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There could be some relationship here. Some of the first names are
repeated in my genealogy. Want to check on a few things and will get back
to you later.
My family setteled in Bad Axe, MI. Also have relatives in Port Huron.MI.
Write to me direct.
Wiesena(a)juno.com
On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 21:23:12 EST KSABBEY(a)aol.com writes:
> These are the Clines related to me:
> 1830 Michigan Census Oakland Co.(Bloomfield Twp.)
> Frederick Cline 11000011 110001
> It's possible that Frederick/Benjamin Cline could have been born in
> Canada.
> Frederick/Benjamin Cline's known children are George W. b . 1822 in
> MI,
> lived Barry Co. Mi; Henry A. Cline b. 1833 MI, lived Oakland Co. MI,
> m. Genette
> L. Rockwell, d/o Rohn Adams Rockwell and Louisa Maria (Whaley)
> Pearsall;
> Elvira/Alvira b. 1840 ca. m. George Adgate, desc. of Thomas Adgate
> of New England.
>
> Henry A. Cline b. 1833 was in Bloomfield Twp. Michigan in 1870 (at
> the
> Northern shore of Island Lake; which was near Pine Lake, with his
> family as shown
> at the Library of Michigan site, but under the name of Henry
> "Leline" in the
> index).
> Henry's death cert. shows that his father was Benjamin Cline and
> mother
> Rhoda/Roda Franklin. She was born in either RI or VT., I believe, as
> census info
> is conflicting.
> George W. Clines death cert. says his father is Frederick Cline and
> Rhoda
> Franklin, but we have proven that Henry and George are brothers.
> It's possible
> that the two older men in the 1830 census were brothers or father
> and son, and
> it's also possible that Rhoda could have been married more that
> once. She
> died in 1870, while living in Barry Co. with son George.
> In 1860 She lived with Henry.
>
> 1880:
> _Henry CLINE_
> (http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual
> _record.asp?INDI_CODE=1880US_7557339_0&frompage=5) Self M Male
> W 45 MI
> Farmer MI MI _Jennette CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339_1&frompage=5)
> Wife M
> Female W 40 MI Keeping House NY NY _John A. CLINE_
> ro
> mpage=5) Son S Male W 20 MI Farm Laborer MI MI (m. Rosa
> Madora
> Parker-1846) _Charls CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339_3&frompage=5)
> Son S Male W 16
> MI Farm Laborer MI MI (middle name Frederick/Franklin) _Sarah
> L. CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=
> 1880US_7557339_4&frompage=5) Dau S Female W 13 MI At School
> MI MI
> (m. Spencer Lake) _Benjiman CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339_5&frompage=5)
> Son S
> Male W 11 MI At School MI MI (m. Nellie _Roda CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339_6&f
> rompage=5) Dau S Female W 8 MI MI MI _Mary CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339
> _7&frompage=5) Dau S Female W 5 MI MI MI (m. Ellsworth R.
> Dearborn)
> _Edward CLINE_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI
_CODE=1880US_7557339_8&frompage=5)
> Son S Male W 2 MI MI
> MI
>
> ____________________________________
> Source Information:
> Census Place Bloomfield, Oakland, Michigan Family History Library
> Film
> _1254598_
>
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp
?display=filmhitlist&columns=*,180,0&filmno=1254598)
> NA Film Number
> T9-0598 Page Number _43C_
>
(javascript:imageWindow=open('1880USCensusCost.asp','imageRecord','menuba
r=yes,toolbar=yes,status=yes,resizable=yes,width=600,hei
>
ght=440');imageWindow=open('http://www.ancestry.com/FamilySearch/?nara=T9
-0598
>
&pgno=43C&irecid=1880US_7557339_0','imageRecord','menubar=yes,toolbar=yes
,stat
> us=yes,resizable=yes,width=600,height=440');imageWindow.focus();)
> 1900 Federal Census Bloomfield Twp., Oakland, Michigan ED #82
> Sheet 17
> Enumeration Date: 13 June 1900 Roll T623-735
> Cline Henry Head Dec 1832 67 M 40 Mich
> Mich Mich
> Farmer
> Jeannette Wife Jan 1837 63 M 40 7 7 �
> �
> �
> (also Genette; mother b. NY father b. CT- to correct above)
> Benjamin Son Nov 1869 30 S � �
> �
> Farm Laborer
> Rose Dau May 1876 24 S � �
> �
> Floyd (s/o John Almerion) grdson Mar 1892 7 S
> �
> � � At School
>
> 1910 Federal Census: Page 11 A
> Cline Henry (A.) head 77 M1 Mich ?
> Eng
> (English)
> On the image (#21.ancestry.com) it looks like Ger (German) for
> Henry's
> father's birth.
> Jennett (L. nee Rockwell) wife 74 M1 Mich
> NY NY
> Benjamin (Arthur) son 40 S Mich Mich Mich
>
> Edward J (Jones) son 32 D �
> � �
> Roda (Rose) dau 31 D �
> � �
> Melvin James boarder 50 D � �
> �
>
> 1920 Royal Oak Twp., Ferndale Village, Oakland, MI ED # 213 Pg.
> 18B
> Enumeration Date: March 15, 1920 (looks like "Genesee Street")
> Cline, John A Head 57 M MI MI MI
> laborer
> Factory "
> Rosa Wife 46 M MI England NY "
> (d/o Benj. and Mary Ann (Carver) Parker of Royal Oak Twp. ,
> Michigan.
> Fannie Dau 14 S MI MI MI "
> Edward Son 10 S MI MI MI "
> Kenneth Son 8 S MI MI MI "
> Myrtle Dau 7 S MI MI MI "
>
> Lillian Dau 5 S MI MI MI
> Brown Joe B son-in-law 28 M MI Canada MI
> laborer
> Factory "
> Helen Dau 23 M MI MI MI "
> Robert grandson 2 7/12 S MI MI MI
> Cline Roy E Son 26 M MI MI MI
>
> Millwright Factory "
> Laura M dau-in-law 21 M NY U.S. MI
> Magee Vernon C son-in-law 21 M ILL U.S. U.S.
> Truck Driver
> Express Co. "
> Gladys Dau 26 M MI MI MI
>
> Federal Census 1930 Ferndale, Oakland, Michigan ED #25 Page
> 18B
> Enumeration Date: 18 April 1930 Roll T626-1016
> Magee Vernon Head 30 M 20 Illinois
> Illinois
> Illinois Chauffer Gladys Wife 26 M 17
> Mich
> Mich Mich
> Edwin L Son 8 S �
> Illinois �
>
> Howard G Son 4 9/12 S � �
> �
> Edith L Dau 2 1/12 S � �
> �
> Gladys H Dau /12 S � �
> �
> Cline John A father-in-law 67 D �
> Mich
> � None
> Great Aunt Sarah b. 1902, told me that during the depression John
> Cline
> would send his boys out to the "woods" to live during the summer to
> work and
> live, to save on expenses at home. But, John and Rosa were
> separated at the time
> of this census (she lives elsewhere, so perhaps there wasn't a
> "home" per
> se.
>
> This is the 1894 census of Michigan's Pensioners; none of these are
> mine
> that I know of:
> SURNAME GIVEN MIDDLE TOWNSHIP CORRECTION COUNTY Cline Alonzo
> Village
> of Marlette Sanilac Cline David Huron Wayne Cline Harvey
> C.
> Genesee Genesee Cline Isaac Detroit Sixth Ward Wayne
> Cline John
> Leavitt Oceana Cline Joseph E. Barton Newaygo Cline Oren
> Manistique
> yes Schoolcraft Cline Wm. H. Grand Rapids City Fourth Ward
> Kent
> Cline Wm. Village of Columbiaville Lapeer
>
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> To contact the list admin: <A HREF="MAILTO:CLINEROOTS@AOL.COM">
> CLINEROOTS(a)AOL.COM</A>. Please do not send virus messages to the
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>
> ==============================
> View and search Historical Newspapers. Read about your ancestors,
> find
> marriage announcements and more. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13969/rd.ashx
>
>
>
These are the Clines related to me:
1830 Michigan Census Oakland Co.(Bloomfield Twp.)
Frederick Cline 11000011 110001
It's possible that Frederick/Benjamin Cline could have been born in Canada.
Frederick/Benjamin Cline's known children are George W. b . 1822 in MI,
lived Barry Co. Mi; Henry A. Cline b. 1833 MI, lived Oakland Co. MI, m. Genette
L. Rockwell, d/o Rohn Adams Rockwell and Louisa Maria (Whaley) Pearsall;
Elvira/Alvira b. 1840 ca. m. George Adgate, desc. of Thomas Adgate of New England.
Henry A. Cline b. 1833 was in Bloomfield Twp. Michigan in 1870 (at the
Northern shore of Island Lake; which was near Pine Lake, with his family as shown
at the Library of Michigan site, but under the name of Henry "Leline" in the
index).
Henry's death cert. shows that his father was Benjamin Cline and mother
Rhoda/Roda Franklin. She was born in either RI or VT., I believe, as census info
is conflicting.
George W. Clines death cert. says his father is Frederick Cline and Rhoda
Franklin, but we have proven that Henry and George are brothers. It's possible
that the two older men in the 1830 census were brothers or father and son, and
it's also possible that Rhoda could have been married more that once. She
died in 1870, while living in Barry Co. with son George.
In 1860 She lived with Henry.
1880:
_Henry CLINE_ (http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual
_record.asp?INDI_CODE=1880US_7557339_0&frompage=5) Self M Male W 45 MI
Farmer MI MI _Jennette CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...) Wife M
Female W 40 MI Keeping House NY NY _John A. CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...
mpage=5) Son S Male W 20 MI Farm Laborer MI MI (m. Rosa Madora
Parker-1846) _Charls CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...) Son S Male W 16
MI Farm Laborer MI MI (middle name Frederick/Franklin) _Sarah L. CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...
1880US_7557339_4&frompage=5) Dau S Female W 13 MI At School MI MI
(m. Spencer Lake) _Benjiman CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...) Son S
Male W 11 MI At School MI MI (m. Nellie _Roda CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...
rompage=5) Dau S Female W 8 MI MI MI _Mary CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...
_7&frompage=5) Dau S Female W 5 MI MI MI (m. Ellsworth R. Dearborn)
_Edward CLINE_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/census/individual_record.asp?INDI_...) Son S Male W 2 MI MI
MI
____________________________________
Source Information:
Census Place Bloomfield, Oakland, Michigan Family History Library Film
_1254598_
(http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?...) NA Film Number
T9-0598 Page Number _43C_
(javascript:imageWindow=open('1880USCensusCost.asp','imageRecord','menubar=yes,toolbar=yes,status=yes,resizable=yes,width=600,hei
ght=440');imageWindow=open('http://www.ancestry.com/FamilySearch/?nara=T9-0598
&pgno=43C&irecid=1880US_7557339_0','imageRecord','menubar=yes,toolbar=yes,stat
us=yes,resizable=yes,width=600,height=440');imageWindow.focus();)
1900 Federal Census Bloomfield Twp., Oakland, Michigan ED #82 Sheet 17
Enumeration Date: 13 June 1900 Roll T623-735
Cline Henry Head Dec 1832 67 M 40 Mich Mich Mich
Farmer
Jeannette Wife Jan 1837 63 M 40 7 7 “ “
“
(also Genette; mother b. NY father b. CT- to correct above)
Benjamin Son Nov 1869 30 S “ “ “
Farm Laborer
Rose Dau May 1876 24 S “ “ “
Floyd (s/o John Almerion) grdson Mar 1892 7 S “
“ “ At School
1910 Federal Census: Page 11 A
Cline Henry (A.) head 77 M1 Mich ? Eng
(English)
On the image (#21.ancestry.com) it looks like Ger (German) for Henry's
father's birth.
Jennett (L. nee Rockwell) wife 74 M1 Mich NY NY
Benjamin (Arthur) son 40 S Mich Mich Mich
Edward J (Jones) son 32 D “ “ “
Roda (Rose) dau 31 D “ “ “
Melvin James boarder 50 D “ “ “
1920 Royal Oak Twp., Ferndale Village, Oakland, MI ED # 213 Pg. 18B
Enumeration Date: March 15, 1920 (looks like "Genesee Street")
Cline, John A Head 57 M MI MI MI laborer
Factory "
Rosa Wife 46 M MI England NY "
(d/o Benj. and Mary Ann (Carver) Parker of Royal Oak Twp. , Michigan.
Fannie Dau 14 S MI MI MI "
Edward Son 10 S MI MI MI "
Kenneth Son 8 S MI MI MI "
Myrtle Dau 7 S MI MI MI "
Lillian Dau 5 S MI MI MI
Brown Joe B son-in-law 28 M MI Canada MI laborer
Factory "
Helen Dau 23 M MI MI MI "
Robert grandson 2 7/12 S MI MI MI
Cline Roy E Son 26 M MI MI MI
Millwright Factory "
Laura M dau-in-law 21 M NY U.S. MI
Magee Vernon C son-in-law 21 M ILL U.S. U.S. Truck Driver
Express Co. "
Gladys Dau 26 M MI MI MI
Federal Census 1930 Ferndale, Oakland, Michigan ED #25 Page 18B
Enumeration Date: 18 April 1930 Roll T626-1016
Magee Vernon Head 30 M 20 Illinois Illinois
Illinois Chauffer Gladys Wife 26 M 17 Mich
Mich Mich
Edwin L Son 8 S “ Illinois “
Howard G Son 4 9/12 S “ “ “
Edith L Dau 2 1/12 S “ “ “
Gladys H Dau /12 S “ “ “
Cline John A father-in-law 67 D “ Mich
“ None
Great Aunt Sarah b. 1902, told me that during the depression John Cline
would send his boys out to the "woods" to live during the summer to work and
live, to save on expenses at home. But, John and Rosa were separated at the time
of this census (she lives elsewhere, so perhaps there wasn't a "home" per
se.
This is the 1894 census of Michigan's Pensioners; none of these are mine
that I know of:
SURNAME GIVEN MIDDLE TOWNSHIP CORRECTION COUNTY Cline Alonzo Village
of Marlette Sanilac Cline David Huron Wayne Cline Harvey C.
Genesee Genesee Cline Isaac Detroit Sixth Ward Wayne Cline John
Leavitt Oceana Cline Joseph E. Barton Newaygo Cline Oren Manistique
yes Schoolcraft Cline Wm. H. Grand Rapids City Fourth Ward Kent
Cline Wm. Village of Columbiaville Lapeer
Here is what I have on the Cline's.
Wm. Cline b. 1767 MD d. 1843 Rome, Richland Co., OH m. Eleanor
children:
Jacob b. 21 Jan 1794 Hagerstown, MD d. 2 Oct 1853 Shenandoah, Richland Co.,
OH
Joseph
John
William
Adam
Samuel
Could be more..................
I have been doing a lot of research on the Cline's. I have been trying to
find the parents of my Jacob b. 1823 Richland Co.
About 1800 a lot of Cline's probably brothers and cousins moved into
Richland Co. They came from Ulster Co., NY, PA, MD some by way of VA.
I am in the process of moving, so will only be able to do this as I have
time. I have a lot of notes. If you can ask me a direct question, I will
try to find info on your question.
Take a look at Richland Co., OH you may find your Cline's there before
moving on to IN, IL, and IA. I also have some in Iowa. Do you know where
yours went in Iowa?
Sharie
Oceanside, CA
----- Original Message -----
From: <wiesena(a)juno.com>
To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 13, 2005 10:23 AM
Subject: Re: [CLINE] Cline's in Ohio/VA/PA
>
> On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 23:17:56 EST LFHalter(a)aol.com writes:
> > In a message dated 2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time,
> > brittons(a)comcast.net writes:
> >
> >
> > > Subj:Re: [CLINE] Cline's in Ohio/VA/PA
> > > Date:2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time
> > > From:brittons@comcast.net
> > > Reply-to:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> > > To:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> > > Sent from the Internet
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > We've been working on those and associated Clines for some time.
> > Isaac
> > > Ivnes Cline, b. 1809, probably in MD in the Hagarstown area, was
> > my
> > > wife's ancestor. A 1950s family genealogy listed siblings Mary,
> >
> > > Phebe, Saml, Jacob and William, "perhaps others", Isaac being
> > the
> > > youngest son. It seems likely that your Sam Cline was his eldest
> >
> > > brother or possibly an uncle. (A 32 year span is wide for one
> > mother,
> > > though possible, but not for two wives, e.g. 1812 Christopher and
> > his
> > > wives.)
> > >
> > > What we know and surmise: Sam Cline & family (including a male b.
> > about
> > > 1803, probably Jesse Cline) were in Mason County, VA (now WV) for
> > the
> > > 1810 Census, associated with the Jeremiah Hill and James Cofel
> > > families. The location, PA birth and an SC wife are consistent
> > with
> > > migration via the Hagerstown area, down the Great Wagon Trail and
> > west
> > > via the Kanawha route. They all seem to have moved on into OH
> > around
> > > 1817, presumably following what's now Route 35. The Hills stopped
> > in
> > > Fayette, but the Clines and "Coffields" continued another 20 miles
> > or so
> > > to Caesars Creek near present New Jasper, Greene County. The 1820
> >
> > > Census found them adjacent and with the Clines augmented by
> > Christopher
> > > Cline, b. 1755_+_5, and helper, and William G. Cline. In 1827,
> > the
> > > Hills led the way north to Bokes Creek, Logan County, probably
> > directly
> > > up the old Indian trail, to be shortly "followed by the Coffield
> > and
> > > Cline families". New actors appeared with the 1830 Census, and
> > > thereafter things become progressively murkier.
> > >
> > > A block of 10 adjacent entries in the 1830 Census for Bokes Creek
> >
> > > consist of 4 Coffields, 2 Hills, father and son, and 4 Clines,
> > William,
> > > Samuel, Jesse, and "Christian". Caesars Creek Twp. was then down
> > to a
> > > Jacob Cline (probably unrelated), but Christopher Cline and wife,
> > both
> > > 70-80, were in offshoot Silver Creek Twp. and missing the young
> > man who
> > > was with them in 1820. Samuel seems associated with fifteen
> > children
> > > over a span of about 26 years, assuming Jesse as a first child and
> > David
> > > the last. From various estimates, his wife Jane could have had
> > Jesse in
> > > her late teens and David in her early 40s, or married Samuel in
> > her
> > > early 20s with 2 or 3 children from a first wife. "Christian" maps
> > well
> > > to the "Christopher" from MD who married Isabella Gordon and
> > remained in
> > > Bokes Creek through 1870, and as Old Christopher's missing young
> > man.
> > > He had two 15-20 males with him in 1830, one of whom was
> > presumably our
> > > Isaac since he married Elizabeth Hill in Bokes Creek the following
> >
> > > year. That accounts reasonably well for all the Caesars Creek
> > Clines of
> > > 1820, allowing for female attrition by marriage and excepting 1812
> >
> > > Christopher, who cannot be found.
> > >
> > > In the mid to late 1830s, most of the Clines decamped from Bokes
> > Creek
> > > to Illinois and, apparently, a clan disaster. Samuel moved to
> > Perry
> > > County, 5 adjacent households in the 1840 Census being of Samuel,
> > 2 of
> > > his married daughters, 1812 Christopher and Jesse. Jesse had with
> > him
> > > an unnamed male born 1815_+_5. There was only one adult female
> > plus too
> > > many and oddly aged children for one family, so presumably one of
> > the
> > > males was a widower with several young children. Clearly, though,
> > this
> > > was Samuel's immediate family group. Isaac moved also, but to the
> >
> > > adjacent county of Washington.
> > >
> > > By the 1850 Census, Illinois had been abandoned, at least one
> > family
> > > decapitated, the children living with relatives, and many
> > individuals
> > > untraceable or dead. Survivors were mostly back in Bokes Creek,
> > Isaac
> > > and family in next door Jefferson Twp. It's not known what
> > happened.
> > > The land in the area was apparently poor and even less healthy
> > than
> > > Bokes Creek before it was drained. Epidemics had occurred and the
> >
> > > social disorder associated with the Mormon movement had swept
> > through
> > > the area too. William G. seemed to vanish too, an older William
> > and wife
> > > appearing to care for an infant William G., suggestive of
> > grandparents
> > > raising their grandchild.
> > >
> > > A decade or so later, Isaac Cline and perhaps others tried again,
> > moving
> > > to Iowa, followed by Jeremiah Hill Jr. to continue approaching a
> > century
> > > of family association.
> > >
> > > We have tentatively mapped and assigned most of the Cline families
> > of
> > > the area and period, but remain notably baffled by the origins of
> > the
> > > James Cline who married Surrepta Holycross and the other one who
> > married
> > > Martha King.
> > >
> > > kb
> >
> > Thank you for sharing your information. I will save it & let you
> > know if
> > something connects in the future. You've done a lot of good work in
> > thorough
> > researching these Clines.
> >
> > There's a Kline Weyland Cemetery in Cass Co., IN where my Conns came
> > from.
> > David Conn married Luella Keene whose father was really Charlie
> > Cline but
> > adopted by Sam Keene. I've wondered if the Clines & Keenes knew
> > each other in Ohio,
> > came together (probably with wagon train or flat boat down the Ohio
> > to the
> > Mississippi River & disembarked at Bird's Point on the Mississippi
> > River, a few
> > miles from where the Clines & Keenes lived.
> >
> > Do you see any Keenes in the areas of Ohio that you've traced
> > Clines?
> >
> > Francine Conn Halter
> >
> >
> > ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> > This list is for the discussion of the CLINE surname and variants.
> > The CLINE Resource page for links to the archives and GenConnect
> > boards <A
> >
> HREF="http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=Surnames.Cline">
>
> > POST YOUR CLINE QUERY!</A>
> >
> > ==============================
> > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in
> > the
> > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more:
> > http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx
> >
> >
> >
>
> I don't think this Cline family is related to me. This is a very
> interesting heritage.
> I found my John Cline in Canada.
> Wiesena(a)juno.com
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> This list is for the discussion of the CLINE surname and variants. A>
REMINDER!!! When replying to a message, cut and paste the part of the
message that your are replying to. This makes it easier for readers to
find.
>
> ==============================
> View and search Historical Newspapers. Read about your ancestors, find
> marriage announcements and more. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13969/rd.ashx
>
>
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 23:17:56 EST LFHalter(a)aol.com writes:
> In a message dated 2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time,
> brittons(a)comcast.net writes:
>
>
> > Subj:Re: [CLINE] Cline's in Ohio/VA/PA
> > Date:2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time
> > From:brittons@comcast.net
> > Reply-to:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> > To:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> > Sent from the Internet
> >
> >
> >
> > We've been working on those and associated Clines for some time.
> Isaac
> > Ivnes Cline, b. 1809, probably in MD in the Hagarstown area, was
> my
> > wife's ancestor. A 1950s family genealogy listed siblings Mary,
>
> > Phebe, Saml, Jacob and William, "perhaps others", Isaac being
> the
> > youngest son. It seems likely that your Sam Cline was his eldest
>
> > brother or possibly an uncle. (A 32 year span is wide for one
> mother,
> > though possible, but not for two wives, e.g. 1812 Christopher and
> his
> > wives.)
> >
> > What we know and surmise: Sam Cline & family (including a male b.
> about
> > 1803, probably Jesse Cline) were in Mason County, VA (now WV) for
> the
> > 1810 Census, associated with the Jeremiah Hill and James Cofel
> > families. The location, PA birth and an SC wife are consistent
> with
> > migration via the Hagerstown area, down the Great Wagon Trail and
> west
> > via the Kanawha route. They all seem to have moved on into OH
> around
> > 1817, presumably following what's now Route 35. The Hills stopped
> in
> > Fayette, but the Clines and "Coffields" continued another 20 miles
> or so
> > to Caesars Creek near present New Jasper, Greene County. The 1820
>
> > Census found them adjacent and with the Clines augmented by
> Christopher
> > Cline, b. 1755_+_5, and helper, and William G. Cline. In 1827,
> the
> > Hills led the way north to Bokes Creek, Logan County, probably
> directly
> > up the old Indian trail, to be shortly "followed by the Coffield
> and
> > Cline families". New actors appeared with the 1830 Census, and
> > thereafter things become progressively murkier.
> >
> > A block of 10 adjacent entries in the 1830 Census for Bokes Creek
>
> > consist of 4 Coffields, 2 Hills, father and son, and 4 Clines,
> William,
> > Samuel, Jesse, and "Christian". Caesars Creek Twp. was then down
> to a
> > Jacob Cline (probably unrelated), but Christopher Cline and wife,
> both
> > 70-80, were in offshoot Silver Creek Twp. and missing the young
> man who
> > was with them in 1820. Samuel seems associated with fifteen
> children
> > over a span of about 26 years, assuming Jesse as a first child and
> David
> > the last. From various estimates, his wife Jane could have had
> Jesse in
> > her late teens and David in her early 40s, or married Samuel in
> her
> > early 20s with 2 or 3 children from a first wife. "Christian" maps
> well
> > to the "Christopher" from MD who married Isabella Gordon and
> remained in
> > Bokes Creek through 1870, and as Old Christopher's missing young
> man.
> > He had two 15-20 males with him in 1830, one of whom was
> presumably our
> > Isaac since he married Elizabeth Hill in Bokes Creek the following
>
> > year. That accounts reasonably well for all the Caesars Creek
> Clines of
> > 1820, allowing for female attrition by marriage and excepting 1812
>
> > Christopher, who cannot be found.
> >
> > In the mid to late 1830s, most of the Clines decamped from Bokes
> Creek
> > to Illinois and, apparently, a clan disaster. Samuel moved to
> Perry
> > County, 5 adjacent households in the 1840 Census being of Samuel,
> 2 of
> > his married daughters, 1812 Christopher and Jesse. Jesse had with
> him
> > an unnamed male born 1815_+_5. There was only one adult female
> plus too
> > many and oddly aged children for one family, so presumably one of
> the
> > males was a widower with several young children. Clearly, though,
> this
> > was Samuel's immediate family group. Isaac moved also, but to the
>
> > adjacent county of Washington.
> >
> > By the 1850 Census, Illinois had been abandoned, at least one
> family
> > decapitated, the children living with relatives, and many
> individuals
> > untraceable or dead. Survivors were mostly back in Bokes Creek,
> Isaac
> > and family in next door Jefferson Twp. It's not known what
> happened.
> > The land in the area was apparently poor and even less healthy
> than
> > Bokes Creek before it was drained. Epidemics had occurred and the
>
> > social disorder associated with the Mormon movement had swept
> through
> > the area too. William G. seemed to vanish too, an older William
> and wife
> > appearing to care for an infant William G., suggestive of
> grandparents
> > raising their grandchild.
> >
> > A decade or so later, Isaac Cline and perhaps others tried again,
> moving
> > to Iowa, followed by Jeremiah Hill Jr. to continue approaching a
> century
> > of family association.
> >
> > We have tentatively mapped and assigned most of the Cline families
> of
> > the area and period, but remain notably baffled by the origins of
> the
> > James Cline who married Surrepta Holycross and the other one who
> married
> > Martha King.
> >
> > kb
>
> Thank you for sharing your information. I will save it & let you
> know if
> something connects in the future. You've done a lot of good work in
> thorough
> researching these Clines.
>
> There's a Kline Weyland Cemetery in Cass Co., IN where my Conns came
> from.
> David Conn married Luella Keene whose father was really Charlie
> Cline but
> adopted by Sam Keene. I've wondered if the Clines & Keenes knew
> each other in Ohio,
> came together (probably with wagon train or flat boat down the Ohio
> to the
> Mississippi River & disembarked at Bird's Point on the Mississippi
> River, a few
> miles from where the Clines & Keenes lived.
>
> Do you see any Keenes in the areas of Ohio that you've traced
> Clines?
>
> Francine Conn Halter
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> This list is for the discussion of the CLINE surname and variants.
> The CLINE Resource page for links to the archives and GenConnect
> boards <A
>
HREF="http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=Surnames.Cline">
> POST YOUR CLINE QUERY!</A>
>
> ==============================
> Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in
> the
> last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx
>
>
>
I don't think this Cline family is related to me. This is a very
interesting heritage.
I found my John Cline in Canada.
Wiesena(a)juno.com
It will take a bit to check my files, but presently it's not promising.
I have around 40 Cline marriages from Logan Co., OH, but only 5 pre
1836. None of those has a Catherine, and I don't have a male of
appropriate age who is unaccounted for in the families I've been
researching. If your other names are in my files, they're on paper
dumps of whole districts which I was using to pattern match groups who
moved together. Don't hold your breathe...
I might be able to help with a quick lookup, but I'd like more data,
mostly places and dates.
From the genealogy in your post "Catherine (maiden?) Cline b. 1818
Ohio" of 1/16/05, it looks like Catherine's first child was Lucinda, b.
1833, which would make the marriage pre 1834. Is that right?
Lucinda lives through 1880 and Ira through 1900. Do you know what those
Censuses said about their parents?
Where were (?) Cline and Catherine for the 1840 Census - State, County
and Township or town?
What states were your CONNs, KEENEs and CLINEs in for each Census, with
County and other details if you know them?
kb
In a message dated 2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time,
brittons(a)comcast.net writes:
> Subj:Re: [CLINE] Cline's in Ohio/VA/PA
> Date:2/8/2005 11:53:39 PM Central Standard Time
> From:brittons@comcast.net
> Reply-to:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> To:CLINE-L@rootsweb.com
> Sent from the Internet
>
>
>
> We've been working on those and associated Clines for some time. Isaac
> Ivnes Cline, b. 1809, probably in MD in the Hagarstown area, was my
> wife's ancestor. A 1950s family genealogy listed siblings Mary,
> Phebe, Saml, Jacob and William, "perhaps others", Isaac being the
> youngest son. It seems likely that your Sam Cline was his eldest
> brother or possibly an uncle. (A 32 year span is wide for one mother,
> though possible, but not for two wives, e.g. 1812 Christopher and his
> wives.)
>
> What we know and surmise: Sam Cline & family (including a male b. about
> 1803, probably Jesse Cline) were in Mason County, VA (now WV) for the
> 1810 Census, associated with the Jeremiah Hill and James Cofel
> families. The location, PA birth and an SC wife are consistent with
> migration via the Hagerstown area, down the Great Wagon Trail and west
> via the Kanawha route. They all seem to have moved on into OH around
> 1817, presumably following what's now Route 35. The Hills stopped in
> Fayette, but the Clines and "Coffields" continued another 20 miles or so
> to Caesars Creek near present New Jasper, Greene County. The 1820
> Census found them adjacent and with the Clines augmented by Christopher
> Cline, b. 1755_+_5, and helper, and William G. Cline. In 1827, the
> Hills led the way north to Bokes Creek, Logan County, probably directly
> up the old Indian trail, to be shortly "followed by the Coffield and
> Cline families". New actors appeared with the 1830 Census, and
> thereafter things become progressively murkier.
>
> A block of 10 adjacent entries in the 1830 Census for Bokes Creek
> consist of 4 Coffields, 2 Hills, father and son, and 4 Clines, William,
> Samuel, Jesse, and "Christian". Caesars Creek Twp. was then down to a
> Jacob Cline (probably unrelated), but Christopher Cline and wife, both
> 70-80, were in offshoot Silver Creek Twp. and missing the young man who
> was with them in 1820. Samuel seems associated with fifteen children
> over a span of about 26 years, assuming Jesse as a first child and David
> the last. From various estimates, his wife Jane could have had Jesse in
> her late teens and David in her early 40s, or married Samuel in her
> early 20s with 2 or 3 children from a first wife. "Christian" maps well
> to the "Christopher" from MD who married Isabella Gordon and remained in
> Bokes Creek through 1870, and as Old Christopher's missing young man.
> He had two 15-20 males with him in 1830, one of whom was presumably our
> Isaac since he married Elizabeth Hill in Bokes Creek the following
> year. That accounts reasonably well for all the Caesars Creek Clines of
> 1820, allowing for female attrition by marriage and excepting 1812
> Christopher, who cannot be found.
>
> In the mid to late 1830s, most of the Clines decamped from Bokes Creek
> to Illinois and, apparently, a clan disaster. Samuel moved to Perry
> County, 5 adjacent households in the 1840 Census being of Samuel, 2 of
> his married daughters, 1812 Christopher and Jesse. Jesse had with him
> an unnamed male born 1815_+_5. There was only one adult female plus too
> many and oddly aged children for one family, so presumably one of the
> males was a widower with several young children. Clearly, though, this
> was Samuel's immediate family group. Isaac moved also, but to the
> adjacent county of Washington.
>
> By the 1850 Census, Illinois had been abandoned, at least one family
> decapitated, the children living with relatives, and many individuals
> untraceable or dead. Survivors were mostly back in Bokes Creek, Isaac
> and family in next door Jefferson Twp. It's not known what happened.
> The land in the area was apparently poor and even less healthy than
> Bokes Creek before it was drained. Epidemics had occurred and the
> social disorder associated with the Mormon movement had swept through
> the area too. William G. seemed to vanish too, an older William and wife
> appearing to care for an infant William G., suggestive of grandparents
> raising their grandchild.
>
> A decade or so later, Isaac Cline and perhaps others tried again, moving
> to Iowa, followed by Jeremiah Hill Jr. to continue approaching a century
> of family association.
>
> We have tentatively mapped and assigned most of the Cline families of
> the area and period, but remain notably baffled by the origins of the
> James Cline who married Surrepta Holycross and the other one who married
> Martha King.
>
> kb
Thank you for sharing your information. I will save it & let you know if
something connects in the future. You've done a lot of good work in thorough
researching these Clines.
There's a Kline Weyland Cemetery in Cass Co., IN where my Conns came from.
David Conn married Luella Keene whose father was really Charlie Cline but
adopted by Sam Keene. I've wondered if the Clines & Keenes knew each other in Ohio,
came together (probably with wagon train or flat boat down the Ohio to the
Mississippi River & disembarked at Bird's Point on the Mississippi River, a few
miles from where the Clines & Keenes lived.
Do you see any Keenes in the areas of Ohio that you've traced Clines?
Francine Conn Halter
Our Cline family originated in Waterford, Canada. Previous to that they
were in Germany. After Canada they settled in Bad Axe, Michigan.
On Wed, 09 Feb 2005 00:59:58 -0500 Keith Britton <brittons(a)comcast.net>
writes:
> We've been working on those and associated Clines for some time.
> Isaac
> Ivnes Cline, b. 1809, probably in MD in the Hagarstown area, was my
>
> wife's ancestor. A 1950s family genealogy listed siblings Mary,
> Phebe, Saml, Jacob and William, "perhaps others", Isaac being the
>
> youngest son. It seems likely that your Sam Cline was his eldest
> brother or possibly an uncle. (A 32 year span is wide for one
> mother,
> though possible, but not for two wives, e.g. 1812 Christopher and
> his
> wives.)
>
> What we know and surmise: Sam Cline & family (including a male b.
> about
> 1803, probably Jesse Cline) were in Mason County, VA (now WV) for
> the
> 1810 Census, associated with the Jeremiah Hill and James Cofel
> families. The location, PA birth and an SC wife are consistent with
>
> migration via the Hagerstown area, down the Great Wagon Trail and
> west
> via the Kanawha route. They all seem to have moved on into OH
> around
> 1817, presumably following what's now Route 35. The Hills stopped
> in
> Fayette, but the Clines and "Coffields" continued another 20 miles
> or so
> to Caesars Creek near present New Jasper, Greene County. The 1820
> Census found them adjacent and with the Clines augmented by
> Christopher
> Cline, b. 1755_+_5, and helper, and William G. Cline. In 1827, the
>
> Hills led the way north to Bokes Creek, Logan County, probably
> directly
> up the old Indian trail, to be shortly "followed by the Coffield and
>
> Cline families". New actors appeared with the 1830 Census, and
> thereafter things become progressively murkier.
>
> A block of 10 adjacent entries in the 1830 Census for Bokes Creek
> consist of 4 Coffields, 2 Hills, father and son, and 4 Clines,
> William,
> Samuel, Jesse, and "Christian". Caesars Creek Twp. was then down to
> a
> Jacob Cline (probably unrelated), but Christopher Cline and wife,
> both
> 70-80, were in offshoot Silver Creek Twp. and missing the young man
> who
> was with them in 1820. Samuel seems associated with fifteen
> children
> over a span of about 26 years, assuming Jesse as a first child and
> David
> the last. From various estimates, his wife Jane could have had
> Jesse in
> her late teens and David in her early 40s, or married Samuel in her
>
> early 20s with 2 or 3 children from a first wife. "Christian" maps
> well
> to the "Christopher" from MD who married Isabella Gordon and
> remained in
> Bokes Creek through 1870, and as Old Christopher's missing young
> man.
> He had two 15-20 males with him in 1830, one of whom was presumably
> our
> Isaac since he married Elizabeth Hill in Bokes Creek the following
> year. That accounts reasonably well for all the Caesars Creek
> Clines of
> 1820, allowing for female attrition by marriage and excepting 1812
> Christopher, who cannot be found.
>
> In the mid to late 1830s, most of the Clines decamped from Bokes
> Creek
> to Illinois and, apparently, a clan disaster. Samuel moved to Perry
>
> County, 5 adjacent households in the 1840 Census being of Samuel, 2
> of
> his married daughters, 1812 Christopher and Jesse. Jesse had with
> him
> an unnamed male born 1815_+_5. There was only one adult female plus
> too
> many and oddly aged children for one family, so presumably one of
> the
> males was a widower with several young children. Clearly, though,
> this
> was Samuel's immediate family group. Isaac moved also, but to the
> adjacent county of Washington.
>
> By the 1850 Census, Illinois had been abandoned, at least one family
>
> decapitated, the children living with relatives, and many
> individuals
> untraceable or dead. Survivors were mostly back in Bokes Creek,
> Isaac
> and family in next door Jefferson Twp. It's not known what
> happened.
> The land in the area was apparently poor and even less healthy than
>
> Bokes Creek before it was drained. Epidemics had occurred and the
> social disorder associated with the Mormon movement had swept
> through
> the area too. William G. seemed to vanish too, an older William and
> wife
> appearing to care for an infant William G., suggestive of
> grandparents
> raising their grandchild.
>
> A decade or so later, Isaac Cline and perhaps others tried again,
> moving
> to Iowa, followed by Jeremiah Hill Jr. to continue approaching a
> century
> of family association.
>
> We have tentatively mapped and assigned most of the Cline families
> of
> the area and period, but remain notably baffled by the origins of
> the
> James Cline who married Surrepta Holycross and the other one who
> married
> Martha King.
>
> kb
>
> BHurst1948(a)aol.com wrote:
>
> >I have a Sam Cline b. 1777 in PA. His children:
> >Elizabeth b. 1808 VA. marr. 1829 Fayette Co., Ohio
> >Christopher b. 1812 VA
> >mary J. b. 1822 VA
> >Sam b. 1826 VA
> >David b. 1829 VA
> >All of the above settled in Ohio and all their children were born
> in Ohio -
> >mainly Logan County.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> REMINDER!!! Be sure that your message is read, change the subject
> line to show what your message is about.To contact the list admin:
> <A HREF="MAILTO:CLINEROOTS@AOL.COM"> CLINEROOTS(a)AOL.COM</A>.
>
> ==============================
> Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records.
> New content added every business day. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
>
>
>
We've been working on those and associated Clines for some time. Isaac
Ivnes Cline, b. 1809, probably in MD in the Hagarstown area, was my
wife's ancestor. A 1950s family genealogy listed siblings Mary,
Phebe, Saml, Jacob and William, "perhaps others", Isaac being the
youngest son. It seems likely that your Sam Cline was his eldest
brother or possibly an uncle. (A 32 year span is wide for one mother,
though possible, but not for two wives, e.g. 1812 Christopher and his
wives.)
What we know and surmise: Sam Cline & family (including a male b. about
1803, probably Jesse Cline) were in Mason County, VA (now WV) for the
1810 Census, associated with the Jeremiah Hill and James Cofel
families. The location, PA birth and an SC wife are consistent with
migration via the Hagerstown area, down the Great Wagon Trail and west
via the Kanawha route. They all seem to have moved on into OH around
1817, presumably following what's now Route 35. The Hills stopped in
Fayette, but the Clines and "Coffields" continued another 20 miles or so
to Caesars Creek near present New Jasper, Greene County. The 1820
Census found them adjacent and with the Clines augmented by Christopher
Cline, b. 1755_+_5, and helper, and William G. Cline. In 1827, the
Hills led the way north to Bokes Creek, Logan County, probably directly
up the old Indian trail, to be shortly "followed by the Coffield and
Cline families". New actors appeared with the 1830 Census, and
thereafter things become progressively murkier.
A block of 10 adjacent entries in the 1830 Census for Bokes Creek
consist of 4 Coffields, 2 Hills, father and son, and 4 Clines, William,
Samuel, Jesse, and "Christian". Caesars Creek Twp. was then down to a
Jacob Cline (probably unrelated), but Christopher Cline and wife, both
70-80, were in offshoot Silver Creek Twp. and missing the young man who
was with them in 1820. Samuel seems associated with fifteen children
over a span of about 26 years, assuming Jesse as a first child and David
the last. From various estimates, his wife Jane could have had Jesse in
her late teens and David in her early 40s, or married Samuel in her
early 20s with 2 or 3 children from a first wife. "Christian" maps well
to the "Christopher" from MD who married Isabella Gordon and remained in
Bokes Creek through 1870, and as Old Christopher's missing young man.
He had two 15-20 males with him in 1830, one of whom was presumably our
Isaac since he married Elizabeth Hill in Bokes Creek the following
year. That accounts reasonably well for all the Caesars Creek Clines of
1820, allowing for female attrition by marriage and excepting 1812
Christopher, who cannot be found.
In the mid to late 1830s, most of the Clines decamped from Bokes Creek
to Illinois and, apparently, a clan disaster. Samuel moved to Perry
County, 5 adjacent households in the 1840 Census being of Samuel, 2 of
his married daughters, 1812 Christopher and Jesse. Jesse had with him
an unnamed male born 1815_+_5. There was only one adult female plus too
many and oddly aged children for one family, so presumably one of the
males was a widower with several young children. Clearly, though, this
was Samuel's immediate family group. Isaac moved also, but to the
adjacent county of Washington.
By the 1850 Census, Illinois had been abandoned, at least one family
decapitated, the children living with relatives, and many individuals
untraceable or dead. Survivors were mostly back in Bokes Creek, Isaac
and family in next door Jefferson Twp. It's not known what happened.
The land in the area was apparently poor and even less healthy than
Bokes Creek before it was drained. Epidemics had occurred and the
social disorder associated with the Mormon movement had swept through
the area too. William G. seemed to vanish too, an older William and wife
appearing to care for an infant William G., suggestive of grandparents
raising their grandchild.
A decade or so later, Isaac Cline and perhaps others tried again, moving
to Iowa, followed by Jeremiah Hill Jr. to continue approaching a century
of family association.
We have tentatively mapped and assigned most of the Cline families of
the area and period, but remain notably baffled by the origins of the
James Cline who married Surrepta Holycross and the other one who married
Martha King.
kb
BHurst1948(a)aol.com wrote:
>I have a Sam Cline b. 1777 in PA. His children:
>Elizabeth b. 1808 VA. marr. 1829 Fayette Co., Ohio
>Christopher b. 1812 VA
>mary J. b. 1822 VA
>Sam b. 1826 VA
>David b. 1829 VA
>All of the above settled in Ohio and all their children were born in Ohio -
>mainly Logan County.
>
>
>
I have a Sam Cline b. 1777 in PA. His children:
Elizabeth b. 1808 VA. marr. 1829 Fayette Co., Ohio
Christopher b. 1812 VA
mary J. b. 1822 VA
Sam b. 1826 VA
David b. 1829 VA
All of the above settled in Ohio and all their children were born in Ohio -
mainly Logan County.
There is a CASS county TX but they didn't wander down here now did they
???????????
1st
On Mon, 7 Feb 2005 19:47:53 EST LFHalter(a)aol.com writes:
>
> Can anyone do a lookup for any Keenes or Clines in Cass Co.? Our
> Conns
> (descendants of Henry Clay Conn) went to southeast MO, as did Keenes
> & Clines. To
> date, I know that the Keenes & Clines were in Ohio for births of
> children and
> possibly marriages, but I can't find out where in Ohio. Then I
> discover
> there's a Cline Cemetery in Cass Co.
>
> Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
>
> Francine Conn Halter
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> This list is for the discussion of the CLINE surname and variants.
> The CLINE Resource page for links to the archives and GenConnect
> boards <A
>
HREF="http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=Surnames.Cline">
> POST YOUR CLINE QUERY!</A>
>
> ==============================
> Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records.
> New content added every business day. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
>
>
Can anyone do a lookup for any Keenes or Clines in Cass Co.? Our Conns
(descendants of Henry Clay Conn) went to southeast MO, as did Keenes & Clines. To
date, I know that the Keenes & Clines were in Ohio for births of children and
possibly marriages, but I can't find out where in Ohio. Then I discover
there's a Cline Cemetery in Cass Co.
Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
Francine Conn Halter
What were some of the names of your Clines and dates. I have some in
Richland Co and Washington Co., OH.
Sharie
Oceanside, CA
----- Original Message -----
From: <LFHalter(a)aol.com>
To: <CLINE-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Monday, February 07, 2005 4:47 PM
Subject: [CLINE] Keene-Cline-Conn
>
> Can anyone do a lookup for any Keenes or Clines in Cass Co.? Our Conns
> (descendants of Henry Clay Conn) went to southeast MO, as did Keenes &
Clines. To
> date, I know that the Keenes & Clines were in Ohio for births of children
and
> possibly marriages, but I can't find out where in Ohio. Then I discover
> there's a Cline Cemetery in Cass Co.
>
> Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
>
> Francine Conn Halter
>
>
> ==== CLINE Mailing List ====
> This list is for the discussion of the CLINE surname and variants. The
CLINE Resource page for links to the archives and GenConnect boards <A
HREF="http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=Surnames.Cline">
POST YOUR CLINE QUERY!</A>
>
> ==============================
> Find your ancestors in the Birth, Marriage and Death Records.
> New content added every business day. Learn more:
> http://www.ancestry.com/s13964/rd.ashx
>
>
Can anyone do a lookup for any Keenes or Clines in Cass Co.? Our Conns
(descendants of Henry Clay Conn) went to southeast MO, as did Keenes & Clines. To
date, I know that the Keenes & Clines were in Ohio for births of children and
possibly marriages, but I can't find out where in Ohio. Then I discover
there's a Cline Cemetery in Cass Co.
Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
Francine Conn Halter