John “Duke” Schneider, a Pike County attorney for over 50 years, came to Pike County in 1965 following graduation from West Point and stints as an Airborne Ranger Infantry officer in Germany and California. He graduated from Penn State Dickinson Law and was admitted to the Pike County Bar Association in 1968. As a young lawyer, he served a term as public defender, president of the Pike County Bar Association, and president of the Milford Lions club.
His mother and father had moved to Pike County after Interstate Route 80 condemned their home in New Jersey. Ironically, I-84 took a portion of their Pike County home, which led Schneider to begin a successful litigation career representing landowners in condemnation cases in state and federal courts.
He and his wife, Joan’s, purchase of a Milford home led to the development of the private “Trees” subdivision on the old Milford Road, where they raised their son and daughter. As a licensed real estate broker, Duke conceived and developed one of the first whole-ownership resort campsite communities in the United States—Trail’s End in Shohola—followed by Tall Timbers in Vernon, NJ, and Mountain Shadows in Stillwater, NJ.
In the 1980s he and Joan became the part of a small development team of friends that built three resort projects on Sanibel Island in southwest Florida, where they maintained a winter residence.
Work with his friend and client Richard L. Snyder on the Milford Enhancement Committee provided the impetus for Duke’s interest in the Milford streetscape (Pike County’s “front porch”), the development of numerous arts and community events including Black Bear Film Festival and Milford Music Festival, and the founding of Greater Pike Community Foundation in 2012. Duke served on the board of Greater Pike for nine years.
He and his sister Jill Davis, following the sale of the family Pike County home, created the Gertrude and Edward Schneider Family Fund at Greater Pike to benefit area nonprofits. Duke and his wife Joan also went on to create the Schneider Family Fund at Greater Pike. Following the death of Dick Snyder, Duke formed the Snyder Chair of Conservation Studies Fund in honor of Dick’s memory. That fund, together with acreage that Dick donated to the Delaware Valley School District in his lifetime, will allow Milford to continue its national reputation as the “birthplace of the conservation movement.”
In the 1990s, Duke became a founding member of the National Network of Estate Planning attorneys. This area of legal concentration provided an education into the financial-planning and giving world. Duke encourages clients and friends to create a lifetime plan and build their own legacies for future generations.