A few months ago Robert
Thrift, a descendant of
Isham Thrift of
North Carolina, submitted a Y-chromosome DNA test and got a result showing that this line has several distinguishing markers -no one else in the databases was very close. In particular, the
Thrift families from northern
Virginia and from southern
Georgia who had already tested were shown to be unrelated to
Isham Thrift. That finding was particularly interesting because several people had made the assumption that
Isham Thrift was descended from Nathaniel
Thrift of Old Rappohannock Co, VA. The DNA test proved this was untrue, but could not say who
Isham WAS descended from.
[Note how important it is to be able to use DNA testing to prove two people are NOT related!]
Others had proposed that
Isham Thrift was son of
Drury /
Drewry Thrift of
Dinwiddie County, VA. In looking into this assertion it appears questionable to me, since I can find no clear evidence that
Drury was much older than
Isham. However I did find that part of Drury's estate was claimed by members of the
Snipes family, suggesting some family relationship
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.snipes/316/mb.ashxThe
Snipes family moved from the St
George Co /Dinwiddie Co VA region to
North Carolina, AND had close ties with
Isham Thrift's family, so it makes sense that
Drury might be related to
Isham, perhaps a brother or cousin if not father.
I further found a reference from a period witness that
Isham &
Drury were brothers, although that statement might be questionable since other statements in the file (Rev War pension application of John Curtis, who claimed to be a cousin of
Isham &
Drury, and served as a substitute for
Drury) were not completely accurate:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.thrift/231/mb.ashxThere is no evidence that
Drury did have male children. (After Drury's death, and before his wife's death, his land was conveyed to
Colson Tucker, husband of Jane
Thrift born 1765?, so Jane could be a daughter.) So we apparently cannot test Drury's DNA.
I am excited to say that we have now found one very close match to
Isham Thrift: John
Thrift who descends from William
Thrift of
Dinwiddie Co, VA, born before 1761:
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&...William,
Isham and
Drury have about the same upper limit for year of birth, so it is possible that they were all brothers or cousins. In fact several other Thrifts from the region, possible relatives, have similar age limits, see
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&d...Now we need to find and test the male descendants of the remaining patriarchs in this list! In particular we would like to test descendants of
Abraham
Thrifthttp://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&...and John
Thrifthttp://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&...(The others listed do not have male descendants as far as I know, but I could be wrong. Miles and Solomon died in the Revolutionary War. We also need to test Friths from the region, and Thrifts and Friths from
England, and from other colonies including Bermuda, Bahamas,
Florida, Australia, etc.)
The testing company has only reported results for 25 markers of John's 67-marker test so far. There is only one mismatch out of these 25 markers, indicating a very close relationship. We may have more that can be said in the near future after all markers are reported. But the DNA results thus far clearly establish that the two
Thrift lines are related, and each of the two DNA results (and their relation to the available genealogical data) are validated by the other.
The test results are presented here:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~thriftzzfr... or
http://tinyurl.com/3vjhms/documents/fam_grouping.htm(The chart includes brand new results for a
Frith from
Alabama, but that situation is more complex and I'm not ready to post about it quite yet.)
I look forward to discussion or questions.
Richard
Thriftrtx at cox dot net
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~thriftzzfr...or
http://tinyurl.com/3vjhms