Anna Lowry, Progenitor of Cheraw MS

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Anna Catherine Glover (d'Laury)

Also Known As: "Lowery/Lowrey/d'Laury"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Cape Charles, Northampton County, VA, United States
Death: March 03, 1810 (94-103)
Camden, Kershaw County, SC, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of James Lowrey, of Kent Fur Trade, Hateras and Priscilla Lowery
Wife of Sgt. William Glover, III, Ulathaupzye and Treaty Signatory
Mother of Joseph Frederick Glover; Ulathaupzye' John Abner Glover Sr.; Drury Glover; John R. Glover; William Glover, IV and 1 other
Sister of Robert Lowery; Thomas Lowery / Hateras and William Lowery
Half sister of James d'Laury Lowery, Hateras and William Lowry / Hateras and Meherrin

Guilford Community: Lumberton, SC Census with Reagan, Cumbo, and Glover who left for what is now Cheraw, MS
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Anna Lowry, Progenitor of Cheraw MS

Anna d'Laury was born circa 1711 in Drowning Creek, NC, Edgecombe Co became, present day Robeson. . Anna married Sgt. William Glover, III, Treaty Signatory. Together they had the following children: Ulathaupzye' John Abner Glover Sr. paper proven; Joseph Frederick Glover not vetted; John R. Glover not vetted William Glover vetted; She died in What became Robeson Co.Ann Glover (born Lowery) Thought to tie to d'Laury of the court case with the d'Laury/Lowery who was pulled into court in Wicocomico lands of the Fur Trade where it is recorded that D'Laury/Lowery/Lowrey did not pay for the skin color taxation of the Brit colony for his being Wicocomico and was fined for it. (Tithable = Skin color poll taxation of that place and at that time). LOWRY of the Mulatto designation from Robeson County go back to New Kent Fur Trade per research of multiple parties who mostly quote court records of the era and also [Byrd, William L., III, Bladen County Tax Lists, 1768-1774, Volume I]. (Robeson was formed from Bladen in 1797).

1770, pp.24-46

Mullatos: Isaac, John., Eliza & Hannah HAYES, John Cumbo, John JOHNSTON & wife, Titus OVERTON & wife, John Bullard & Gutridge LOCKLEAR, Benja. Lamb, Simon COX, Gilbert COX & James Percey, CANNON CUMBO, James CARTER Senr. & Junr. & Isaac CARTER, Frederick GOIN & wife, John Waldon, Adam Ivey, John Phillips, Isaac & Needham Lamb, Arthur Lamb, Wm Wilkins, Charles OXENDINE, Elisha Sweeting, Sarah & James SWEAT, Daniel Wharton & wife, David Braveboy, Peter Causey & son David, Joseph Clark, Ishmael CHAVIS, James DIAL & Wife, Thos. Groom, John Hammons, Richd. Jones & wife, Solomon James, Solomon Johnston & wife, Solomon Johnston Junr. & wife, Major Locklear, James LOWRY & Wm Jones, Jacob Locklear, John Locklear & wife & son Wm

Bogue Chitto Cousin Study 2016 run by Tushanna Corkern and Rachelle Roby Results of atdna Commuity Study of 100 plus cousins in the community of the census where William Glover is listed near Cannon Cumbo on the censes, bottom line findings: Cheraw, MS are kin in a signature SNP on the 16th chromosome in a very large SNP that runs half of the 16th chromosome segment due to cousinship of and to Glovers, Moores, Oxendine, Bloom, Osborne/Lowry Circles of the Lumbee,,and Saponi. Cheraw MS cousins who share Moore/Morris, Glover,,Oxendine, and Lowry ancestry triangulate with Lumbee and Saponi cousins (in same chromosome and segment matches). Cheraw SC and Cheraw MS cousin triangulations lead to Moore/Morris via Glover; to Osborne via Oxendine/Lowry from Mrs Frank McClendon, and Cumbo Circle closest to Isom Cumbo as those particular cousins had already worked out their cM amounts in community studies of Anderson Co, NC cousins and Saponi cousins in terms of 5th and less cousin distance. By the 2018 time frame, a signature SNP became very clear with hundreds more adding their test information into the mix. MyHeritage Family Trees

Family Web Site, managed by The Scholten/King/Mathes Family

Birth: Circa 1714 - Surrey Co., VA

Death: Before 1735

Husband: William Glover

MyHeritage Family Trees SOWEGA151029 in Blewett Web Site, managed by Michael K. Blewett

Birth: Circa 1714 - Northampton County, NC

Death: Northampton, NC

Husband: Sgt. William Glover III Ann Glover (born Lowery)

MyHeritage Family Trees SOWEGA151029 in Blewett Web Site, managed by Michael K. Blewett Birth: Circa 1714 - Northampton County, NC Death: Northampton, NC Husband: William Iii Glover Ann Glover (born Lowery)

MyHeritage Family Trees SOWEGA151029 in Blewett Web Site, managed by Michael K. Blewett Birth: Circa 1714 - Northampton County, NC Death: Northampton, NC Husband: William Iii Glover Children: William Iv Glover, Lowery Glover, Isham Glover, Mary Glover, John Glover, Drewry I Glover, Elizabeth Sandifer (born Glover), Jesse I Glover



was from the Tuscarora Nation


Fought in the American Revolution as well as his son William.

Indian Patriot

BJL Note #01

William Lowry

http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Lemon_Lytle.htm

William Lowry, born say 1754, was called the son of James Lowry in an 18 February 1775 deed by which he purchased land in Bladen County from Ann Perkins. He sold land in Bladen County shortly afterwards on 2 May 1775 [DB 23:481-2; 36:381]

This Ann Perkins was Mary Ann Johnston that married Joshua Perkins (he died in 1755). Then she married John McPhaul a Highland Scot from Cumberland County, NC.

(Notes from Cape Fear Clans about the McPhaul family)

http://www.capefearclans.com/

He was accompanied by his son, Neill McPhaul. Leaving their fellow-emigrants in the Cross Creek settlements of the upper Cape Fear section, John McPhaul and his son, Neill McPhaul, followed the high ground southward and managed to effect a crossing of the turbid Big Raft Swamp somewhere in the vicinity of what is now Antioch Church community. The Big Raft Swamp presented quite a formidable barrier in those days and tradition has it that John McPhaul was the first Scotsman to effect a crossing.

Proceeding only a short distance further, they came to what is now called Little Raft Swamp but which has also been known as Lowrie's Swamp, McPhaul's Mill Swamp, Branch of the Raft Swamp, and Mill Prong of the Raft Swamp. Here they found a tiny settlement around a tavern kept by a widow and her comely daughter - Ann Perkins [Her name is Marrion in her will, though Marrion and Mary Ann are interchangeable in that there was no standardized spelling at this time.] and Mary Perkins. It was here that they also found contentment for in time Ann Perkins became the wife of John McPhaul and "Pretty Molly" [or "Pretty Polly"] Perkins married Neill McPhaul. Thus was founded the McPhaul family in North Carolina.

Ann Perkins was granted fifty acres of land "lying on a branch of the Raft Swamp" by patent dated April 20, 1767 [She also was granted 100 acres in 1772, NC Grant #351, "on Beaverdam branch So of the Raft Swamp which is a branch of Richland Swamp".] and John McPhaul was granted one hundred acres "lying on the mill prong of the Raft Swamp" by patent dated December 22, 1770. The grant to John McPhaul reveal that the two tracts of land were adjacent.

BJL Note #02

Revolutionary War

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/historyfiction/fullview.aspx?id=loh

James Lowrie had three sons, viz: William, Thomas and James, and at the commencement of the Revolutionary War William, his oldest, being then about grown, entered into the struggle for independence and joined the brave and patriotic band, then under the command of that noble Whig patriot, Col. Thomas Robeson, after whom and in honor of whom Robeson county was named. William Lowrie made a good Whig soldier and fought side by side with the whites in every skirmish and battle in which Col. Robeson was engaged. Whilst piloting Col. Wade and his men across Drowning Creek, after a massacre at Piney Bottom, in Cumberland county, William Lowrie received a severe sword cut in his left hand from a Tory named James McPherson, who resided on the place then owned by Col. Charles Malloy, now Laurel Hill Church, in Richmond county.

The skirmish between Col. Wade's men and the Tories took place on the spot of ground on which Montpelier Church was erected, near Bettie's bridge, now Gilchrist's bridge, in the upper portion of Robeson county, immediately on Drowning Creek, in Robeson county, and William Lowrie carried the marks of this wound to his grave as a token of his devotion to the Whig cause. After the close of the Revolutionary War William Lowrie received a pension for this same sword cut from the government up to the day of his death, as the records in the Pension Office at Washington City will show.

The other two sons of James Lowrie, viz: Thomas and James were of tender age and too young to enter the service. The feelings and sentiments of James Lowie, their father, were on the Whig side, although he took no active part either way. Living, however, so near to McPhaul's Mill, (a distance of not more than three miles) the then general rendezvous or head-quarters of the Tories from the whole adjacent country, he became obnoxious to them on account of his son William being in the Whig ranks.

BJL Note #03

Post Revolutionary War

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/historyfiction/fullview.aspx?id=loh

Soon after the close of the Revolutionary War, prejudices becoming so rife against him and his son William, on account of Whig principles, James Lowrie sold out on Lowrie Swamp to John Gilchrist in 1791, and moved down on Drowning Creek, near his old friend Silas Atkins and settled on the place now known as “the Harper Ferry place.” Here he kept a house of entertainment for the traveling public, in connection with a grocery or drinking saloon. Here he died, leaving land and negroes to his children and a good name to his posterity.

BJL Note #04

William Lowry Family

http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/historyfiction/fullview.aspx?id=loh

After the death of James Lowrie, his son William Lowrie married Bettie Locklaer, a half-breed Tuscarora Indian woman (Locklaer meaning “hold fast”). Allen Lowrie, a son of William Lowrie, married Pollie Cumba, a woman of Portuguese extraction. He raised a large family of sons and daughters; and four of his sons, viz: William Lowrie, Steve Lowrie, Thomas Lowrie, Henry Berry Lowrie, were concerned in the depredations committed in the county of Robeson, from their inception, while it is due to history to record that his other sons had no connection whatever with their four brothers engaged in robbing.

BJL Note #05

Genealogy Chart Lowry Family Robeson County North Carolina

Compiled by Ronald H. Lowry, 1975-1985, Virginia Beach, Virginia

Resources:

(1) Marvin Lowry...oral communications

(2) Rev. Doctor Fuller Lowry...written communications

(3) Dr. Earl C. Lowry...written communications

(4) Genealogical Research in Libraries in Hampton Roads, Virginia

   Genealogy excerpts from the Carolina Indian Voice Newspaper, Pembroke,NC

William Lowry---wife---Bettie Locklear (daughter of Benet Locklear)

a veteran of the Revolutionary War

He inherited a plantation of 100 acres or more

Sons:

George Lowry---wife---????????

Allen Lowry---wife---1st...Katerine Locklear 2nd...Mary Polly Cumbo (daughter of Stephen Cumbo)

Name

   James Lowrie Gender
   Male Military Date
   31 May 1777 Military Place
   Virginia, USA State or Army Served
   Virginia Regiment
   1st Regiment Rank
   Private
view all

Anna Lowry, Progenitor of Cheraw MS's Timeline

1711
1711
Cape Charles, Northampton County, VA, United States
1740
1740
Northampton County, North Carolina, United States
1740
North Carolina, British Colonial America
1740
Union, South Carolina, United States
1743
1743
1755
1755
Edisto Island, Charleston County, SC
1810
March 3, 1810
Age 99
Camden, Kershaw County, SC, United States
????
????