Remember at the time of this Hughes licensed trader status in Virginia Colony, that Virginia included Maryland. Hughes was Licenced Traders of Virginia initially was to a handful of Traders. The theory is that when the trading became unlicensed, it lead to raids by NA to offset encroachment and that led to the Cherokee War. Working backwards, the licensed traders mentioned by Adair may not have covered everyone; but, it did mention the Hoos and that they first came to Delaware area ====Adair's "Expansion of South Carolina on the Hughes/Hoos/Howes that got one mention.= Screen shot from Archive Stream dot com behind a paywall.
Reading slowly 500 pages of http://www.ancestraltrackers.net/va/resources/virginia-magazine-his... Is this the Licking Branch Hughes/Hoos whose Hoosiers Canal builders went to Indiana.
Allied Families with this family at this point in the 1600s were the early Lotts who were of I ydna and were Iberian connecting to King Canutt, which some Iberian Peninsula folks moved to Denmark and that is how far back the Lotts go back with the Hoos, as John Lott III served under Capt Hughes/Hooe(s) in the Rev War an by that time, that part of both families were in the Goinstown area, VR.
Rice Hooe links:
msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/000600/000669/pdf/drews.pdf
https://books.google.com/books?id=o78RAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA427&lpg...
https://books.google.com/books?id=tcM40zgdAZgC&pg=PA339&lpg...
Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5: Families G-P edited by John Frederick Dorman page 339
Line on Geni starts here: Rice Hooe, of Merchant's Hope
Are you saying that Rice Hooe, II, of Merchant's Hope = Trader Hughes of the unknown first name who ran a trading post with a native woman?
Trader ... Hughes has descendants who are cousin matching via a descendant MRCA of Rice Hooe II. The circle is up to 6 matches on chromosome 16 triangulating to Tabitha Harris and as more come it, will add to her profile.
Some interesting possibilities here.
In 1662 there was a lawsuit in Charles City County over payment for an "Indian girl" who Rice Hooe, II, of Merchant's Hope had purchased from Manwaring Hammond. And, oddly, it seems to have been Rice Hughes, of New Kent who signed the initial contract on Hammond's behalf.
Other researchers have already speculated that this Indian girl might have been Nicketti, or the original version of Nicketti.