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Cajun Last Names & Their Meanings

Photo: Wilson Savoy of the Pine Leaf Boys (Cajun accordion player in sunglasses and patchwork costume) playing with other Cajun musicians at the 2010 Faquetigue Courir de Mardi Gras in Savoy, Louisiana. Credit: Herb Roe; Wikimedia Commons.

If you’re from Louisiana, there’s a chance your last name has a Cajun origin. And if your name is Cajun, your ancestry may be partially or completely French. Although factors like lost male heirs or family migrations can pose challenges to putting together a comprehensive family tree, it’s safe to say that the roots of Cajun names can be traced back to Acadia (Canada), where French families settled in the 16th century.

Illustration: the Louisiana Acadian flag, designed by Thomas J. Arceneaux. Credit: Lexicon; Wikimedia Commons.

As with other last names with European roots, common Cajun last names often reflect back to the regions in France from where settlers originally left, mainly Paris, Brittany, Normandy, and Basque Aquitaine.

Most Common Cajun Last Names

Historically speaking, last names tend to stem from either a person’s trade or a repurposing of their father’s first name. Cajun names are by and large French, yet French names often have German roots due to the fluidity of borders that have reimagined nation-states over time. Learn more about some of the common last names in this list, and use them to trace your family history using stories found in Louisiana newspaper archives.

Background: From Acadia to Cajun Louisiana

Acadia spread across Maritime Canada, but also Quebec and parts of Maine. Henceforth called Acadians, these early French settlers lived peacefully alongside the Wabanaki Confederacy, a collective of Native American nations that had banded together in the area.

How did the Acadians move from all the way up North down to Louisiana? The ultimate cause was due to rising political tensions between the British and the French, twin rulers of the region. Acadians refused to take the oath of unconditional allegiance to the British Crown and resisted British rule for 45 years with support from the Wabanaki Confederacy, who helped them by conducting raids.

The Great Expulsion

During the French and Indian War of 1754 to 1763, the British decided to remove the Acadians to neutralize the area, and Acadian villages were burned to the ground. The English in command spoke of purging the region. English troops rounded up and arrested thousands of Acadians, confiscated their property and livestock, and deported them. Known as the Great Expulsion, and recognized as the “Great Upheaval” by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005, Acadian families were separated and scattered in waves of deportations.

Many died from a combination of sickness and starvation, or in shipwrecks. Those who couldn’t escape to the North were shipped off down to the Atlantic coastal colonies, from New England to Georgia. They were also deported to England, France, and even Portugal.

The French government worked to resettle the Acadian refugees, although some plans failed. A project to send Acadians to colonize southern America is one example of a number of failed plans. The death rate for these difficult journeys was very high, and the commitment to them from the French government was low. Other Acadians, disheartened by the poor conditions made available to them in Europe, braved the Atlantic once again to return to Acadia. Others stayed in Atlantic coastal regions in France, particularly Brittany.

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