24 cm.

Destrehan, La. Master’s thesis, Middle Tennessee State University, 2001. They arrived in 1721 and founded the city of Des Allemands.

Louisiana Creole was colonized by French and Canadians in 1699. LC: F380.G3/M47 2005Giraud, Marcel.

Rev.

Acc. London Magazine (Publisher).Deiler, J. Hanno. As the Acadiana flag shows, it focuses on only two countries: France and Spain. Louisiana Creoles share cultural ties such as the traditional use of the French, Spanish, and Louisiana Creole languages and predominant practice of Catholicism. 21 cm. 24 cm. Brian Pearce, trans. The Settlement of the German Coast of Louisiana and the Creoles of German Descent.

“History of the German Society of New Orleans, with an introduction giving a synopsis of the history of the Germans in the United States, with special reference to those in Louisiana. From the 1720s on, well before the Grand Dérangement and other immigration waves due to revolutions in France and Haiti, people from Alsace-Lorraine were among the first European settlers.

The war stopped imports, creating a shortage of an instrument that was greatly appreciated. Act 114 of 1918 specifically prohibited the German language in all public schools, at all levels, under penalty of a fine of twenty-five to one hundred dollars and/or imprisonment of between ten and ninety days. Other German speakers from the Rhine Valley, Switzerland and Belgium also followed the same path to form the German Coast, now the parishes of St. Charles, St. John the Baptist and St. James. If Louisiana history has taught me anything, it is that anything is possible. Immigrants from the German-speaking countries of Europe: a selective bibliography. Romani-based Creole. Cajuns [kaˈʒœ] ( Anhören?/i), Cadiens [ka.ˈdjɛ] ( Anhören?/i)) sind eine frankophone Bevölkerungsgruppe, die im Cajun Country im US-Bundesstaat Louisiana lebt. Lafayette, La. 1979.89.7353.A New Map of the River Mississipi [sic] from the Sea to Bayagoulas. Written by himself. Anyway, in 1716 when John Law took over the trade monopoly in Louisiana, he called out to Alsatians to move there. LC: F380.G3/V94Voss, Louis. The instrument quickly became popular before the advent of sound amplification. 94-691-RLHunter, Donald G., et al. Engraved printed map with watercolor. [“The First Germans on the Lower Mississippi and the Creoles of German Descent: Talk Held on September 16, 1904 in the Main Hall of the St. Louis World’s Fair / By J. Hanno Deiler.”] LC: PAM F380.G3/D28Forsyth, Alice D. German "pest ships," 1720–1721. 95-215-RL - 95-216-RLRobichaux, Albert J., Jr. German Coast Families. Jahrhundert aus den Atlantikprovinzen Kanadas vertriebenen akadischen Franzosen. [Baton Rouge]: God Country Heritage, 1996. LC: F380.G3/V92Blume, Helmut. Gretna: Pelican Publishing.

Trenton, [N.J.]: D. Fenton. His son, an American soldier, went to fight in the Great War.

28 cm. “The German Coast during the colonial era, 1722–1803: the evolution of a distinct cultural landscape in the lower Mississippi delta during the colonial era with special reference to the development of Louisiana's German Coast.” Helmut Blume ; translated, edited and annotated by Ellen C. Merrill. Was it German? Union City, N.J. ; Hoboken, N.J.: The Triangle Press.

In 1803, Napoleon’s prefect to Louisiana, Pierre Clément de Laussat, even recommended introducing a regular flow of German settlers to the region, as they were the only group who had as yet proven itself capable of taming the Louisiana wilderness. LC: F379. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1991.LaReine, Olympe. It was written in Cajun French.

As census records and scholarly works found in THNOC’s German Study File illustrate, the contributions made by this community to the health and growth of New Orleans increased consistently through the eighteenth century. 2005.

We do not know exactly how, but Kahn began importing and selling German accordions. : Center for Louisiana Studies, University of Southwestern Louisiana. Because many early German settlers traced their familial origins to Switzerland, they were commonly called Swiss-Germans. In 1803, Napoleon’s prefect to Louisiana, Pierre Clément de Laussat, even recommended introducing a regular flow of German settlers to the region, as they were the only group who had as yet proven itself capable of taming the Louisiana wilderness.Indeed, as evidenced in a number of the manuscripts records below, the German population up-river from New Orleans thrived through the eighteenth century. German ancestors and patriots of Louisiana. With a new pref., chronology, and index by Jack Belsom. New Orleans: Sendker Printing Service, inc., 1927. N553/M553 2005Merrill, Ellen C. Germans of Louisiana.

Ethnicity plus: historical roots of slavery for the Germans of Louisiana and East Texas, 1719–1830: 1997. Philadelphia: American germanica press, 1909.26 cm. 2 vols. Having come to Louisiana under the flag of John Law’s Company of the Indies, the few Germans who survived the disease-ridden passage from Europe languished on the beaches of Biloxi and Dauphine Island, victims of Law’s dilettantish colonization plan. September 1904 vor dem ‘Germanistischen Congress’ in der Congresshalle der St. Louiser Weltausstellung / von J. Hanno Deiler.” New Orleans, La. It wasn’t until close to the middle part of the nineteenth century, however, that Germans began to constitute a significant portion of the population of the city of New Orleans.Children's Carnival Float with the title “Coming of the Germans, 1721.” Charles L. Franck Photographers (photographer). Forward by Don Heinrich Tolzmann. Without the produce supplied by their farms in the 1730s, New Orleans would probably have collapsed from famine.