There are two approaches to this. Where possible I would start with a clean folder for your new git working directory and then copy your version of things in later. This might look something like*:
mv $dir $dir.orig
git clone $url $dir
rsync -av --delete --exclude '.git' $dir.orig/ $dir/
rm -rf $dir.orig
At this point you should have a pretty clean working copy with your previous working folder as the current working directory so any changes include file deletions will show up on the radar if you run git status
.
On the other hand if you really must do it the other way around, you can get the same result with something like this:
cd $dir
git clone --no-checkout $url tempdir
mv tempdir/.git .
rmdir tempdir
git reset --mixed HEAD
Either way, the first thing I would do is run something like git stash
to get a copy of all your local changes set aside, then you can re-apply them and work through which ones you want to get committed.
* Both examples assume you start out on the shell in the parent directory of your project.