Straub Explained
Straub is a Germanic surname that literally means "one with bushy or bristly hair".[1] Its original meaning in Middle High German is "rough" or "unkempt".[2] It may also refer to people who come from Straubing in Germany.[1] Spelling variations of Straub include Straube, Strauber, Straubinger, Strauble, Strob, Strobel, Strube, Strub, Strufe, Struwe, and Struwing.[3]
The first known Straub in the United States was Johannes Straub, one of the Palatine Germans brought to New York in 1710.[4] There were later arrivals, especially in the Pennsylvania Deutsch region and Ohio, most with an origin in Baden-Württemberg, Hesse-Darmstadt, Rhineland-Palatinate, Bavaria, Austria, the German cantons of Switzerland, and Alsace-Lorraine. Some Straubs who had earlier migrated east out of Germany, settling in German enclaves in Russia and Austria-Hungary (now Romania), have subsequently immigrated to the U.S. as well.
There were two notable breweries founded in Pennsylvania by Straub immigrants. The earliest was the J. N. Straub & Company brewery founded in the 1840s in Alleghany (now Pittsburgh), Pennsylvania, by John N. Straub, immigrant from Hesse-Darmstadt. The other was the Straub Brewery founded in 1872 in St. Marys, Pennsylvania, by Peter P. Straub, immigrant from Felldorf, Württemberg.
Other notable landmarks and companies named after a Straub include Bob Straub State Park in Oregon and Straub Hall at the University of Oregon in Eugene; Straub's Markets, a St. Louis, Missouri-based specialty food retailer; Straub Clinic & Hospital in Hawaii. Straub Honda Dealership in Wheeling, West Virginia
During the Second World War there was a Sclass Cannon destroyer escort named that was built for the U.S. Navy. The ship was named after its sponsor, Mrs. Margaret H. Straub.
There is also an asteroid named 6147 Straub.
Notable Straubs
Notable individuals with the surname Straub include:
- Agnes Straub, (1890–1941) German film actress
- Alexander Straub (entrepreneur), entrepreneur and financier
- Alexander Straub (athlete), German pole vaulter
- Bill Straub, American soccer player
- Brunó Ferenc Straub, Hungarian politician
- Calvin Straub, American architect
- Chester J. Straub, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals
- Christian Markle Straub, Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
- Christopher Straub, contestant on reality series Project Runway
- Elek Straub, Hungarian engineer, consultant and businessman
- Hans Straub, Swiss Olympic sprint canoer
- Jean-Marie Straub, French filmmaker
- Joe Straub, Major League Baseball catcher
- Johann Baptist Straub, German Baroque artist
- John E. Straub, Director of the White House Office of Administration
- Jürgen Straub, East German middle distance runner
- Kris Straub, webcomic creator
- Maria Straub (1838–1898), American songwriter, hymnwriter
- Marianne Straub, 20th century textile designer
- Michael John Straub, artist and printmaker
- Paul F. Straub, Philippine–American War Medal of Honor recipient
- Peter Straub, prolific horror author
- Peter Straub (politician), German politician
- Peter P. Straub, founder of the Straub Brewery in St. Marys, Pennsylvania
- Philipp Jakob Straub, Austrian sculptor
- Robert W. Straub, (1920–2002) Governor of Oregon
- Rudolph Straub, German prisoner-of-war executed during World War II
- Simon Straub, German luthier and violin maker (17th Century)
- Stephan Straub, German footballer
- Wolfgang Straub, Swiss lawyer and photographer
- Zoë Straub, Austrian singer
External links
Notes and References
- Book: Smith, Elsdon Coles . American Surnames . 2003 . Genealogical Publishing Co. . Baltimore . 0-8063-1150-9 . 18 . registration .
- Book: Hanks, Patrick . Patrick Hanks . Dictionary of American Family Names: 3-Volume Set . 2003 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0-19-508137-4 . 420 .
- Book: Breitbard, Gail Ann . Notes on the early history in this country of the Straus (Stroop, Stroup, Straup, Strubb, Strupp, Strope, etc.) family . 1970 . . Miami .
- Book: Knittle, Walter Allen . Early Eighteenth Century Palatine Emigration: A British Government Redemptioner Project to Manufacture Naval Stores . 1937 . Dorrance & Co. . Philadelphia .