Rev. Isom Price Pounds, Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents

Cheraw, Marion County, MS, United States

Rev. Isom Price Pounds, Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Rev. Isom Price Pounds

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Onslow County, NC, United States
Death: November 02, 1856 (74)
Cheraw, Marion County, MS, United States
Place of Burial: Cheraw, Marion County, MS, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of William Lott, Signatory of Kingston Co Court Petition For More Fair Court and Ishaw (Price) Lott / Pounds, Court Petitioner For More Fair Court
Husband of Sarah Henley and Margaret Parker, co-founder of Cheraw, MS
Father of Mary Ann Pigott; Sarah Ann Pounds; John J. Pounds; Theodore Pounds; Margaret Ellison (Pounds) Collins and 6 others
Brother of Joseph Pounds; William Pouns/Pounds Lott II and Sarah Cumbee

Occupation: First Circuit Preacher To The Florida Parishes; Baptist Minister
Managed by: Marsha Gail Veazey
Last Updated:

About Rev. Isom Price Pounds, Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents

  • Disconnection of profiled former assumed father Samuel Pounds, Captain of Isom Pounds and his brothers from Patriot Samuel Pounds per The Administrator of the Pounds FTDNA project, Lee Pounds, reports this; The ydna is IM233 yDNA . Lee Pounds: "Now we come to the estate of David Walker in 1806 in Columbia Co, GA. David was the father of Mary Walker who married John Pound and Sarah Walker who married Samuel Pound, the Rev War soldier. In a deed in Book H Page 184, his executors, in a deed dated Jan 19 1808 granted the widow Elizabeth Walker to right to use the estate of David Walker through her natural life. One of the executors was the above Mary Walker Pound. In a addendum to the deed, two men, Jared Pound and Isham Pound, dated 20 Jan 1808, Made the following statement: They bound themselves to perform all the obligations in the deed "in the event of our being the heirs of Samuel Pound, who is one of the legal heirs of said David Walker, deceased, 20 Jan 1808."
  • Do not confuse with Isham Pound of Columbia Co GA was married to Sarah Hendley 5 April 1808 in Columbia Co., GA. Isham is listed in the 1805-1806 tax lists of Columbia County along with Jared Pound and David Walker. Isham, Jared and David Pounds witnessed each other's marriages in the 1807 to 1809 time period. then a few years later Sarah Pound and Robert Crawford received letters of administration for Isham Pound, deceased, on November 2, 1812. I have a copy of this document. This means Isham of Columbia Co., GA, the son of Samuel Pound and Sarah Walker and heir of David Walker, died in 1812 in Columbia Co.. GA. This man can't be the Isom Pound living in Marion Co., South Carolina in 1810 who went to Mississippi and Louisiana. Then there is the the ydna that belongs to the Lott family as the ydna of Rev Isom Pounds is not that of Samuel Pounds. Then, there is the atDna side of this which has been studied in community studies and also is easiest to see on the 23andMe where that does all of the work in triangulation and at a click and a glance where it is easy to see that the cousin cM amounts of atdna studies are in 3rd cousin ranges for Pounds who have been matching signature SNPs that are known "Lott" SNP, which makes sense given that the ydna is the same as that of the Joshua Samuel Lott ydna and the chromosome mapping that has been taking place on 23andMe = professionally done with the click of a touch for the closest of the cousin to see and verify, reverify or should they want to run their kits in the Tier One group browser, this is easy to do given that we started making our kit numbers available on the ends of our Geni names and in our social media groups. r efforts to end poll taxation on ethnicity. The fulcrum of the Lott intersection was at Kingston Co where signing their marks were Ishaw's three sons and one and one only Lott in the mix. The ydna story goes back to the upline of the adjudicated orphaned father of Capt John Lott with the map telling the rest of the tell based on their land holdings: Lotoya Island on the Outer Banks / Kateras - Cheraw by Marriage of Iberian Mediterraneans of New Spain, pre Brittish era and post British era as Spain did not release control of Florida on the East side til 1816; though Spain ceded to this particular group of people in their 74 day Lone Star Republic where they revolted against Spainish control and they were successful for 74 days until the Americans annexed them. The Cheraw story goes back in writing to the Valley of the Xualla as the chroniclers for DeSoto had it logged then in the late 1600's, the Spanish expedition to refind LaSalle's colony in said valley happened after West Spanish Florida was exchanged from France back to Spain, a great way to get out of treaties with natives and a sad fact. The location of the Valley of the Xualla was in the same place but the people were missing. That is because they had been hauled over from Tazewell to the Nottoway for this particular group and then some hauled by ship, Godfrey treaty signer of Middle Plantation and his Chalmette/Shoemaker wife. So, full circle this group came back and when they had the chance to flip their land from the US Presidents, they name it Cheraw, MS.

PLEASE CLICK ON THE MEDIA SECTION FOR MORE INFORMATION and visit our family doings at [www.oldcheraws.org] ==Biography==
Isom means Little Corn and self spelled his name as " Isom Pouns " where he made his mark of his x spot on his New Hanover NC property deed that he flipped for his Old Cheraws' land, where he is next noted to have marked his x where his name was spelled Isom Pouns along with his 2 brothers and a Lott signatory. His name was spelled Isham Pound/Pounds, found in Columbia Co., Georgia and Hancock Co., GA, on his indenture transcript in Hancock Co., GA in which Samuel Pound late of Washington Co,, GA indentured his son Isham Pounds to James and Liddy Britten. Interestingly, the Brittens were the parents of James Britten Jr who married Frances Pound, the daughter of Reuben Pound the Revolutionary War Soldier. This gives Isham Pounds's birth date as Jan 10, 1782.Rev. Isom Pounds /Cheraw was born on January 10, 1782 in Onslow Co, NC to his native mother who was second wife of Patriot Samuel Pounds, a shoemaker for the length of the Revolution. Read more at this profile:

[Samuel Pounds, Captain Patriot Samuel M. Pounds] and [Ishaw (Price) Lott / Pounds, Court Petitioner For More Fair Court Ishaw Pounds].  Rev.  Isom Pounds was the First Circuit Preacher in the Florida Parishes, (Convention of the former New Sweeden, first Baptists in America in now NJ) and was community tied to everyone from Augusta Ga over to Liberty Co., TX  or what became for his son, the First Southern Baptist Ministers-Co-Ministry within what became the state of MS. Two personal reservations for his previously being tithable in the Britton 's house as signed off by his dad's indenture signature, were obtained due to the waiting for said reservations first in St Tammany in the company of then Indian Territorial Guide, "Choctaw Bill" Williams ( - who was Nottoway Cheraw, not Choctaw).  The passport was not for safe passage through Creek Territory.  It was for his personal reserve application process that resulted 2 checkerboarded personal reservations, one from Pres Van Buran, one in Hinds Co from Andrew Jackson in 1835 and the last one went separately to his son, Rev Joe Pounds from Pres Buchannon. This was a re-recognition of the flipping of the piece meal properties and buying land with the funds at what they named Cheraw, MS.  

Isom Price Pouns when holding land in New Hanover Co, in NC back when he was married Sarah (Henley) Pounds. Later Isom Price Pouns,marked his x by his name Isom Pouns with his brother spelling their name the same way, in 1809 at the Kingston Co Court petition back when or close to being married to his co= Founder of Cheraw, MS, Margaret Parker Pounds on April 7, 1808 in South Carolina, United States. Together they had the following children: Mary Ann Pounds; John J. Pounds; Sarah Ann Pounds; Theodore Pounds; Margaret Ellison Collins; Isom Johnson Pounds; Rev. Joseph Edward Pounds; Elizabeth Ann Dairs; Andrew Jackson Pounds; Robert M. Pounds; Minerva Caroline Keller.

He died on November 2, 1856 in Cheraw, MS and was buried in November 1856 in Cheraw, Marion/ portion now in Pearl River Co., MS, United States.



Father of Mary Ann Pounds; John J. Pounds; Sarah Ann Pounds; Theodore Pounds; Margaret Ellison Collins; Isom Johnson Pounds; Rev. Joseph Edward Pounds; Elizabeth Ann Dairs; Andrew Jackson Pounds; Robert M. Pounds and Minerva Caroline Keller « less Brother of Joseph Pounds / Cheraw; William C. Pounds / Cheraw and Sarah Price (Pounds) Sutton-Cumbo Half brother of Elizabeth Sarah Pounds and John Leroy Pounds

Source: Media Tab has FTDNA results. ydna I-M253 = Reuben Pounds( I-M225) direct descendant's ydna. I S25 451 Cluster = descendant claimant, Robert Pounds(I-M223) of the Lott Lett FTDNA Project. The West Family Ydna Project - Group 7 b is where the "Sonne of Queen of Pamaunky" cluster is with I S25 519 claimant line.

Etnicity Source: Cheraw youth Indenture til age 21 in house of Britton.

Ethnicity Source: Media Tab has the Indenture Bond (Natives had to be indentured apprentices til age 21 per state law) from Hancock Co, GA Indentureship Lists the incorrect place of Isom's death and incorrect date and misspelled name spelling. He signed his mark as Isom Pouns - -on land deed flips in VA to Little PeDee Horse Swamp and not too far from what would become known as Dimery Settlement.

Deeds: In 1810, Pouns (as they each placed their mark by their X on the Horry Co Petition for a more fair court, were 3 Pouns (as they spelled it) brothers who had sold in Prince George Parish and moved to then Marion County, SC. Isom and one of his 2 brothers, Joseph Pounds, appear in Hinds Co with land deed proof; but, are absent on the 1820 MS census because of a residence post in Abner Jenkin's Bogue Chitto neighborhood in St. Tammany Parish, then Luisiana, Nuevo Espania taked over for the West Spanish Florida section of the troops with William C. C. Claiborne who became territorial gov of then MS Territory. Boutnty lands in Hinds County with the actual signature of Andrew Jackson came to Rev. Isom Pounds, a circuit preacher from FL which fell from the British in 1813 over to parts in East TX and then who was enumerated on the 1830 Mississippi census for Hinds County, page 208. Those records indicated Rev Isom Pounds was between the ages of 40 - 60 and his family consisted of 1 son (Robert), under 10 years of age; 2 sons (probably Andrew Jackson and Joseph Edward), 10 - 20 years of age; 1 son (John J.), 20 - 40 years of age; 2 daughters (Minerva and Elizabeth), under the age of 10; 2 daughters, 10 - 20 years of age (Margaret and Mary Ann); and his wife (Margaurite, dtr of Simon & Margaurite of Georgetown, SC of the line of Old Cheraw Chief Thomas Parker of Tabb Creek, NC), who was between the ages of 40 - 60. The only child not listed was probably Isom Johnson, who would have been about 15 years old and possibly out on his own. Rev. Isom Pounds moved his family back to St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana after 1835 but before 1840. Most of the older children of Isom declared to have been born in Horry Co, SC where John Dimery had begun the Dimery Settlement for Cheraw and the Cheroenhaka of the Nottoway. His property transfer for his wife is a Horry Geneological Society web search under their website and is tied to the Old Cheraw Chief Thomas Parker of Tabb Creek, NC. Other land purchased by Rev Isom Pounds were two properties in Conveyance Book C for Marion Co. MS (1, on page 26) Sampson Pope and Esther, his wife, for $300 sell to Isom Pounds a tract of land - E half of NW quarter and the E half of the SW quarter of S 10, T 2, R 13E, containing 160 acres. Dated 4/30/1835. Transaction witnessed by J. W. Pittman. (2, on page 66) Sampson Pope for $100 deed to Isom Pounds land - NW quarter of SW quarter, Section 10; SE quarter of SE quarter of section 9, T2, R 13 E, containing 80 acres. Dated 2/24/1837. Transaction made before R. Willoughby, J. P.

view all 16

Rev. Isom Price Pounds, Cheraw Reserves from 2 US Presidents's Timeline

1782
January 10, 1782
Onslow County, NC, United States

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

1804
January 16, 1804
Part of Old Prince George Parish, Marion District, South Carolina, United States
1810
1810
South Carolina, United States
1810
1810
SC, United States
1813
July 12, 1813
South Carolina, United States
1815
June 10, 1815
South Carolina, United States

As recorded in "Baptist and Methodist Records of Florida Parishes of Louisiana, Volume 3, 1989" by Donna Burge Adams, both Joseph E. Pounds and Isham J. Pounds were licentiate ministers as early as 1850. According to this same reference, the New Jerusalem Church in Washington Parish, Louisiana, was admitted to the Association in 1854. The church , located near Covington, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana, had been organized under the labor of I. J. Pounds, with eleven original members. At the request of the New Jerusalem Baptist Church in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana, the Antioch Church near Cheraw, Marion County, Mississippi, ordained Isom as a minister on December 10, 1854. "Baptist and Methodist Records of Florida Parishes of Louisiana, Volume 2" by Donna Burge Adams recorded minutes from The Eastern Louisiana Baptist Association which indicated that Bro. Jesse Crawford assisted at the ordination of Bro. I. J. Pounds to the Gospel Ministry in 1855 and according to "Marriage Records, Marion County, Mississippi", the credentials of "Isham" J. Pounds as a minister were vouched for by Joseph E. Pounds and Elliott W. Moore, Ministers of Gospel, recorded December 16, 1855. Isom served the Florida Parishes of Louisiana as a Baptist minister after 1855. Probably in 1857, Isom returned to Louisiana from Mississippi, purchased property formerly owned by Charlotte Richardson Pool, on which he lived until his death. The 1860 census for Fifth Ward, Washington Parish, Louisiana, enumerated him as a Farmer/Baptist Preacher. It valued his real estate at $300 and his personal estate at $326. He was then called as the pastor at Lee's Creek Baptist Church, Bogalusa, Washington Parish, Louisiana, which was officially established in 1872, after the congregation of the old Union Church split. He preached his first sermon in that capacity on Saturday, December 16, 1871. In the last twenty years of his life, he served many neighboring Baptist churches and helped establish many new churches in both Washington and St. Tammany Parishes.

1818
March 1, 1818
Cheraw, Marion County, MS, United States

I have seen Joseph's place of birth referenced as "indian territory Mississippi."

1819
April 14, 1819
Mississippi, United States