Schexnayder

Schexnayder (/ʃksˈndər/)[1] is a German surname, probably deriving from an occupational name for a maker of jackets and jerkins.[2] The first Schexnayder to settle in Louisiana, Henry Albert Schexnayder, arrived in the 1720s and settled in what was called the "German Coast" (now St. Charles Parish). Hanno Deiler lists 27 spellings of the Schexnayder surname found in official documents.[3]

Notable individuals with the surname include:

Arrival in the U.S.A. from Europe

Three Schexnayder families departed Europe bound for Louisiana in the early 18th century, but only two families left documents showing they actually arrived in Louisiana.

A Scheckschneider family, consisting of Hans Rhinhart, Catherine, and their two sons left L’Orient, France aboard the La Garonne in January 1721. Several on board were taken ill, and their son Jacob was one of the sixteen who were left in Brest, France because they were too ill for the voyage. The name of the second son was not recorded, and no record of this family has been found in Louisiana.[4][5] An undated- likely post-1732- list of inhabitants of the German Coast (St Charles Parish) lists a Henry Albert Scheckschneider as holding 4 arpents on the west bank.[6]

The New Orleans Catholic Church has records for two Schexnayder families:

1. A record of the marriage on 26 June 1742 of Hanz Georg Schscchneider, son of Hanz Schscchneider and Anne Marie Hessin, and Catherine Antonia.[7]

2. Records of the baptisms of the five children of Albert Schscchneider and Marie Magdelaine Wich are in the New Orleans Catholic Church records: Catherinne, Jean George, Jean Henry and Marie Lucie and Marie Josephe.[8]

References

  1. "How to say or pronounce Schexnayder". PronounceNames.com. Retrieved 2016-02-02.
  2. Dictionary of American Family Names, Patrick Hanks, Oxford University Press U.S.A., 2003, p. 288
  3. The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and the Creoles of German Descent, J. Hanno Deiler, Americans Germanica Press, 1909, pp. 125-6
  4. The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and the Creoles of German Descent, J. Hanno Deiler, Americans Germanica Press, 1909, pp. 27-29
  5. The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and the Creoles of German Descent, J. Hanno Deiler, Americans Germanica Press, 1909, p. 125
  6. The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and the Creoles of German Descent, J. Hanno Deiler, Americans Germanica Press, 1909, p. 105
  7. Sacramental Records of the Roman Catholic Church of the Archdiocese of Orleans, Earl C. Woods, Archdiocese of Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1987, p. 237
  8. Sacramental Records of the Roman Catholic Church of the Archdiocese of Orleans, Earl C. Woods, Archdiocese of Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1987, vol. I, p. 238, vol. II, p. 253

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