Nacogdochean or Nacogdochian (inhabitant of Nacogdoches)
“Nacogdochean” (or “Nacogdochian”) is the name of an inhabitant of Nacogdoches, Texas. The name “Nacogdochian” has been cited in print since at least 1908 and “Nacogdochean” since 1916.
Wikipedia: Nacogdoches, Texas
Nacogdoches ( /ˌnækəˈdoʊtʃɨs/ nak-ə-doh-chəs) is a city in Nacogdoches County, Texas, in the United States. The 2010 census recorded the city’s population to be 32,996. It is the county seat of Nacogdoches County and is situated in East Texas. Nacogdoches is a sister city of Natchitoches, Louisiana.
Nacogdoches is the home of Stephen F. Austin State University and of the Association for Business Communication.
The town made international headlines in February 2003, after receiving much of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster debris.
The Nacogdochian
Tales of East Texas Forest Poems Weird Places of East Texas Old Bottles Zombies
Google Books
Historical Tales: American
By Charles Morris
Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott Company
1908
Pg. 218:
The Nacogdochians were not long in making him a citizen, and he soon after set out for the Alamo, the scene of his final exploit and his heroic death.
1 March 1916, Galveston (TX) Daily News, pg. 4, col. 3:
And now the lawyers are after State Press. Two of them, one from Nacogdoches and one from Cisco—East and West—have written in to set S. P. and everybody else right on “Cotton-Eyed Joe.” Each of these attorneys at law sends what he declares to be the only authorized version of the song, and each of these versions is different from the other. The Ncogdochean says his version is right, because he heard it before the war.
25 September 1917, Dallas (TX) Morning News, “The State Press,” pg. 10, col. 3:
A Nacogdoches reader writes in to suggest that the drouth-stricken travelers who are said to be headed east from west be sent to Austin and given work upon the proposed investigation board. Of course the Nacogdochean is facetious.
17 January 1922, Dallas (TX) Morning News, “The State Press,” pt. 1, pg. 14, col. 4:
Nacogdoches is beginning Anno Domini, 1822 with a determination to drive dull gloom away by showing him that he is not master of the Nacogdocheans’ house.
13 October 1930, Dallas (TX) Morning News, “The State Press,” pt. 2, pg. 12, col. 3:
Now we have a letter from Nacogdoches. It isn’t often this column gets a call from Nacogdoches, either because the Nacogdocheans are indifferent to contemporary literature or because they simply don’t give a dang.
Daily Sentinel (Nacogdoches, TX)
GOODRICH: 50th birthday event planned for Fredonia
Posted: Saturday, February 26, 2005 12:00 am
ROBBIE GOODRICH, The Daily Sentinel The Daily Sentinel
(...)
Dr. Jere Jackson, who served as secretary of the Fredonia Corporation, wrote about the history of The Fredonia, calling it a ” famous landmark” and attempting to ” explain the depth of emotional feeling which fills so many Nacogdocheans in connection with ” their hotel.’”
Daily Sentinel (Nacogdoches, TX)
Letter: Thanks for assisting with Scare on the Square
Posted: Wednesday, November 3, 2010 2:00 am
It takes a community of people like Nacogdochians to present a fun-filled, family-friendly, free event like Scare on the Square to our residents and their children.
Daily Sentinel (Nacogdoches, TX)
Letter: Don’t forget, prisoners are human beings
Posted: Wednesday, February 23, 2011 12:15 am
I am writing today on a subject that will not endear me to my fellow Nacogdochians - prisoners’ rights.