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. 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