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To: Physicist

My family came in through Brownsville in the 1860’s, they were from Alsace. Ethnic Germans, but today it is in france. Oddly enough the kids there aren’t speaking German anymore, only french.


20 posted on 08/26/2007 2:56:52 PM PDT by Aruchu (There is no I in team, but there is a M and an E.)
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To: Aruchu

I believe Castroville was their destination...


37 posted on 08/26/2007 3:38:46 PM PDT by jdub
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To: Aruchu

My Dad’s brother-in-law was from an Alsatian Family. His family spoke German, but their customs were so different from those who came elsewhere in Germany that my Dad always spoke of him as French. But Germany, a hundred years ago, was still largely a federation of many, very different communties. In fact, some say that the German-American communities, such as St: Louis, Cincinatti, and Milwaukee, and of course, San Antonio, were the first places where someone from Bavaria and Prussia came to think of themselves as A German. Toward the end of the Century, while Bismarck was trying to unfyy his new empire, the different Germanies were also being melded, family by family, into German-Americans.


70 posted on 08/26/2007 4:37:01 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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