Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Day Tripping to SchulenBurg Texas

After spending most of yesterday reflecting of past Adventures, I decided to do a day trip today...You see Texas is Blessed at having an abundance of History and I am Blessed to be living in Texas...the "Perfect Storm"..of sorts...Todays trip...Schulenburg, Texas a  road trip east on I-10, about 90 miles...why you ask...well the Texas Legislature designated Schulenburg the "Official Home of Painted Churches" in 2005 ...and that was good enough for me...how about a short bit of history,,,,

Schulenburg Mansion...Horst Kelly Photographer

Schulenburg  Texas is called a “railroad town”, “halfway to everywhere”, the “musician town”, “home of the painted churches”, “gateway to the rolling hills” and many others. It was founded when the Galveston, Houston and San Antonio Railway reached here in 1873. At that time the many people in the communities of Lyons and High Hill moved to the new railroad town of Schulenburg. Schulenburg was named after Louis Schulenburg who donated the land for the city. Before the town of Schulenburg was born, English, German, Czech and other European citizens settled this area bringing with them their religion, beliefs, tools and way of life.

Assumption Of Blessed Virgin Mary Church..Praha Tx...Horst Kelly Photographer

The first stop along the route was Praha, Tx...
 Praha, on Farm Road 1295 three miles east of Flatonia in southern Fayette County, was originally known as Mulberry and Hottentot, the latter apparently referring to a band of outlaws. James C. Duff, William Criswell, and Leroy Criswell first settled the area. During the mid-1850s a



Assumption Of Blessed Virgin Mary Church..Praha Tx...Horst Kelly Photographer

 Bohemian immigrant named  Mathias Novak came to the region. After working a short while for the American settlers, he saved enough money to buy 100 acres of land and build a house where early masses were celebrated. Other Bohemian immigrants included John Baca, Joseph Vyuiala, Andreas Gallia, Joseph Hajek, Frank Vacl, and George Morysek. In 1858 the Bohemian settlers changed the town's name to Praha in honor of Prague, the capital of their homeland. In 1865 Joseph Bithowski, a Bernardine father, built a small frame church, and at midnight on Christmas Day the first Mass was offered. In 1868 a public school was established, and by the 1880s Praha had three stores, a restaurant, and a new frame church, which served as the mother parish for surrounding towns. A post office started service in 1884, and in 1896 a Czech Catholic school was established. In 1873, when the Southern Pacific Railroad was built a mile north of town, Flatonia, a new town founded near the tracks, began to draw business away from Praha. During the twentieth century the population of Praha never rose above 100, and in 1906 the post office closed. By 1968 the population had dropped to twenty-five, where it remained in 2000...

Next on the Route was Freyburg, Texas...
United Methodist Church...Freyburg Tx...Horst Kelly Photographer    
Freyburg is at the intersection of Farm roads 956 and 2238, twelve miles southwest of La Grange in southwestern Fayette County. It was founded about 1868 by Germans and named for a town in Germany. Methodist services were held in local homes, then in a store and a school building. In 1879 the Freyburg Methodist Church, described as "an open plan Gothic Church with a central bell tower," was constructed. By 1886 Freyburg had a blacksmith shop and C. F. Thulemeyer's general store. A post office was opened in 1889, and by 1896 the community had fifty inhabitants, a saloon, a grocery store, and a general store. In the early 1900s the Order of Sons of Hermann had a dance hall in the community. The post office closed in 1907, and in 1940 Freyburg had forty inhabitants, one business, and a number of scattered dwellings. In the 1970s it comprised an old store, an old gin, several cemeteries, scattered homes, and Lutheran and Methodist churches. In 2000 Freyburg had a population of forty-five, and a bed and breakfast operated in an old farmhouse there. In 2004 the recently restored Freyburg Methodist Church celebrated its 125th anniversary...

United Methodist Church...Freyburg Tx...Horst Kelly Photographer    

Next it was off to High Hill Texas...
St. Mary's Church..High Hill Tx Horst Kelly Photographer

From Hostyn, return to US 77 and head south just over five miles to the intersection of FM 956. Turn right and head west on FM 956 for slightly more than a mile to the intersection of FM 2672. Turn left and drive south for 2.7 miles to the community of High Hill.

St. Mary's Church..High Hill Tx Horst Kelly Photographer

 
This town was once a thriving community on a stagecoach line but, when bypassed by the railroad in 1874, the population began dwindling—but not before the construction of the Nativity of Mary, Blessed Virgin church, also known as St. Mary Church, this structure was built in 1906 and painted six years later. The red brick building, designed by Texas architect Leo Dielmann, boasts a Gothic style. The church is noted for its wooden columns, painted to resemble marble, stained glass windows, and religious statuary.

St. Mary's Church..High Hill Tx Horst Kelly Photographer

 The church also has a history of a European-style seating arrangement...Next was north to Ammannsville...
 
 Ammannsville was settled during the 1870s by German and Czech immigrant farmers on lands originally allotted to the Fayette County schools. The first settler in the community was Andrew Ammann, who arrived on March 12, 1870. He was a noted architect as well as a farmer. Other early family names included Kossa, Sobolik, Heller, Stefek, Fietsam, Munke, Bartos, Holster, Lidiak, Ohnheiser, and Zoesper. In 1876 the first business opened, and by 1879 the town had a post office and a public school.
St. John The Baptist Church..Ammannsville Tx..Horst Kelly Photographer
 John The Baptist Church..Ammannsville Tx..Horst Kelly Photographer

A Catholic church and school opened in 1890 with Father Jules Vrana as priest. The church was destroyed by a storm in 1909 and rebuilt and dedicated on November 24, 1910. Shortly thereafter it was destroyed by fire and again rebuilt.

John The Baptist Church..Ammannsville Tx..Horst Kelly Photographer


 In 1900 Ammannsville had three stores and saloons, two blacksmith shops, one drugstore, one physician, and two gins. The post office was discontinued in 1906; mail was delivered from Weimar until the 1920s and subsequently from Schulenburg. The public school closed in 1909....


Dubina Parish Church..Horst Kelly Photographer
Dubina Parish Church..Horst Kelly Photographer
.....and last was the Hamlet of Dubina...Dubina dates from 1856 when a group of recently arrived Czech immigrants found shelter under a group of large oak trees (Dubina is Czech for Oak Grove). Its first name, however, was Navidad and then Bohemian Navidad (after the nearby Navidad River).
The settlers planted cotton and harvested only one bale from their first crop. Just when they were adjusting to life in Fayette County along came the Civil War and many of the men were drafted. After the war, Dubina became a toehold for recently arrived Czech immigrants, much like the nearby town of Hackberry was for German settlers.
The railroad ran straight from Weimar to Schulenburg in 1873 and Dubina was ignored. Population was drawn off, yet by 1900, the church still served 600 families who lived within the sound of the Saints Cyril and Methodius' Church bell.
Dubina's first church was built in 1876, but was destroyed by a 1909 hurricane. Rebuilt in 1912, it survived a fire that all but destroyed the town.

I know..this was a long History lesson...I suppose I just got caught up in the moment and wanted to share it with all of you...especially the Czechs and Polish settlers in this area...most folks don't associate that population with Texas....but some of the earliest Settlers of that Nationality settled in Texas..as I said Texas has some great history....An example is a lot folks  look at Chicago as being the oldest Polish settlement in the United States....not so....as Paul Harvey use to say...here is the rest of the story..

Schulenburg Hotel...Horst Kelly Photographer

Father Leopold Moczygemba consecrated the first Polish Catholic church in the United States at Panna Maria, Texas( about 20 miles east of La Vernia Texas). Father Moczygemba, a native of Silesia born in 1824, came to Texas in 1852 and began urging his fellow countrymen to leave the harsh economic conditions of their homeland and settle in Texas. In 1854 Polish immigrants had journeyed to Karnes County in South Texas and celebrated Christmas Mass with Moczygemba under a live oak tree at the future church site. They founded the community of Panna Maria, Polish for “Virgin Mary.” In addition to the church, pioneers also established St. Joseph’s School, the first Polish school in America, and new waves of immigration after 1865 led to the settlement of other Polish communities in the area such as Cestohowa, Kosciusko, and Falls City. Panna Maria remained a rural hamlet in the twentieth century but enjoyed the distinction of being the oldest permanent Polish settlement in the United States.

Horst Kelly Photographer

Its not just about roping and branding and Cattle Drives to Kansas City....Texas became a melting pot of numerous European  ethic groups...and there you have it...hopefully I didn't bore you too much...just wanted to share a small part of Texas with you.....and that's what makes this a GREAT Country...until the next sunrise...Happy Trails...Horst sends
 
 


.

9 comments:

  1. Nice ride through Texas...some really stunning photos Horst!!! I learned a thing or two! Just beautiful churches....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for your comments about the photo's...though they don't do the Churches justice...Texas does have a lot of interesting places to see...and plenty of them are great one day trips...hope all is going well with you folks...still have my fingers crossed on the sale of your home...Horst

      Delete
  2. Replies
    1. Thanks Barney....nothing compared your your daily adventures and blog documentations...BTW, did you get my email on your questions about CG's at Moab???...have a safe journey..Horst

      Delete
  3. We love driving the FM roads in Texas. Lots of interesting things to see and do are found along them. Thanks for the road trip. Really enjoyed it....jc

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're so right...another place I want to spend some time is in East Texas...close to your neck of the woods...some great sights and History there...Hope all things are going well for you and Wanda and that Wanda's Mother hip surgery and recovery are going well...Horst

      Delete
  4. Fascinating that the little Texas towns have all these roots in eastern Europe! Love the cultural diversity!

    Keep up the history lessons!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Happy Grandpa's day to you. I hope the Casita is well on its way to being ready for the big travel experience with the kids.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am way behind...plus I'm trying to buy a new tow vehicle...its getting frustrating...oh well...it will all fall into place somehow...my plan is live around the 28th of June...we'll see...have a great Day and again Happy Grandfathers Day to you...Horst

      Delete