Beginning March 2nd, 2020 the Mailing Lists functionality on RootsWeb will be discontinued. Users will no longer be able to send outgoing emails or accept incoming emails. Additionally, administration tools will no longer be available to list administrators and mailing lists will be put into an archival state.
Administrators may save the emails in their list prior to March 2nd. After that, mailing list archives will remain available and searchable on RootsWeb
Can anyone help me place these individuals in the right families?
Name Birth Date Ethnicity Birth Place City/County State
Robert Philip Clinard 28 Aug 1879 W Ouray CO
Forrest D. Clinard 29 Feb 1896 W Rogers TX Milam[Late TX
James Elmo Clinard 18 Jul 1885 W Rio Blanco CO
Joseph Daniel Clinard 14 Oct 1876 W Rio Blanco CO
Anybody know who this Alexander Clinard was?
Surname Given Name
CLINARD ALEXANDER
Surname Spouse Given Name Spouse
REDDICK ARCENIA
Marriage Date County State
6 Apr 1860 Madison TN
From "History of Randolph County" 1882?
page 356
JOHN PEGG was born in NC May 17, 1800 and died on his farm in White River
Township, Randolph County, April 7, 1867. He was a son of REUBEN PEGG, and
was brought up on a farm, and accustomed to hard work all his life from his
youth. He was married 2/12/1829 to Miss Lydia Cloud, and in 1830 came to
Randolph County and settled on the west half of Section 28 in White River
Township. Mr. and Mrs. Pegg had eleven children, of whom nine are living,
viz: William, Martin, Rachel, Rebecca, Lydia, John, Jesse, Lucinda, and
Lurena. John and Martin were soldiers in the late wars and participated in
many of the most noted battles, among which were the following: Both the
Bull Run conflicts, Chancellorsville, the Wilderness, Fredericksburg,
Antietam, and Gettysburg. At the last named place, John was wounded and
taken prisoner, on the 1st day of July 1863, and on the 4th day of the same
month he was retaken by the Union forces.
WILLIAM PEGG, farmer, P.O. Unionsport, is a native of Wayne County, IN and
was born 4/1/1831. His parents were John and Lydia Pegg who came to this
county about the year 1832. The county was then wild, and they had to work
very hard in the thick timber to make a farm. They lived for several years
in a round-log cabin. Mr. Pegg attended a subscription school in an old
log cabin, and sat on a slab bench, and wrote upon a board supported by
pins in the wall. They often had spelling schools at night, and vied with
each other as to who should stand up last in the contest. Mr. Pegg was
married in February 1859 to Miss Hettie A. Green, daughter of Levi Green,
deceased. She was born in this county. They have six children--Taylor,
John H., Lydia B., Charley C., Rosanna, and Lizzie C. Mr. Pegg owns 153
acres of valuable land, and is a prominent farmer.
MARTIN PEGG, farmer, P.O. Unionsport was born in this township1/30/1837,
and is a son of John and Lydia Pegg, early settlers of this County. He was
raised on his father's woodland farm, and hence is familiar with grubbing,
picking, chopping, rolling logs, and other hard work attending the making
of farms in the woods. He attended school in a log house, and sat on a
slab seat. He was married 3/11/1866, to Miss Rebecca J. Woolf, daughter of
William Woolf, an early settler of Randolph County. They have four
children--Francis M., John W., Milo C., and Willard P. Mr. Pegg served
three years in the late war in Co A, 84th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and
participated in the battles of Mission Ridge, Stone River, Atlanta,
Huntsville, and others, twenty-two in all. He now own seventy-one acres of
valuable land, and is engaged in farming and stock raising.
page 382
VALENTINE PEGG, Wayne County, was born about 1743 in Maryland; he had two
sons in the Revolutionary Army; he moved to North Carolina during that war;
he came to Wayne County, IN in 1808, and died about 1826, an old man,
eighty-three years old.
JOHN PEGG, son of Valentine Pegg, was born in Maryland in 1770; moved to
North Carolina during the war of the Revolution; married Margaret (Davis)
in 1792, born in 1773; they had seven children. He died in 1847,
seventy-seven years old; his wife died in 1856, eighty-three years
old. Their children were Mary (Pearson), born 1793, six children, died
1879, eighty-five years old; Ruth (Pearson), born 1795, four children, died
in 1876, eighty-one years; Davis Pegg, 1798, seven children, living in
Wayne County; Sarah (Baxter), 1800, six children, living in Randolph
County; Valentine Pegg, 1803, nine children, living in Wayne County; Lydia
(Massey) 1805, two children, died in 1849; John Pegg, 1809, nine children,
living in Wayne County. John Pegg Sr., son of Valentine Pegg, as above
given, entered land in Randolph County 11/7/1816, and moved to the county
not far from that date.
VALENTINE PEGG, son of John Pegg above named, is now an old man of
seventy-nine years; has a family of nine children. He and they are noted
for their mechanical genius; they build their own houses, do their own
blacksmithing, etc. One invented a superior threshing machine. Mr P. is
eccentric in his thoughts and words, quaint but clever, old-fashioned but
genial and hospitable, greatly confident of his own opinion, and a stickler
for personal liberty.
>From the Genealogy Records: NC Wills 1665-1900; Index to NC 1665-1900; surnames C-D, p. 99:
Name Co. Date Recorded Cy Original
Clinard, Charles 034 1890 WB-4/17 AR
Clinard, Charles 038 c1862 WB-1/203 AR Copy
Clinard, John W. 032 1879 WB-3/278 AR
Clinard, Philip 085 c1802 WB-E/214 AR
Clinard, Sally 032 1874 WB-3/108 AR
Clinard, William 032 1877 WB-3/244 AR
>From Genealogy.com Membership library entries
Be well & God bless,
Kate Beaugrand Cook
Minnesota
kbcook(a)cfaith.com
or
k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net
Descendants of Sarah Elizabeth Clinard
Generation No. 1
1. Sarah Elizabeth1 Clinard was born Abt. 1807, and died Unknown. She
married Jesse S. Parker Abt. 1827 in IL. He was born March 31, 1807 in
Robertson Co, TN, and died May 5, 1885 in Cartwright Twsp., Sangamon, IL.
Children of Sarah Clinard and Jesse Parker are:
2 i. George2 Parker, born Aft. 1825.
3 ii. Lewis J. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
4 iii. Martha J. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
5 iv. Mary M. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
6 v. Matilda T. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
7 vi. Richard C. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
8 vii. Rose Catherine Parker, born Aft. 1825.
9 viii. Sarah A. Parker, born Aft. 1825; died Unknown.
10 ix. William A. Parker, born Aft. 1825.
11 x. Susan Jane Parker, born September 25, 1829 in TN; died 1910. She
married Thomas Armstrong Holmes January 17, 1850 in Greenbrier, TN.
12 xi. Charles Allen Parker, born 1847; died 1932.
13 xii. Virginia E. Parker, born 1851; died 1932.
William Clinard, a German, one of many who served in the British 10th
Regiment of Foot, (North Lincolnshire) during the American Revolution. He
was stationed in Ireland, leaving for America in spring of 1767 landing in
Nova Scotia. After short stay ordered to Boston in 1768 "where, in 1768,
the conduct of the populace assumed so violent a character as to render the
presence of a military force necessary," In April 1775 the 10th advanced on
Concord and Lexington and suffered some casualties. In June 1775 the 10th
fought at Bunker Hill. On November 1776, the 10th fought in the siege of
Ft. Washington and Ft. Lee with minor losses. September 1777 at Chad's
Ford, passing on to Concord, Ashtown. On September 25, 1777 camped in
Germantown. On September 29, 1777 the 10th was ordered to attack a strong
American redoubt at Billings Point on the Jersey shore of the Delaware River
across from Chester.
William Clinard was transferred to the Hessians on May 12, 1777.
(Philadelphia Muster Rolls Book J 28, March 1778; Public Records Office,
London, in W.O. 12, volume 2750; National Genealogical Society Quarterly #71
June 1983).
Name Spouse Marriage Date County State
SPURGEON, JOSEPH R. CLINARD, MARY ANN 21 Oct 1852 Pettis MO
PAYNE, J. P. CLINARD, ROSANNAH 25 Jun 1868 Pettis MO
SHIELDS, WILLIAM CLINARD, MARY A. [Mrs] 17 Nov 1874 Pettis MO
SHIELDS, WILLIAM CLINARD, MARY H. [Mrs] 22 Feb 1875 Pettis MO
HAINLINE, DANIEL W. CLINARD, BARSHEBA A. 16 Jan 1877 Pettis MO
CLINARD, DAVID WARD, B. A. 9 Sep 1857 Lafayette MO
CLINARD, J. C. DAVIDSON, MARY E. 28 Aug 1892 Stoddard MO
CLINARD, CHARLES L. EVINS, SARAH M. 9 Dec 1873 Saline MO
CLINARD, SAMUEL F. STANLY, MAGGIE [Mrs] 27 Jan 1879 Saline MO
Wished we had more information (that's surely still hidden in PA documents
still uncovered by us Clinard researchers). In my early research, I had
estimated that Philip migrated to NC about 1772 (because that's about when
the Hinkle family migrated) from Weisenburg - Macunge area near
Philadelphia, PA. (Same area where John Kleinerd's will names as his
residence too). But I don't find a Jacob mentioned in NC until around 1778.
Philip possibly did not migrate to NC until 1776. His daughter married
Philip Mock on 3/10/1776 in Rowan and I believe that's my earliest
documented evidence of his presence there. If the Jacob that married
Catherine Sauters is the same Jacob documented in 1778 with Philip on the
Rowan Tax list, he must have remained in the PA area or perhaps delayed his
migration to NC for a couple of years, perhaps even stopping at points in
between (Maryland?, Virginia?). If they're the same, he would have been
born prior to 1737 to be of legal marrying age in 1757. This leads me to
think this Jacob was probably a brother to Philip, and perhaps a son of John
Kleinerd whose will was dated 1751/52. But if that's true, why didn't John
name Jacob in his will along with Philip and Anna, his two named children?
I get very frustrated when I start thinking through this stuff and the
reasonable assumptions that one can make.
Has anyone ran across the Sauters name anywhere else associated with the
Clinards or in areas that Clinards have known to have settled?
> > Dec. 27, 1757
> >
> > Jacob Kleinert married Catharina Sauters at St. Michaels and Zion Church
> in
> > Philadelphia, PA .
> > Reference "Record of Pennsylvania Marriages prior to 1810" Vol 2 p 305
>
>
Sale of Property
106 Acres
belonging to
Jacob Clinard, Junior
Davidson County, North Carolina
Auctioned on 2nd Monday March 1828
Claimed by Heirs of John Lindsay
Recorded August 10, 1835
transcribed by David V. Clinard
State of North Carolina Davidson County. To all to whom these presents
shall comes. I William Kennedy Sheriff of said county send greeting.
Whereas by a writ of Execution issued out of the Court of said County to me
directed and delivered bearing date the 2nd Monday in March 1828. I was
Commanded to make of the goods and chattles, and want of such the lands and
tenements of Jacob Clinard Junior of said County, the sum of twenty four
Dollars 69 Cts with which John Lindsay had recovered against the said
Clinard as by the said writ of Executions referenced being thereunto had
morefully appeared and whereas after coming of the said writ unto me and
before the day of the return thereof, I did by virtue of the said writ seize
and take the lands herein after particularly described, and have for wants
of goods and chattles of my County of the said Jacob Clinard to satisfy the
abovespecified writ sold the lands as in herein after mentioned at public
auction according to the Statutes in such case provided to John Lindsay for
fifty one dollars that being the highest sum bid for the same. Now know ye
that I William Kennedy Sheriff aforesaid by virtue of the writ of Execution
of (?) and of the statutes in such case made and Provided in consideration
of the said sum of fifty one dollars to me in hand paid. The receipt and
hereof is hereby acknowledged have granted bargained and sold and by these
Presents do grants bargain and sale unto Ester Hargrave, Mary Campbell,
Sarah Wrights, John M. Lindsay, Hugh Lindsay, Thomas J. Lindsay, Eliza
Overman, Andrew Lindsay, James Lindsay, Alexander H. Lindsay legatees and
heirs at law of the said John Lindsay, late of said County deceased and to
their heirs of Assigns forever the following described tract of land lying
in sais County on the waters of Abbotts Creek Beginning at a Point Oak,
thence East with Farabee and Worthington's line twenty five chains and
twenty links to a Post Oak thence south fourteen Chains to a Stake thence
East four Chains and fifty links to a Post Oak thence South with Diller's
line twenty Chains to a Stake thence with the same west Seven Chains and
eighteen links to a Post Oak thence with the same South four Chains and
fifty links to a line thence with the same West twenty two Chains and twenty
five links to a Stake and from thence North thirty eight Chains and twenty
links to the beginning Containing one hundred and six acres with its
appointenances and all the Estate, rights title and interest which the said
Jacob Clinard had in the said tract or Parcel of land. To have and to hold
the said land and premises and every parts thereof with the appreertenances
unto the above named heirs and legetees their heirs and Assigns forever as
fully and absolutely as I the said William Kennedy as Sheriff aforesaid and
under the authority aforesaid mights Could or ought to sale and Convey the
same In witness whereof I the said Wm. Kennedy have hereunto set my hand and
seal this 10th day of August 1835 Signed in the presence of
Zebulon Hunt
W.B. Wilson W Kennedy Sheriff (seal)
North Carolina
Davidson County} August Session 1835
The within deed was duly acknowledged in open Court, Recorded and
ordered to be Registered.
Sam Gaither CCC
by Chas. Mock DC
Registered October the 5th 1835 Jn. Thames, C.R.
This was difficult to transcribe so some words may not be correctly
deciphered. I typed it as it appeared to me.
David Clinard
Gray, GA
The Will of John Kleinerd
It is to be remembered that I John Kleinerd of Maconce in the County of
Bucks and in the province of Pennsylvannia yeoman being much indesposed unto
bodily health yet thro the mercy of the Lord of sound perfect mind and
memory taking into consideration the uncertainty of this life have therefore
thought proper to dispose of my worldly estate by this my Last Will &
Testament in such manner and form as is hereinafter expressed. To say first
of all, I will all and singular my just debts and charges according for my
interment br well and duly and fully paid and in as much as I have already
according to my station done pretty well for my son, viz is Philip Kleinerd,
I give to him as to my son all my estaed of all that I have under my
possession in this world to have and to hold I say it is my Will and
Testament that he my son he and his heirs and assigns shall have all my
worldly estead for ever after my decease Excepting notwithstanding my and my
wife’s priveledge of our residence within my said dwelling house for and
during our natural life. I likewise disposed of and give to my daughter
Anna, fifteen pounds currand and lawfull money of Pennsylvannia and the
money to pay after my and my wifes decease and I give to my daughter one
marrthe with marr by coller and to give her the marr after decease for she
and her heirs and assigns forever and likewise is my Will and Testament that
my son Philip Kleinerd shall give to me and my wife Jarly and every year so
long as we are in this our natural life to give us first, thirty bushell of
frond, twenty bushell of wheat and ten bushell of rye and to livesser us the
srud in the beck and in the mill and home again on our dwelling house and to
give us yearly one fed sheep and seventy pounds of beef, the shain mus weed
one hundred pounds and to give us a milk cow free in his foder and I and my
wife will have liberty to teck every year a fris malck kouer and of the teck
in the spring and to give us seventy pounds of butter yearly and to give us
six pounds of wool and to give us fourteen pounds of field flax and we will
have our free will in the green to teck six apple trees where we bless and
to give to us every year five pounds of currand lawfull money of
Pennsylvannia and this herein mentioned good that kombs to our natural life
if I other my wife in all say then shall the half of flax and the half of
the ---and half of the money shall fall back again to my son Philip Kleinerd
or to his heirs and assigns for ever and that one after our decease and all
the good that kombs over is in any of us in the possession after any of our
decease shall fall back again to my son or to his heirs and assigns forever.
I do hereby give grant will and transfer unto my said son and his heir power
and asuthority to grant and cobvey the above mentioned estaet and good
premises after my decease according to the --- and direction hereof to any
person or persons who shall purchase the same and to heirs forever in fee
simple by all & every such lawfull ways and means in the law as to my son’s
council learned in the laws shall seem fit and necessary also revoke and by
force and virtue hereof adnull and declare void all former and other wills
whatsoever by me at any time heretofore made and I declare this only to be
my Last Will and Testament. I witness whereof I have hereunto affixed my
hand and seal this second day of December and in the year of our Lord one
thousand seven hundred and fifty one.
John Kleinerd {seal} Signed sealed published and declared to be the Last
Will Testament of the above named John Kleinerd in our presence who at his
request in his presence as witnesses hereunto have subscribed our names
Geede Grim, Johannes Carchinburgh, Nicholas Jermany. Philada 10th April
1752 Then personally appeared Geede Grim and Johannes Carchinburgh two of
the witnesses to the foregoing Will abd oath did declare they saw and heard
John Kleinerd the testor therein named sign seal publish & declare is same
will for as fis Last Will & Testament & that at the doing thereof he was of
sound mind memory & understanding to the best of their knowledge.
Gordon Wm.
Ministed ----
Both of these findings are very interesting. Has anyone on the list
researched either of them? Thanks for posting this.
David
----- Original Message -----
From: K . B. Cook <k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net>
To: <CLINARD-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Monday, March 19, 2001 9:02 AM
Subject: [CLINARD] 2 Klinerts...
> Found 2 websites of interest:
>
> PA Volunteers of the Civil War:
> http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/3916/cwpa/cwpa129b.html
>
> and
>
> Maryland State Archives
>
> http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/stagser/s1400/s1432/html/s1432h.html
>
> Both have a Kleinert/Klinehart listed....
>
> Kate Beaugrand Cook
> MN
>
> kbcook(a)cfaith.com
> or
> k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net
>
>
> ==== CLINARD Mailing List ====
> If you experience any problems posting or receiving messages please
contact the list administrator Rick Russell. E-mail address:
rickrussell(a)worldnet.att.net
>
> ==============================
> Visit Ancestry.com for a FREE 14-Day Trial and enjoy access to the #1
> Source for Family History Online. Go to:
> http://www.ancestry.com/subscribe/subscribetrial1y.asp?sourcecode=F11HB
>
December 2, 1751/2
John Kleinerd Maconce, Co. of Bucks, Penna. Yeoman. April 10, 1752.
J.535. Wife: Jarly. Children: Philip and Anna. Exec: Philip Kleinard.
Witnesses: Geede Grim, Johannes Carchinburgh, Nicholas Jermany.
(Pennsylvania Wills, 1682-1834)
December 1, 1755
Philip Kleinert was living in Weisenburg, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, above
Macungie. From Advertisements in German Newspapers published in Philadelphia
and Germantown, 1743 - 1800. Ref: German Settlers of Pennsylvania by Edward
Hocker R974.8293 Hoc.
June 12, 1757
Anna Maria Klinert, daughter of Philip Kleinert (1802 will) and Catherine,
is baptized in Weissenberg, Lehigh County. Ref: Ziegel Church records.
March 12, 1759
Philip Kleinert, (Jr.), the son of Philip Kleinert and Catharine is baptized
at Ziegel Church in Weissenberg Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. Ref:
Records of Ziegel Church, Pennsylvania Births, Lehigh County, 1734 - 1800 by
John Humphrey.
April 6, 1761
Daniel Kleinert, son of Philip Kleinert and Catherine, is baptized in
Weissenberg. Ref: Ziegel Church records.
1765
Catherine Klinert, daughter of Philip Klinert, is born in Maxetanien,
Pennsylvania. Ref: DAR records.
March 15, 1769
Johann Lorentz (Lawrence) Kleinert, son of Philip and Catherine Kleinert is
born in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. Ref: Rev. Daniel Schumacher's
Baptismal Register 1756 - 1773.
1772
Philiph Kleinerd of Northampton County, in the Township of Weisenburg,
Pennsylvania, appears on the tax list; occupation: farmer. Ref:
Pennsylvania Archives, 3rd Series Volume 19, page 56.
August 1, 1777
Philip Clinart buys 432 acres of land from Thomas and Margaret Buis. Ref:
Rowan County Deed Records, Book 8, page 410. Proved August 9, 1777, Minutes
of the Court of Pleas & Quarter Session, 4:124, 1775 - 1789.
1778
Jacob Clinard and Phillip Clinehart are recorded on the Rowan County Tax
List.
August 5, 1778
Jacob Clinehart and Phillip Clinehart signed the Oath of Allegiance to the
State. Names of many men who later appear in Georgia are included. Ref:
"They Were Here,@ Georgia Genealogical Records, Numbers 1 & 2, 1971, page
2053. Also Rowan County Minutes of Court of Pleas and Sessions, 4:159.
September 15, 1778
Jacob Clinard enters 300 acres in Rowan County on Rich Fork of Abbotts
Creek, includes improvement where Dewalt Mock lives. Ref: Rowan Land Entrys
#1512, 1778.
February 4, 1779
Jacob Clinard is listed as an overseer of the road. Ref: 4:193, Rowan
County Minutes of the Court of Pleas & Quarter Session, 1775 - 1789.
February 8, 1780
Jacob Clinard buys 200 acres of land on the waters of Brushy Fork of Abbotts
Creek at Salisbury in behalf of Anthony Hinkle and Peter Hinkle, orphans of
Peter Hinkle, deceased. Ref: #2440 Rowan County Entry Book (unindexed),
Register of Deeds Office.
August 19, 1780
In Rowan County, "General Gates and Officers ate breakfast with Mr.
Kleinert, but were in haste." (This is more than likely Philip Kleinert
who, as the elder, would have been about 60 years old, being born in 1720)
Ref: Records of the Moravians in North Carolina, Volume 4, page 1560.
General Gates was an American officer during the American Revolution.
November 19, 1780
"Mr. Kleinert arrived with packages, letters, from Pennsylvania." (Probably
one of Philip's sons: Jacob [b. 1750], Philip, Jr. [b. 1759], or Daniel [b.
1761] Ref: Moravian Records NC, Volume 4, page 1704.
September 13, 1782
"Through Mr. Kleinert we received letters, diaries, and Nachrichten (news or
information) from Pennsylvania." Ref: Moravians in NC, Volume 4, page 1797.
August 9, 1783
State grant #1573 @ 50 shillings, the 100 acres to Phillip Mock, 150/140
acres on both sides of Abbotts Creek adjacent to Phillip Kleinert . . .
and his own land. Ref: Rowan County Deeds, 11:387.
September 18, 1783
Peter Clynard, son of Philip Kleinert, marries Sophia Sosamon in Rowan
County; Peter Faust, bondsman. Ref: NC Marriage Bonds 1753 - 1868, page 80.
November 5, 1783
Administration of estate of Charles Hinkle granted to Elizabeth Hinkle and
Casper Hinkle, and with Anthony Hinkle and Jacob Clinehart securities. Ref:
Minutes of the Court of Pleas & Quarter Sessions, 4:383. Rowan County,
1775 - 1789.
November 5, 1783
Jacob Clinehart vs. Absalom Baker. Ref: Minutes of Court of Pleas &
Sessions, 4:383. Rowan County, 1775 - 1789.
May 15, 1784
Land deeded from Philip and Catherine Clinehart to Peter Clinehart, their
son: 216 acres; proved by Dewalt Mock. Ref: Minutes of Court of Pleas &
Sessions, 4:516. Rowan County, 1775 - 1789.
February 1787
Jacob Clinart enters 100 acres in Rowan County on waters of Abbotts Creek,
borders . . . Anthony Hinkle. Ref: Land Entrys, #3106, December 1778 -
February 1795.
March 1, 1787
Jacob Clinert buys 200 acres from Jacob Heisley. Ref: Rowan County Deeds,
Book 11, page 71.
August 11, 1787
Deeds proved: Jacob Husley (Heisley) to Jacob Clinehart, 200 acres. Proved
by Anthony Hinkle. Ref: Minutes of Court of Pleas & Sessions, 5:92, Rowan
County, 1775 - 1789.
February 9, 1788
Jacob Clinhart, with George Hoover bail. Ref: Rowan County NC
November 8, 1788
Daniel Clinard, son of Philip Kleinert, marries Mary Hinkle; bondsman George
Hoover. Ref: Rowan County Marriages 1753 - 1868, page 79.
November 19, 1788
"Mr. Armstrong presented the petition of Jacob Clinard, which was read and
ordered to be sent to the House of Commons." Ref: Colonial and State
Records of North Carolina, Book 20, page 523, Minutes of the State Senate.
May 10, 1793
Jacob Clinert sells 200 acres to M. Sauer. Ref: Rowan County Deeds, Book
13, page 200.
February 19, 1798
Dewalt Mock files his will. Sons: Daniel and John, David Mock's honored
mother Phebe (Kleinert) Mock, daughters: Mary Coppas, Catharina Houk. Jacob
Clinard, is the executor. Probated 1798. Ref: Rowan County Wills 1753 -
1806, page 78.
March 23, 1802
The will of Philip Clinard is recorded in Rowan County. Names sons Daniel,
Lawrence, Jacob, Peter, Henry; daughters Phoebe Mock, Catherine Miller;
grandson Jacob Mock (Phillip Mock's son), John Mock (Phoebe's son), Daniel
Mock (Phoebe's son); granddaughter Mary Stanley; Dewalt Mock (Phoebe's
husband). Son Jacob is named as one of the executors. Wit: Ezekiel Brown.
(The entire will is included at the beginning of this book) Ref: Rowan
County Wills, Book E, page 214.
April 19, 1809
Jacob Clinard is a witness to Felix Clodfelter's will. Ref: Rowan County
Wills, Book G, page 306.
September 2, 1815
Benjamin Smith sells Jacob Clinard, Jr. 150 acres on Abbotts Creek. Ref:
Rowan County Deeds, Book 25, page 826.
November 2, 1821
Jacob Clinard, Jr. sells 50 acres of land to William Roberts. Witness,
Ezekiel Brown, Anderton Brown. Ref: Rowan County Deeds.
May 19, 1825
Jacob Clinard, Jr. buys a tract of land from Henry Tice for 200 dollars.
Witness, Ezekiel Brown and Lydia Brown. Ref: Davidson County, North
Carolina Deeds. (Note: Davidson County was formed out of Rowan County on
December 9, 1822)
August 20, 1827
Jacob Clinard, Jr. sold the 70-acre tract of land he bought on May 19, 1825
for 200 dollars to Joseph Murphey. Ref: Davidson County Deeds.
Hi,
I found a William A. Clinard listed as a pupil at the N. C. Institute for the Education of the Deaf, Dumb & Blind (1845-1854) (from NC Arch., NC Gen. Assemb. Sessions Rec'ds 11/1854-2/1855, Box 1)
Detail: Clinard, William A. ... Davidson ... 6 (Session) ... age 9
Does anyone know which Clinard family he belongs in?
Thanks,
Be well & God bless,
Kate Beaugrand Cook
Minnesota
kbcook(a)cfaith.com
or
k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net
Hi,
If anyone is interested, I have printed off the Cane Creek Monthly Meeting records and am willing to look up from them. (principal Clinard connections: Chamness and collaterals)
R(ules) O(f) E(ngagement) for LOOKUP Requests:
(1) 1-2 names (1st & last), dates and pertinent information if you have it.
(2) Email off the list -- to private email address either shown below
(3) Give me a couple days to respond.
Best regards,
Kate Beaugrand Cook
Minnesota
kbcook(a)cfaith.com
or
k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net
Been out surfing this morning ... found---
The Nat. Gen. Soc. Quarterly, Vol.. 66: South Carolina Jewish Marriage Settlements, 1785-1739, p. 110:
Phillips, Aaron of Georgetown, and Caroline Lazarus, dau. of Marks and Rachel, 24 Feb. 1807; witnesses: Lyon Levy, Jacob Cohen; groom's bond L1000 to Isaac C. Moses; m. 25 Feb. 1807.
Any chance "our Aaron Phillips" had his ancestry in South Carolina?
Never hurts to look where you never did before .... :O)
Kate Beaugrand Cook
Minnesota
kbcook(a)cfaith.com
or
k.b.cook(a)worldnet.att.net
Hi again,
We have been speculating on who the Jack Curtis mentioned in Delta
Clinard's interview may have been. She mentioned him a couple of times
Delta: ...Alfred (Clinard). He's up in Wisconsin. He came, not him but his
son came to
one of the reunions a long time ago. Jack Curtis and I went up there one
time.
Delta: Jack Curtis used to take trips down there. He'd take a load of
apples and bring back a load of oranges and something like that, ya know. And
he stopped at one of the Clinard places in Georgia.
I think I may have found the connection. The following shows that a W.A.
Curtis and Theodore E. Clinard, son of Philip S. Clinard may have been
related by marriage, possibly brothers-in-law. Theodore Everett Clinard
married Mary Etta SWINFORD Black and a W.A. CURTIS married Georgia
SWINFORD. I have not yet determined if Mary Etta Swinford and Georgia
Swinford were sisters. But this gives us a direct connection to the Curtis
family. The question now is how was Jack Curtis related to W.A. Curtis?
FARMERS AND BREEDERS, COLES COUNTY
From Coles County 1918 Farmers Directory
Heads of Households
Clinard, T.E., (Mary E. Black)
Children: Charles Black, Dalton, Everett, Raymond, Delphia;
Post Office: Ashmore R1
Farm: Ashmore Sec 15 Tenant 160 acres
Land Owner: Farmers' Mutual (1867)
Tel. Rardin
PRAIRIE FARMER'S RELIABLE DIRECTORY
From Coles County 1918 Farmers Directory
Heads of Households
Curtis, W.A., (Georgia Swinford)
Children: Opal, Everett, Harold, Waldo, Ruth, Pauline, Alonzo, Gerald
Post Office: Oakland R4
Farm: East Oakland Sec 3 Tenant 20 acres
Land Owner: Asenith Hatfield (1881)
Rick
Hi Everyone,
Some information and questions on the PEGG land supposed to have been
in the city of Philadelphia. Posted below is part of the Delta CLINARD
interview Karen Clinard posted earlier, then something I saw on a PEGG website.
What do you think?? How would Nellie, Elias and Rachel PEGG, children of
the Daniel PEGG mentioned in the land lease be related to Rebecca (PEGG)
PHILLIPS who married Davis Clinard, Sr? Rebecca's mother was Mary PEGG,
daughter of Rachel Chamness and Reuben PEGG. Is that correct or do I have
that wrong? How was Daniel PEGG related?
Did the lease come up for renewal after the 99 years and the back taxes
were due, leaving the PEGG descendants to pay them? Or was this later
because that would have been 1893, before Delta Clinard was born in
1896. When did these discussions about regaining the property take place?
How can we locate this property now?
Rick
From the website:
"The following is a newspaper account of the lease of Daniel Pegg, to the
City of Philadelphia for a tract of land. Copied by permission from W.
Miller. When the family went in search of this lease in the record book it
could not be found, nor was their any evidence that one ever existed."
Pages 203-4, June 10th, 1793.
"From Daniel Pegg to the city of Philadelphia, Pa.; five hundred and
fifty (550) acres of land to have and to hold in contract on lease by me
for ninety-nine (99) years. It laying direct in line commencing at my brick
house which is on the Delaware river, north three hundred (300) chains,
there being five hundred and fifty (550) acres in all, and also three
hundred (300) acres in the Northern Liberties in the city limits of
Harrisburg, Pa. I, James Wilson, Justice of the Supreme Court of
Philadelphia, Pa., here witness and set my seal this 10th day of June, 1793.
Witnessed and sworn to by James Polk, Clerk of the Court and
officers Smith, Meredith, and James I. Scott. This for the benefit of my
children, my daughter Nellie Pegg, my son Elias Pegg and my daughter Rachel
Pegg, they do receive the rentals of the said land every twenty years, or
their offspring as they agree.
I, James Wilson, make this agreement with Daniel Pegg in
Harrisburg, Pa., June 10th, 1793, supporting and constituting this
agreement with Daniel Pegg. James Wilson, C. of C."
Recorded in book of C. of C. Folio 503.
From the interview about 1988:
Delta: Has any one of us thought of writing to the Philadelphia
courthouse? The Peggs estate was in Philadelphia.
Beth: ........I have found, in digging back to that particular piece, there
was a
Daniel Pegg, way back, 16 something, who had land in Philadelphia. He
was a Quaker, and a businessman. I think he was a Bricklayer.
Delta: Well I can remember when the papers came from Philadelphia, for
all the, Uncle Zimri, Uncle Elisha and Uncle Jacob, and my father (Davis
Jr.) and all,
and Aunt Ellen, that that property, the Pegg estate, was for sale. So
pay your taxes! And they had a plan to rebuy it, and they wanted to, but
everybody here was already situated, you know? Their families, and
feared they didn't have the money anyway, and so turned it down and they
didn't regain their property. And then I heard that the Court of
Philadelphia, a courthouse was built. And if that were true, there might
be some records with that, that would have to state it there. Because
that's what it was.
Delta: I can remember very well, because they had many get-togethers and
they were discussing it.