> I am on the list. I do have some information on Henry and Elizabeth >> Carpenter Cline in Carpenters A Plenty. >> >> Another source would be the newly (within the last 10 years or so) >> Cline >> History. I do not have a copy of it but have some xeroxed pages from >> it. >> >> I will see if I have anything about the Henry Cline family. >> >> What I wrote about this family in Carpenters A Plenty was mainly from >> other >> researcher's work. I did little primary source research on this family. >> >> Robert Carpenter >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Debra LaMel" <dlamel@sw.rr.com> >> To: <nclincol@rootsweb.com> >> Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 11:29 AM >> Subject: [NCLINCOL] Cline >> >> >>> Does anyone know if Robert C Carpenter who published Carpenter's A >>> Plenty >>> is on the mailing list or does someone have this book and does it cover >>> Elizabeth Carpenter (Zimmerman) who married Henry Cline b 1765 d 1843 >>> and >>> are buried at Old White Church Cem in LC NC. >>> I am trying to prove that Thomas Cline who's father was named Henry >>> might >>> have been a son or grandson of Henry who married Elizabeth. >>> >>> If so how many children they had and their names! >>> >>> >>> Debra LaMel >>> > > > > > > > > > (http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cobb/) > > > > **************The year's hottest artists on the red carpet at the Grammy > Awards. Go to AOL Music. > (http://music.aol.com/grammys?NCID=aolcmp00300000002565) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCLINCOL-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body > of > the message > > > ________________________________________________________________________ > More new features than ever. Check out the new AOL Mail ! - > http://webmail.aol.com > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NCLINCOL-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NCLINCOL-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ________________________________________________________________________ More new features than ever. 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    02/13/2008 03:01:36