Firstly, I am sorry about the English, my German is still hardly fluent although I am practicing.
I am 28, born and raised in Canada, but currently living in the United States (much to my dissatisfaction)
I have been on a true adventure the last few months and years trying to track down information about the origin of my family.
Our surname, Schleihauf, is not a common one, and seems to be almost entirely located around Swabia (Stuttgart particularly in the earliest records I could find from the 1600s) and in Baden-Wurttemberg, particularly around areas of Heidelburg and Heilbronn.
in the early to mid 1800's, my great great great grandfather Johann Christoph Schleihauf Sr. and his two sons, my great great grandfather Philip George Schleihauf Sr. and John C schleihauf moved to Canada, specifically to the county of Elgin in southwestern Ontario along the shores of Lake Eerie.
Together they seemed to form a very successful enterprise, and are credited as being some of the founders of the small town of West Lorne (the towns name was even originally Bismarck to reflect John C's love for the Iron chancellor around the time of the unification of the empire)
I have managed to get a few tangible leads regarding further tracing the lineage of Schleihaufs back (it appears our surname may have originally been Schleehauff) but I have run into a dead end in the late 1600s with a confirmed baptism of a Johann Conrad Schleehauff, but little else that predates this.
I haven't yet purchased access to the files on this archive, but I'd be more than happy to if someone could point me in the right direction to look, I believe records for Johann Conrad Schleehauff were discovered specifically in Stuttgart Stiftskirche archives, but narrowing in on specifics has proved challenging.
I just wish to see how far back I can trace the lineage of Schleihauf/Schleehauff now that I have finally concretely tied the roots from the crossing of the initial migrants to myself after studying Canadian census data, birth records, and tombstones.
Anyone able to help in any way, it would be very much appreciated.
Thank you very much my friends.
I am 28, born and raised in Canada, but currently living in the United States (much to my dissatisfaction)
I have been on a true adventure the last few months and years trying to track down information about the origin of my family.
Our surname, Schleihauf, is not a common one, and seems to be almost entirely located around Swabia (Stuttgart particularly in the earliest records I could find from the 1600s) and in Baden-Wurttemberg, particularly around areas of Heidelburg and Heilbronn.
in the early to mid 1800's, my great great great grandfather Johann Christoph Schleihauf Sr. and his two sons, my great great grandfather Philip George Schleihauf Sr. and John C schleihauf moved to Canada, specifically to the county of Elgin in southwestern Ontario along the shores of Lake Eerie.
Together they seemed to form a very successful enterprise, and are credited as being some of the founders of the small town of West Lorne (the towns name was even originally Bismarck to reflect John C's love for the Iron chancellor around the time of the unification of the empire)
I have managed to get a few tangible leads regarding further tracing the lineage of Schleihaufs back (it appears our surname may have originally been Schleehauff) but I have run into a dead end in the late 1600s with a confirmed baptism of a Johann Conrad Schleehauff, but little else that predates this.
I haven't yet purchased access to the files on this archive, but I'd be more than happy to if someone could point me in the right direction to look, I believe records for Johann Conrad Schleehauff were discovered specifically in Stuttgart Stiftskirche archives, but narrowing in on specifics has proved challenging.
I just wish to see how far back I can trace the lineage of Schleihauf/Schleehauff now that I have finally concretely tied the roots from the crossing of the initial migrants to myself after studying Canadian census data, birth records, and tombstones.
Anyone able to help in any way, it would be very much appreciated.
Thank you very much my friends.