Ishaw (Price) Lott / Pounds, Court Petitioner For More Fair Court

10650 Church Landing Rd, Nichols, SC 29581 Sand Bluff Landin

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Ishaw Lott / Pounds (Price), Court Petitioner For More Fair Court for Natives

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Minoken Town, Old Rappahannock Precinct
Death: circa 1804 (40-57)
10650 Church Landing Rd, Nichols, SC 29581 Sand Bluff Landing
Place of Burial: purchased by I.T. Guide, William Williams in the inventory buy up
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Jinkens Price and Isom Price, of Bear Mtn, Amherst Co, VA
Wife of William Lott, Signatory of Kingston Co Court Petition For More Fair Court
Mother of Joseph Pounds; Rev. Isom Price Pounds, Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents; William Pouns/Pounds Lott II and Sarah Cumbee
Sister of Daniel Price

Managed by: David Goldfarb
Last Updated:

About Ishaw (Price) Lott / Pounds, Court Petitioner For More Fair Court

Ishaw did not married Patriot Samuel Marshall Pounds. as his FTDNA studies showed him to be of a different ydna line.

Ishaw went by the name Pounds which is on the the indenture paper but her 3 sons were Lotts per the ydna and her sons took on the name of their indentureship place as POUNS which was with Collins on the Williams plantation They took on the name if their indentureship. It happened a lot in those days. The first recording if them.using the ""Pouns name was at the Henrico Vo Va deed of Isom Pounds wnich he filpped for Old Cheraw's Dist land and spelled his name Pounds there along with his brothers and the Collins. Their Williams at some point and their diaspora took them to SC where Ishaw's three sons write their x next to their signatures as Pounds and spelled it that was in MS as well, - - Pounds/Lott Family Summary Information.

Biography

Ishaw Pounds was born circa 1755 in Minoken Town, Old Rappahannock Precinct. Her parents were Jinkens Price and Isom Price, of Bear Mtn, Amherst Co, VR. Ishaw married William Lott. Together they had the following children: Rev. Isom Price Pounds,Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents; William C. Pounds; Joseph Pounds; Sarah Pounds.

She died circa 1804 in 10650 Church Landing Rd, Nichols, SC 29581 Sand Bluff Landing and was buried in Episcopal-Methodist Lands, purchased by I.T. Guide, William Williams in the inventory buy up.




Monocan / Minoken Town Trade area over to Bear Creek of the Monocan Nation, taken from the term the Spanish used for "hemp grower" and in the shared diaspora from times of Pardo with all hemp growing Eastern Siouans, this is Isom = Ishaw which means "Little Corn or Cornstalk" and is the same name carried down for preceeding generations. Ishaw's daughter bore the same middle name of Price as one of Ishaw's boys. Direct descent from a male ydna I2A Iberian Group with Azore Island, Portuguese origins, married into West Indies same as Indian John West's ydna line from MO, of ydna I S25; also called I-223 line, in common to to Ishaw's Pounds named sones,. matches with atDNA cousins in mapping which shows that Ishaw's sons were Lott descendants of Lotoya Island - Kateras Native (Cheraw) i.e. Hateras; and also that Ishaw's line goes to Patawomek's line of succession, to Isomgosiono. The marriage source and the land grantees of these brothers are among Eastern Siouan - diaspora of Old Cheraw/Chief Men of the Nottoway/Nottoway Cheraw/ Later called Dimery Settlement; but, at the time of the stay in the SC, they stayed a few decades and in that time, stood with others at the Kingston Co. Court Petition where they protested for a more fair court for free people of color, and that is where they signed their X (so we know they were illiterate) along with the Chief Men of the Nottoway on the Pre-Dimery Petition of Kingston Co, SC for a new courthouse in 1809. This is part of their diaspora and one of many proofs of their being discriminated against. They were unhappy with their treatment by the current court. (Source to be added: Horry Co Geneological Society Records. Their history as Siouans is proven by a large group testing, compared to the Rorey and Walker cousins for segment matching; compared by triangulation via a hired professional and reported in 13 pages of triangulation comparisons with Siouan, Lumbee, Southern Tuscororan cousins and is on the source file of Ishaw Isom Sarah Price. The plantation she was connected to will have a picture in the media section just as soon as possible. (Source: Cheroenhaka cousin's cartography gift). The were former land owners elsewhere after having been apprenticed to age 21 and very connected with William Williams, Nottoway Planter family whose families go back for generations. More will be added to the media and source section of this profile over time.

Biography

Ishaw Pounds was born in 1744 in Minoken Town, Old Rappahannock Precinct. Her parents were Trader Jinkens Price and Isom Price, dtr in law of Widow Price of Northhampton 1666 Tithables.

Ishaw married Patriot Samuel M. Pounds. Together they had the following children: Joseph Pounds / Cheraw; Rev. Isom Pounds /Cheraw; William C. Pounds / Cheraw; Sarah Price (Pounds) Sutton-Cumbo.

She died circa 1808 in Dog's Bluff, Horry County, SC and was buried in Waccamaw Boundary .



See the SNP Group Professional Study in Source section of this profile.

Isom - Ishaw means "Cornstalk" and is the same name carried down for preceeding generations. Ishaw's daughter bore the same middle name as one of Ishaw's boys. Direct descent from a male ydna I2A Iberian Group with Azore Island, Portuguese origins, married into West Indies same as Indian John West's ydna line from MO, of ydna I S25; also called I-223 line, in common to to Samuel Pounds. matches with atDNA cousins in mapping which shows that Ishaw's sons were Samuel Pounds and also that Ishaw's line goes to Patawomek's line of succession, to Isomgosiono. The marriage source and the land grantees of these brothers are among Eatern Siouan - diaspora of Old Cheraw/Chief Men of the Nottoway/Nottoway Cheraw/ Later called Dimery Settlement; but, at the time of the stay in the SC, they stayed a few decades and in that time, stood with others at the Kingston Co. Court Petition where they protested for a more fair court for free people of color, and that is where they signed their X (so we know they were illiterate) along with the Chief Men of the Nottoway on the Pre-Dimery Petition of Kingston Co, SC for a new courthouse in 1809. This is part of their diaspora and one of many proofs of their being discriminated against. They were unhappy with their treatment by the current court. (Source to be added: Horry Co Geneological Society Records. Their history as Siouans is proven by a large group testing, compared to the Rorey and Walker cousins for segment matching; compared by triangulation via a hired professional and reported in 13 pages of triangulation comparisons with Siouan, Lumbee, Southern Tuscororan cousins and is on the source file of Ishaw Isom Sarah Price. The plantation she was connected to will have a picture in the media section just as soon as possible. (Source: Cheroenhaka cousin's cartography gift). The were former land owners elsewhere after having been apprenticed to age 21 and very connected with William Williams, Nottoway Planter family whose families go back for generations. More will be added to the media and source section of this profile over time.

Ameri-Indians, the Monacan Siouians lived on the James River near Goochland, above the falls at Richmond, VA. Monocan means "Hemp Grower". Their history is they were captive from Wichita, KS are, in the attacks of Pardo/Prieto starting in 1570 era and brought to Minoken Town area, still a town, by the Spanish, the Iberian Spain Pardo/Prieto, et al, reduced the metropolis of Witicha of its Chiwere Siouan from 20,000 to a small number. They are still represented in Wichita, KS and on parts eastern and were and are kin to all Siouan groups of the eastern NA. Being that all the NA who remained intermarried in the Northern Neck due to Col Claiborne's 1631 New Kent Fur Trade Colony and provision for the Northern Neck NA to be allowed not to have to pay for what the troublesome Cumberland NA who were implicated in raiding, everyone that far back is showing kinship in the 3 major language speaking NA contingients. That is because everyone who survived were encamped together in 1724 during a very deadly time due to small pox epidemics. So, the cousin matching that shows this is in the Source Section. Look for the Bogue Chitto study. It's 13 pages long in its long form.

FROM ANCESTRY.COM -

Isom, the wife of John Pounds IV, was the only known American Indian in the family tree. She was most likely from the Monacan Indian Tribe, which is apart of the Siouian linguistic group. Their village of about 100 people was located on the James River near Goochland above the falls at Richmond.



Ancestral File No. 1N3W-WZ3

Source: MyHeritage Family Trees MyHeritage.com [online database]. Lehi, UT, USA: MyHeritage (USA) Inc. https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-1/myheritage-family-...

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Ishaw (Price) Lott / Pounds, Court Petitioner For More Fair Court's Timeline

1755
1755
Minoken Town, Old Rappahannock Precinct
1776
1776
Georgia Avenue, Carolina Beach, New Hanover County, NC, 28428, United States
1782
January 10, 1782
Onslow County, NC, United States

DOB may have been January 10, 1774, per Keith Pounds.

1793
1793
Wilmington, New Hanover County, NC, United States
1803
1803
Georgia, United States
1804
1804
Age 49
10650 Church Landing Rd, Nichols, SC 29581 Sand Bluff Landing
????
Episcopal-Methodist Lands, purchased by I.T. Guide, William Williams in the inventory buy up