Tuesday, August 22, 2017

The Cline Home in Morehouse, MO - 1890-1926 - Part 1 of 3


My father, Curtis Henry Cline, was born in this house on May 14, 1911, in Morehouse, Missouri, to William Henry and Nancy Lena (Kline) Cline.  He was the next to the youngest child in this family. Curtis had three brothers and three sisters.  Howard was born in 1891 and died 1967, a sister, Eula Cline Goolsby born in 1895 and died 1982, William "Ed" was born 1899 and died 1957, Gazwell born 1903 and died 1983, Vera Cline Johnson born 1905 and died 1995, Grace Cline Dye born 1907 and died 1989.  My dad had one younger brother, Clarence Dennis "Cotton" born November 19, 1913, in Morehouse, Missouri, when Curtis Henry was 2 years old.  Less than a year later, my Dad's mother Nancy Lena passed away on August 31, 1914, in a hospital at Cairo, Illinois, at the age of 44.  Cairo had the nearest hospital to Morehouse.


My brothers and I heard about the beautiful house our Dad grew up in many times.  Late in his life, he visited me and my husband, Tom, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  We took my dad and mother for a day in sugar cane country.  There was a large plantation home nearby, and we took my parents inside for a tour.  My dad's eyes lit up when we went into the dining room.  Then tears came to his eyes when he said, "The house I grew up in had a beautiful dining room something like this.  The table was long like this one, with twelve chairs to seat twelve people."  I knew the Cline family had a large set of fine china which dad and my aunts and uncles used to talk about.  They all said their home was one of the largest and most beautiful in Morehouse.  Their Uncle Madison Tickell and his family had one identical to their home, except the Cline home had more gingerbread accents.  It was an enjoyable day spent with my parents on that visit.

When we returned home to Baton Rouge, I took my dad into
our office and had him describe their home and the dishes he remembered so well.  Dad recalled the house had two floors, and it was made of cypress wood from a local sawmill.  Curtis remembered it was an early colonial style home which was popular at that time.  The house was painted white, and the boys had to repaint the house every other year.  The broad front had porches up and down stairs extending the width of the house.  Two large rooms and a hall opened on this porch. He laughed saying that his sisters call it a gallery,
The back of the house showing the "L".
not a porch.  The doors were paneled, 
and the hall door had a transom of small panes.


There were nine rooms in the main part of the house, four large rooms downstairs and five bedrooms upstairs.  The kitchen and pantries were back in the "L" part of the house.  There were two bedrooms above the kitchen and pantries.  


Curtis with brother
Dennis and pet dog
as teenagers.
Curtis talked about the family pets and the family's fine buggy.  They had several horses that all the family members use to ride, but they had a special horse that was utilized with the buggy.  He remembered his Grandmother and sister Eula took the horse and buggy to New Madrid once a month to take care of business.  They left after breakfast and did not get back to the house until it was time to eat supper.  He laughed and said, "Today, you could drive there, take care of business, and be back home within two or three hours."  Then he recalled they had a dog and a cat too and everyone had their favorite pet, but he enjoyed them all.


Next week, learn more about my father's memories related to this fine house.









No comments:

Post a Comment