John Mull, son of Peter and Barbara (Kline/Cline) Mull was born 1760. He died 12 October 1812 in Lincoln County (present-day Catawba County), North Carolina. His tombstone at Mull's Chapel Baptist Church Cemetery in Catawba County reads: "John Mull 1760-12 Oct 1812, Aged 52y" [1]
Revolutionary War soldier, fought at the Battle of Kings Mountain.
John Mull's Lincoln County Estate Papers are available at the North Carolina State Archives (box no. CR.060.508.97, John Mull, 1813) and digital images are available at FamilySearch.
Catherine (Whitener a.k.a. Weidner) Mull survived her husband John Mull. Her tombstone adjacent to her husband's reads "Catharine Mull died 1838 Aged 83y"[2]
At April 1814 term of Burke County Court, the heirs of Peter Mull petitioned for a partition of the land they inherited from their father. The 1814 petition establishes that his son John Mull was deceased and that he left the following heirs: Elizabeth Moll, wife of George Mosteller [Elizabeth born 1782, died 1839] Peter Moll [1784-1862; spouse: Barbara Carpenter] Henry Moll [1787-1857; spouse Mary Hull] Jacob Moll [c1790-1870; spouse Maria Hildebrand] Sally Moll, a minor [c1800-; spouses James Ramsey, John McLanney] William Moll, a minor [1804-; spouse Angelina Mull] John Moll, a minor [1794-1839; spouse Sarah Sigman] Catherine Moll, a minor [1796-1881; spouse John Kline/Cline][3]
Sources
↑Find A Grave memorial 39460528 created 14 July 2009 by Elizabeth Olmstead.
↑Find A Grave memorial 39461767 created 14 July 2009 by Elizabeth Olmstead.
↑ Burke County, North Carolina, Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, April 1814 sessions; microfilm CR.014.30002, North Carolina State Archives.
Anne Williams McAllister, Heinrich Weidner 1717-1792 and Catherina Mull Weidner 1733-1804: Through Four Generations] With Important Contributions From Gracie Seitz Cook, Dr. Joy E. Whitner, and Kathy Gunter Sullivan (Privately printed, 1992), vol. I and Through Four Generations With Important Contributions from Gracie Seitz Cook (Privately printed, 1996), vol. II. Digital versions of both volumes are available at Family History Centers.
Acknowledgments
This person was created on 18 March 2011 through the import of knox17032011.ged.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with John by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with John:
Mull-99 and Mull-56 appear to represent the same person because: Both are Henry Mull who died in 1857 and was buried in Mull's Chapel Cemetery and was the father of Sarah Mull Marsteller/Mosteller
Mull-211 and Mull-56 appear to represent the same person because: Henry Mull who was buried in Mull's Chapel Cemetery in 1857 was the son of John and Catherine Mull and was the father of Sarah Mull Marsteller/Mosteller