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Around 1838 or 39. In the 1850 census in Cherokee County, GA he is
listed as 11 years old.
He married in 1858.
Claudie
On Wed, 31 Jul 2002 21:51:01 -0400 "C. Sharp" <CSharp(a)modempool.com>
writes:
> Claudie:
> Do you have a date of birth on your George?We have one in our
> line
> that,if he fits,I can tell you where3 he is buried.A long shot,but
> who
> knows?
>
> Charles A.Sharp
> csharp(a)modempool.com
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Claudie M Thompson" <msclaudie(a)juno.com>
> To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 10:56 AM
> Subject: Re: [CLINE] RE:origins of George CLINE of Monroe Co. OH
>
>
> > I spent all day yesterday in Whitney, TX trying to find the grave
> of my
> > great grandfather George Washington Cline.
> > My sister and I went through records and cemeteries until we were
> > exhausted . The heartbreaking site of the graveyard at Steiner
> Vally
> > Ranch where he had worked in the mid to late 1800's. It was so
> grown
> > over that we could not even go inside, because of the
> possibilities of
> > snakes etc. There is a great possibility that his grave is there,
> but no
> > way to find out.
> > We also learned that when Lake Whitney was built, the cemetery was
> moved
> > to several locations in Whitney, but more of the graves were
> listed as
> > UNKNOWN than there were that had names. This broke my heart.
> > Have any of you come up against semi liar circumstance? Why else
> can we
> > do? We could not find any death records at Hill County courthouse
> before
> > 1900. Is there no way to find out when he died? He had a
> confederate
> > tombstone, is there no records anywhere of those who were issued
> > Confederate tombstones?
> > I'm so disappointed, it is as if he never existed in TX.
> > If anyone has any suggestions, please help.
> > Thank You,
> > Claudie Cline Thompson
> > On Tue, 30 Jul 2002 20:33:14 -0400 "BETTY"
> <BBROCKHOFF(a)cinci.rr.com>
> > writes:
> > > Is Mary Kathryn Weis Petrosky a member of this group? I have a
> copy
> > > of a DAR
> > > app. signed by her (no date) as a descendant of George Cline,
> which
> > > gives
> > > the following account of George and his two brothers. Maybe Mary
> > > Kathryn has
> > > further documentation.
> > >
> > > "George Cline (Klein***), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Sergeant
> in
> > > Captain
> > > William Craig's 3rd Pennsylvania Regiment. Enlisted November
> 4,
> > > 1776, for
> > > the duration of the War.
> > > "***Three Klein brothers came over frm Germany. "Klein"
> signifying
> > > little or
> > > small. Wishing to Americanize their names, one brother took the
> > > name
> > > "Small," one brother took the name "Little," and the th'rid'
> > > brother
> > > (George) retained the name "Klein." George settled at Ft. Henry,
> and
> > > while
> > > there, his name was placed on the deeds and public records as
> Cline
> > > (Irish
> > > form used at Ft. Henry), which he retained from then on."
> > > (She then referenced the vol. etc. of the PA archives where
> George's
> > > service
> > > is recorded.)
> > >
> > > Anyone else know anything about where this information may have
> come
> > > from?
> > >
> > > Just another George/Susannah "ggggggranddaughter,"
> > > Betty in Cincinnati
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Dick and Betsy French" <BARKFrench(a)worldnet.att.net>
> > > To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
> > > Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 8:18 PM
> > > Subject: [CLINE] RE: Dutch origins of George CLINE of Monroe
> Co.
> > > OH?
> > >
> > >
> > > > Hi Mike,
> > > >
> > > > Thanks for your response to my message on CLINE-L. I always
> > > > thought my grandmother Zelma Cline McNiece Perry was Penn-
> > > > sylvania Dutch, too, but can't remember if my mother told me
> > > > that or if I assumed it because of her maiden name and style
> > > > of cooking. Grandma may have thought so herself, if she
> thought
> > > > about it at all; she was more attuned to her mother's English
> > > > KNOWLTON ancestry.
> > > >
> > > > I think the idea that George CLINE was from Northern Germany
> > > > came originally from Lloyd D.T. CLINE's 1960 article, in
> which
> > > > he says "It is believed that George Cline, Sr. emigrated from
> > > > Northern Germany about 1770....."
> > > >
> > > > LDT Cline doesn't say who believed this or why. I think it's
> his
> > > > own theory, based on the fact that many Germans did immigrate
> in
> > > > the 1700's before the Revolutionary War and that the name
> could
> > > > have been the German KLEIN. This idea of German origins is
> > > repeat-
> > > > ed in nearly every CLINE genealogy I've seen and seems to
> have
> > > > become "fact".
> > > >
> > > > But George CLINE didn't act like a recent German immigrant -
> he
> > > > didn't live in German-speaking enclaves; he fought the
> English
> > > > and Indians alongside the Scots-Irish who predominated on the
> > > > frontier; none of his children married Germans; and his name
> on
> > > > Rev. War documents, according to LDT Cline, was spelled KLAIN
> -
> > > > the phonetic spelling of the Dutch KLEYN, not KLEIN, as a
> German
> > > > would pronounce and spell it. On the frontier, it became
> KLINE,
> > > > CLYNE, CLINE, etc., but the earliest version is more likely
> to
> > > > reflect how he pronounced it himself.
> > > >
> > > > My idea that George Cline might have been Dutch gained
> credence
> > > > when I read that Ulster and Dutchess Counties were 80% Dutch
> in
> > > > the 1700's. But I haven't researched it much, except to find
> > > > several KLEYNs who were married in Kingston, Ulster Co. NY as
> > > > far back as 1726. Interestingly, the KLEYN (KLEIN?) wife and
> her
> > > > BRANDOUW (BRANDAUER?) husband were both born in Germany! The
> > > > Dutch "Hollandized" names in the same way we Anglicize them.
> > > >
> > > > BUCKs seemed to live across the Hudson River in Dutchess Co.,
> > > > also heavily Dutch; I found none in Kingston marriages, nor
> have
> > > > I found any marriage information from other parts of Ulster
> Co..
> > > > Kingston was and is the county seat and many of the couples
> were
> > > > from other parts of the county. Possibly all the marriages in
> the
> > > > county were supposed to be reported there and there are no
> more
> > > > to be found. The Kingston marriages list covers over 2500
> mar-
> > > > riages between 1660 and 1809.
> > > >
> > > > I haven't found any documentation of George CLINE and
> Susannah
> > > > BUCK's marriage date of June 8, 1770, the location in Ulster
> Co.
> > > > NY, or her father's name being Joseph. I don't know where any
> of
> > > > that came from. Possibly one of the online LDS databases, so
> many
> > > > of which I've found to be just guesswork and speculation that
> I
> > > > no longer trust any but the straight vital records. Another
> LDS
> > > > source says they were married in New York, New York. Another
> says
> > > > Susannah was born in 1750 in Ulster Co. NY. All this is
> dubious
> > > > since there's no documentation to go with it.
> > > >
> > > > There's so much misinformation out there that one would have
> to
> > > > go back to vital records, if they exist, to sort fact from
> > > fiction.
> > > > George CLINE may have been German; he may have been Dutch; he
> may
> > > > even have been a Scots-Irish CLYNE; or he may have been from
> a
> > > > Dutch family who lived in Germany. But he sure didn't act like
> a
> > > > man who was fresh off the boat in 1770.
> > > >
> > > > I believe I'll copy this to CLINE-L in hopes that someone can
> > > > direct me to the documentation of George and Susannah's
> marriage.
> > > >
> > > > Betsy
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > -----Original Message-----
> > > > From: mike [mailto:micell@ameritech.net]
> > > > Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 5:21 AM
> > > > To: Dick and Betsy French
> > > > Subject: Re: [CLINE] ROLL CALL
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > I find your theory very interesting because I keep seeing the
> > > Cline line
> > > as
> > > > being from Northern Germany. My dad always said he was
> > > Pennsylvania Dutch.
> > > > His grandmother ,Eunice Cline, was a descendant of George
> Cline.
> > > > Thank you
> > > > Mike Givens
> > > >
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
I spent all day yesterday in Whitney, TX trying to find the grave of my
great grandfather George Washing Cline.
My sister and I went through records and cemeteries until we was
exhausted . The heartbreaking site of the graveyard at Steiner Vally
Ranch where he had worked in the mid to late 1800's. It was so grown
over that we could not even go inside, because of the possibilities of
snakes etc. There is a great possibility that his grave is there, but no
way to find out.
We also learned that when Lake Whitney was built, the cemetery was moved
to several locations in Whitney, but more of the graves were listed as
UNKNOWN than there were that had names. This broke my heart.
Have any of you come up against semi liar circumstance? Why else can we
do? We could not find any death records at Hill County courthouse before
1900. Is there no way to find out when he died? He had a confederate
tombstone, is there no records anywhere of those who were issued
Confederate tombstones?
I'm so disappointed, it is as if he never existed in TX.
If anyone has any suggestions, please help.
Thank You,
Claudie Cline Thompson
On Tue, 30 Jul 2002 20:33:14 -0400 "BETTY" <BBROCKHOFF(a)cinci.rr.com>
writes:
> Is Mary Kathryn Weis Petrosky a member of this group? I have a copy
> of a DAR
> app. signed by her (no date) as a descendant of George Cline, which
> gives
> the following account of George and his two brothers. Maybe Mary
> Kathryn has
> further documentation.
>
> "George Cline (Klein***), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Sergeant in
> Captain
> William Craig's 3rd Pennsylvania Regiment. Enlisted November 4,
> 1776, for
> the duration of the War.
> "***Three Klein brothers came over frm Germany. "Klein" signifying
> little or
> small. Wishing to Americanize their names, one brother took the
> name
> "Small," one brother took the name "Little," and the th'rid'
> brother
> (George) retained the name "Klein." George settled at Ft. Henry, and
> while
> there, his name was placed on the deeds and public records as Cline
> (Irish
> form used at Ft. Henry), which he retained from then on."
> (She then referenced the vol. etc. of the PA archives where George's
> service
> is recorded.)
>
> Anyone else know anything about where this information may have come
> from?
>
> Just another George/Susannah "ggggggranddaughter,"
> Betty in Cincinnati
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Dick and Betsy French" <BARKFrench(a)worldnet.att.net>
> To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 8:18 PM
> Subject: [CLINE] RE: Dutch origins of George CLINE of Monroe Co.
> OH?
>
>
> > Hi Mike,
> >
> > Thanks for your response to my message on CLINE-L. I always
> > thought my grandmother Zelma Cline McNiece Perry was Penn-
> > sylvania Dutch, too, but can't remember if my mother told me
> > that or if I assumed it because of her maiden name and style
> > of cooking. Grandma may have thought so herself, if she thought
> > about it at all; she was more attuned to her mother's English
> > KNOWLTON ancestry.
> >
> > I think the idea that George CLINE was from Northern Germany
> > came originally from Lloyd D.T. CLINE's 1960 article, in which
> > he says "It is believed that George Cline, Sr. emigrated from
> > Northern Germany about 1770....."
> >
> > LDT Cline doesn't say who believed this or why. I think it's his
> > own theory, based on the fact that many Germans did immigrate in
> > the 1700's before the Revolutionary War and that the name could
> > have been the German KLEIN. This idea of German origins is
> repeat-
> > ed in nearly every CLINE genealogy I've seen and seems to have
> > become "fact".
> >
> > But George CLINE didn't act like a recent German immigrant - he
> > didn't live in German-speaking enclaves; he fought the English
> > and Indians alongside the Scots-Irish who predominated on the
> > frontier; none of his children married Germans; and his name on
> > Rev. War documents, according to LDT Cline, was spelled KLAIN -
> > the phonetic spelling of the Dutch KLEYN, not KLEIN, as a German
> > would pronounce and spell it. On the frontier, it became KLINE,
> > CLYNE, CLINE, etc., but the earliest version is more likely to
> > reflect how he pronounced it himself.
> >
> > My idea that George Cline might have been Dutch gained credence
> > when I read that Ulster and Dutchess Counties were 80% Dutch in
> > the 1700's. But I haven't researched it much, except to find
> > several KLEYNs who were married in Kingston, Ulster Co. NY as
> > far back as 1726. Interestingly, the KLEYN (KLEIN?) wife and her
> > BRANDOUW (BRANDAUER?) husband were both born in Germany! The
> > Dutch "Hollandized" names in the same way we Anglicize them.
> >
> > BUCKs seemed to live across the Hudson River in Dutchess Co.,
> > also heavily Dutch; I found none in Kingston marriages, nor have
> > I found any marriage information from other parts of Ulster Co..
> > Kingston was and is the county seat and many of the couples were
> > from other parts of the county. Possibly all the marriages in the
> > county were supposed to be reported there and there are no more
> > to be found. The Kingston marriages list covers over 2500 mar-
> > riages between 1660 and 1809.
> >
> > I haven't found any documentation of George CLINE and Susannah
> > BUCK's marriage date of June 8, 1770, the location in Ulster Co.
> > NY, or her father's name being Joseph. I don't know where any of
> > that came from. Possibly one of the online LDS databases, so many
> > of which I've found to be just guesswork and speculation that I
> > no longer trust any but the straight vital records. Another LDS
> > source says they were married in New York, New York. Another says
> > Susannah was born in 1750 in Ulster Co. NY. All this is dubious
> > since there's no documentation to go with it.
> >
> > There's so much misinformation out there that one would have to
> > go back to vital records, if they exist, to sort fact from
> fiction.
> > George CLINE may have been German; he may have been Dutch; he may
> > even have been a Scots-Irish CLYNE; or he may have been from a
> > Dutch family who lived in Germany. But he sure didn't act like a
> > man who was fresh off the boat in 1770.
> >
> > I believe I'll copy this to CLINE-L in hopes that someone can
> > direct me to the documentation of George and Susannah's marriage.
> >
> > Betsy
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: mike [mailto:micell@ameritech.net]
> > Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 5:21 AM
> > To: Dick and Betsy French
> > Subject: Re: [CLINE] ROLL CALL
> >
> >
> > I find your theory very interesting because I keep seeing the
> Cline line
> as
> > being from Northern Germany. My dad always said he was
> Pennsylvania Dutch.
> > His grandmother ,Eunice Cline, was a descendant of George Cline.
> > Thank you
> > Mike Givens
> >
> >
>
>
Is Mary Kathryn Weis Petrosky a member of this group? I have a copy of a DAR
app. signed by her (no date) as a descendant of George Cline, which gives
the following account of George and his two brothers. Maybe Mary Kathryn has
further documentation.
"George Cline (Klein***), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Sergeant in Captain
William Craig's 3rd Pennsylvania Regiment. Enlisted November 4, 1776, for
the duration of the War.
"***Three Klein brothers came over frm Germany. "Klein" signifying little or
small. Wishing to Americanize their names, one brother took the name
"Small," one brother took the name "Little," and the th'rid' brother
(George) retained the name "Klein." George settled at Ft. Henry, and while
there, his name was placed on the deeds and public records as Cline (Irish
form used at Ft. Henry), which he retained from then on."
(She then referenced the vol. etc. of the PA archives where George's service
is recorded.)
Anyone else know anything about where this information may have come from?
Just another George/Susannah "ggggggranddaughter,"
Betty in Cincinnati
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dick and Betsy French" <BARKFrench(a)worldnet.att.net>
To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 8:18 PM
Subject: [CLINE] RE: Dutch origins of George CLINE of Monroe Co. OH?
> Hi Mike,
>
> Thanks for your response to my message on CLINE-L. I always
> thought my grandmother Zelma Cline McNiece Perry was Penn-
> sylvania Dutch, too, but can't remember if my mother told me
> that or if I assumed it because of her maiden name and style
> of cooking. Grandma may have thought so herself, if she thought
> about it at all; she was more attuned to her mother's English
> KNOWLTON ancestry.
>
> I think the idea that George CLINE was from Northern Germany
> came originally from Lloyd D.T. CLINE's 1960 article, in which
> he says "It is believed that George Cline, Sr. emigrated from
> Northern Germany about 1770....."
>
> LDT Cline doesn't say who believed this or why. I think it's his
> own theory, based on the fact that many Germans did immigrate in
> the 1700's before the Revolutionary War and that the name could
> have been the German KLEIN. This idea of German origins is repeat-
> ed in nearly every CLINE genealogy I've seen and seems to have
> become "fact".
>
> But George CLINE didn't act like a recent German immigrant - he
> didn't live in German-speaking enclaves; he fought the English
> and Indians alongside the Scots-Irish who predominated on the
> frontier; none of his children married Germans; and his name on
> Rev. War documents, according to LDT Cline, was spelled KLAIN -
> the phonetic spelling of the Dutch KLEYN, not KLEIN, as a German
> would pronounce and spell it. On the frontier, it became KLINE,
> CLYNE, CLINE, etc., but the earliest version is more likely to
> reflect how he pronounced it himself.
>
> My idea that George Cline might have been Dutch gained credence
> when I read that Ulster and Dutchess Counties were 80% Dutch in
> the 1700's. But I haven't researched it much, except to find
> several KLEYNs who were married in Kingston, Ulster Co. NY as
> far back as 1726. Interestingly, the KLEYN (KLEIN?) wife and her
> BRANDOUW (BRANDAUER?) husband were both born in Germany! The
> Dutch "Hollandized" names in the same way we Anglicize them.
>
> BUCKs seemed to live across the Hudson River in Dutchess Co.,
> also heavily Dutch; I found none in Kingston marriages, nor have
> I found any marriage information from other parts of Ulster Co..
> Kingston was and is the county seat and many of the couples were
> from other parts of the county. Possibly all the marriages in the
> county were supposed to be reported there and there are no more
> to be found. The Kingston marriages list covers over 2500 mar-
> riages between 1660 and 1809.
>
> I haven't found any documentation of George CLINE and Susannah
> BUCK's marriage date of June 8, 1770, the location in Ulster Co.
> NY, or her father's name being Joseph. I don't know where any of
> that came from. Possibly one of the online LDS databases, so many
> of which I've found to be just guesswork and speculation that I
> no longer trust any but the straight vital records. Another LDS
> source says they were married in New York, New York. Another says
> Susannah was born in 1750 in Ulster Co. NY. All this is dubious
> since there's no documentation to go with it.
>
> There's so much misinformation out there that one would have to
> go back to vital records, if they exist, to sort fact from fiction.
> George CLINE may have been German; he may have been Dutch; he may
> even have been a Scots-Irish CLYNE; or he may have been from a
> Dutch family who lived in Germany. But he sure didn't act like a
> man who was fresh off the boat in 1770.
>
> I believe I'll copy this to CLINE-L in hopes that someone can
> direct me to the documentation of George and Susannah's marriage.
>
> Betsy
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: mike [mailto:micell@ameritech.net]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 5:21 AM
> To: Dick and Betsy French
> Subject: Re: [CLINE] ROLL CALL
>
>
> I find your theory very interesting because I keep seeing the Cline line
as
> being from Northern Germany. My dad always said he was Pennsylvania Dutch.
> His grandmother ,Eunice Cline, was a descendant of George Cline.
> Thank you
> Mike Givens
>
>
Hi,
I am new to this mailing list. I just wanted to
introduce myself. My gggrandmother was Mary Ann Cline
(abt 1825- abt 1898). I do not know who her parents
are as of yet. She married Henry Wible/Wyble Feb. 9,
1843 in Jay Co. In. They moved to Il between 1844 and
1848. In the 1860's they moved to Pike Co. Mo. where
she lived the rest of her life. Anyone know anything
about her?
Amy
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Health - Feel better, live better
http://health.yahoo.com
Help! Someone sent me a file on Anderson/Cline (ANDERSONGED) that we thought
connected to my Jackson County Anderson line as well - it goes back to George
Cline Sr. but the Anderson line goes back to James ANDERSON of Denmark - ow I
can't find the accompanying e-mail as to who sent this file to me - any
takers?
Kay
Anyone connect with this family?
1920 Census, Walters, Cotton Co., OK
Cline, John H. or K., b. abt. 1883 OK, parents: OH OH
wife, Katherine
children: Margaret, Katherine, Mildred and Ralph.
Some or all of these children may still be living. I am trying to connect my Cline (Belle) with this family. She was married in Walters, OK in 1923.
Thanks,
Mary Webster
bee-gard(a)lcc.net
Found this while researching in Cedar Co., IA
Sharie
Oceanside, CA
Ridenour, N. A., farmer, Section 7; Post Office Rochester; owns 285 acres of
land valued at $30 per acre; born in Maryland in 1826; came to Iowa in 1843,
and located with his parents in Rochester Township, Cedar County; removed to
his present farm in 1855. Married Nancy Cline in 1849; she was born in Ohio
in 1831; have four children--Angelina, Cornelius, Daniel and Luke. Has held
different township offices.
Found this while nosing around in Cedar Co., IA
Sharie
Oceanside, CA
Cline, Jonathan, farmer, Section 7; Post Office Rochester; owns 250 acres of
land, valued at $35 per acre; born in Cedar County, Iowa, in 1844; his
parents came to Iowa in 1839, and located on the same farm that Mr. Cline
now owns. His father, Abraham Cline, was born in Pennsylvania in 1798, and
married Lydia Sharp in 1829; she was born in Maryland in 1808. Have three
children--Nancy, Elizabeth and Jonathan; Angeline died at the age of 21
years. Mr. Jonathan Cline has been Town Clerk, and held other town offices.
Republican.
There is a Kris on the Cline Board whose ancestor was a brother to my Conrad
Cline.
He would have a completely different set of names.
You might put your names on line and see if he recognizes any of them.
I've only recently tried to research other lines in my family and I
recognize, now, how fortunate I am to have the histories that I have simply
handed down to me without any effort on my part.
You could try putting your family on Ancestry.com's family tree site and see
if you get any matches.
Good luck in your search.
Nancy Curren Keggan
Nancy, I don't know if I could connect with ol Conrad unless he wandered
thru NC. Think ol William Henry Cline came outta Cabarrus cty NC and went
thru TN to Yell county AR. My gr granny was his oldest dotter, Lucy Jane
m Robert Hamilton in 1865. One sis, Perlene m Dr Hiram Harvey, one son
James D Martin Cline went to Pope cty AR and one went to TX and up to OK.
That was Alexander Haywood Cline and indicates they went thru Haywood TN
or Haywood NC. Robert Marion Cline, the youngest died in Idabel OK. I
only know where three cousins are and the rest are hiding from me.
Hey, I ain't really all that elegant.
1st
On Thu, 25 Jul 2002 00:16:32 EDT OhioOrchid(a)aol.com writes:
>
> Thank you, Mr. Moore, for your model of decorum.
> I shall try to emulate your elegant manners.
>
> Are you, by chance, a descendant of Conrad Cline?
> I would be simply delighted to add your name to The Cline Family
> lineage.
>
> Nancy
>
Hello,
Do you have anything else on your Cline ?
My great grandmother Della Mae Cline was b. Kansas Territory and then
moved to Oklahoma, She had a brother whos name was William, and also a
sister Flora whom I believe was a twin.
There father Jacob Sherman Cline also had a brother named William T.
Cline. who was also known in Kansas and Indiana.
Contact me directly and we can share & compare more !
God Bless
Lizzy
Shari Cline wrote:
>Gees after reading everyone's messages I feel so lost and far behind.
>Grin. I am not nearly as far back as any of you seem to be. I am
>searching for information on a Mandred (Carlyle) Cline. Most of the
>documents that I have read show him as M. C. Cline. I believe that he
>was born on 8 Jan. 1840. I have three different locations from several
>different documents. The three are Indiana, Iowa, or possibly England.
>I do know that he died 21 of Jun 1912 in Oklahoma. Mandred married Mary
>Ellen Clark of Sigourney, Keoluk County, Iowa. They lived in Kansas at
>some point before moving on to Oklahoma. Children of Mandred and Mary
>Ellen are Charles, Henry, Amanda, Wesley, Ira, Flora, Orlan, Chester,
>and Nora.
>
>I believe that Mandred may have been the son of William Cline who was
>the son of Henry Cline and Catherine Ramey Cline. A few of the other
>surnames that I have encountered with this line of Clines are Poplin,
>Clark, Ford, Kemp, Fleener, Scott, Nutt, Whitebread, Burcham...
>
>Thank you,
>Shari Cline
>
>
Gees after reading everyone's messages I feel so lost and far behind.
Grin. I am not nearly as far back as any of you seem to be. I am
searching for information on a Mandred (Carlyle) Cline. Most of the
documents that I have read show him as M. C. Cline. I believe that he
was born on 8 Jan. 1840. I have three different locations from several
different documents. The three are Indiana, Iowa, or possibly England.
I do know that he died 21 of Jun 1912 in Oklahoma. Mandred married Mary
Ellen Clark of Sigourney, Keoluk County, Iowa. They lived in Kansas at
some point before moving on to Oklahoma. Children of Mandred and Mary
Ellen are Charles, Henry, Amanda, Wesley, Ira, Flora, Orlan, Chester,
and Nora.
I believe that Mandred may have been the son of William Cline who was
the son of Henry Cline and Catherine Ramey Cline. A few of the other
surnames that I have encountered with this line of Clines are Poplin,
Clark, Ford, Kemp, Fleener, Scott, Nutt, Whitebread, Burcham...
Thank you,
Shari Cline
Hi Nancy,
My Husband is a descendant of George Cline Sr. b. 1740 in Germany and d.
1801 in New Matamoros, OH. Is he possibly the George Cline in your book? If
so, I would love to share info!!
By the way, I don't think she was meaning to jump on you about the
copyright infringement issue, probably just trying to help out a fellow
genealogist. That's what we are all trying to do. I know it's sometimes
difficult to determine the tone that someone means to take in an email.
I too have several "books" on my family tree's, that are unpublished,
except for the family members, made much the same way you described your
Cline book. It's great to have such wonderful resources at hand! It's also
very generous of you to share it with the other members of the list! I'm sure
everyone else is as grateful for your assistance as I am!
Missy :)
My Family tree is full of NUTS!!!
Maternal: Stebbing/Stebbins, Woodward, Hinsdale, Whiting, Johnson, alexander,
Dickinson, Osborne, Newlin, Mendenhall, Dicks, Buckles, Brown, Gerrard,
Frary, Dickinson, Harvey, Bolin-Osborne, Maddock, Zorn, Ruhlman, Stratton,
Carter, McPherson, Clark, Hiatt, Wakefield, Eye, Birt, Tennerey, hibbert,
Reardon/Rariden, Chandler, Cowger, Hawkes, Wilson, Chew, Green, Doan,
Larimer, Dickerson.
Paternal: Threlkeld, Travis, De Loach, Champion, Fitzgerald, Bronaugh,
Holloway, Foster, Rice, Pippen, Hardin, Wells, Collier, Dunning, Fisher,
Davenport, Carter, Bray, Vaughn, Canada/Kennedy, Thurman, Parker, McMican,
Brooks, Carrick, Rucker, McGrew, Coleman, Kelly, Melton, Thrift, Holland.
HUSBANDS: Rose, Petty, McQue/McHugh, Ford, Alton, Johnson, Welsh, Stephens,
Williams, Schimpf, Cline.
Thank you, Mr. Moore, for your model of decorum.
I shall try to emulate your elegant manners.
Are you, by chance, a descendant of Conrad Cline?
I would be simply delighted to add your name to The Cline Family lineage.
Nancy
MAN, them yankees sho do get catty. Miss Ann was just tryin to tell you
in a nice way and you talk to her like she is some kinda honky. Can't
you keep it clean and tell her how you feel in a nice way ??????
1st
On Wed, 24 Jul 2002 13:18:38 EDT OhioOrchid(a)aol.com writes:
> Dear Ann,
>
> Are you out of your mind?
>
> My Cline History is a Family book made up by Jane and Russ Fisher.
> Except for a page telling about the history of the Cline/Kline name
> which
> gives no reference source and another page that tells of Conrad
> Cline's
> service in the Revolutionary War and cites the sources which are all
> public
> records, the book is nothing except names of members of the family
> showing
> seven generations. It shows where they were born when they married
> to whom
> and where they are living in 1976.
> I doubt that it had been circulated outside the family.
>
> I think that The Marion Public Library in Marion, Ohio or the
> genealogy
> society there might have a copy of The Cline HIstory. I'll check, if
> they
> don't have one I'll lend them mine. It bears no copyright. I'm
> talking about
> a book that was done on a typewriter, making cuts in the master,
> and then
> printed on an old fashioned drum copying machine.
>
> The only reason that my father was given a copy is that Curren
> descendants,
> my direct blood line, are in it. His father is in it.
>
> On the other hand, if you are writing about Sidener's book, I don't
> have a
> copy, have never seen it, and have no intention of copying a book
> of seven
> hundred pages. I doubt that it would hold any interest for me as
> the book I
> have begins in 1732,ends in 1976, and has all the information that I
> needed
> to get a DAR patriot's bar for Conrad Cline's service as a
> Revolutionary War
> soldier.
>
> My interest is in tracking the descendants of people in my Cline
> book and
> adding what I have about my family mentioned in the book. Of course
> I would
> share it with others whose ancestors are in the book.
>
> I would be happy to leave the publishing of a new Cline book to the
> descendants of Jane and Russ Fisher. I wish I could find them. I'm
> about to
> call every Fisher in the tri-county directory.
>
> I have just finished doing 90 pages of Curren history,which I
> handed out at
> a Curren reunion this summer.
>
> I have an Almendinger calling and asking for information about my
> grandmother
> Almendinger's descendants and wanting me to write a biography of my
> part of
> the family, and my sister is nagging me to do a Deal history.
>
> I don't need a busy body trying to instruct me about copyright laws.
>
>
> I trust this satisfies your concern about my infringing on
> copyrights.
> I am familiar with "fair use." I taught for 32 years.
>
> And to further allay your fears let me say that my daughter is two
> years from
> getting her law degree at the University of Dayton Law School.
> Then she can
> defend me from idiots who think telling my family who their
> ancestors are is
> an infringement of the copyright laws.
>
> MOB
>
> Nancy Curren Keggan
>
Dear Betsy,
In thinking about whether the Clines were Dutch you should consider that the
people were sailing from Holland at that time. I believe that the Pilgrims
sailed from Holland. Some of the Germans traveling to Holland my have stayed
there for some time waiting to get a group of people to sail together, or
making extra money needed for the trip. Just a thought.
"My" Henry Cline married a german girl, Nancy Worline IWerline.) But, then
many germans were in the area of Ohio at the time of their marriage and
choice was limited.
Nancy
I probably can but i need to learn how first. I just learned how to enlarge
pics. ha ha My printed copy pages are not the greatest copy but i will try.
have to learn sometime. Smile kris