
“The Winedale Story” is a permanent exhibit on display in
Hazel's Lone Oak cottage at Winedale. The exhibit features facsimiles of photographs,
maps, manuscripts, newspapers, and artifacts drawn from Center for American
History's extensive Texas
history collections. The display is divided into two parts, each occupying one
side of the “dog trot” or breezeway that divides Hazel's Lone Oak Cottage.
“The Czechs” (here) is just one of eighteen pages in the
exhibit. To see the entire display,
visit “The Winedale Story” online exhibit at:
http://www.cah.utexas.edu/exhibits/WinedaleStory/index.html
Czech
homelands of Bohemia and Moravia
and Early Czech settlements in Texas.
Maps by Drew Patterson
In the 1840s, limited opportunities, political
and cultural repression, and forced military service in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire led many Czechs to seek a better life in America. Most of the immigrants
came to Texas from northeast Moravia
and southeast Bohemia directly by sea to Galveston. From there they
founded Czech colonies in Austin, Fayette,
Washington, and Lavaca counties
in the 1850s. Settlement spread from these “seed” colonies in a process called
chain migration, whereby Czech communities maintained their cultural contacts
while expanding into new territory. The Czechs’ arrival once again altered the
cultural landscape of Fayette County, transforming the German town of Fayetteville, for
instance, into a mostly Czech community.
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Leiskar home in Austin County.
Winedale Photograph Collection
Czechs came to Texas in the mid-1800s for the same reason
as the Germans: a search for the freedom and opportunity lacking in their
native land. The first Czech immigrants were mostly farmers from Bohemia, who began to settle in the Fayette County
area in the 1850s. The main tide of Czech immigration came from Moravia after the
Civil War, adding a new cultural imprint to the social mix of Fayette and
nearby counties. To help adjust to their new life, the immigrants developed
Czech religious, benevolent, and sports associations to nurture their
community and culture.
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Portrait of Josef L. Lesikar.
Winedale Photograph Collection
Josef L. Lesikar, a
Czech tailor, farmer, and political leader, organized the first groups of
immigrants to Texas
in the early 1850s. Though their passage was arduous, and many of the
immigrants died, the settlements eventually prospered. Lesikar
built a log home in New Bremen in neighboring Austin
County and continued to promote
Czech immigration in Texas
until his death in 1887. His descendants hold yearly gatherings where they
display a prized family heirloom: a Czech prayer book of 1615 carried by
Josef Lesikar on the perilous journey of
immigration.
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Descendants of Josef Lesikar,
ca. 1915, and Lesikar family Czech prayer book,
1615.
Winedale Photograph Collection
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Portrait of Joseph Peter, Sr., ca 1860.
Courtsey of Mrs. Ivan Koenig.
Winedale Photograph Collection
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Joseph Peter and his family were among the early Czech
immigrants to Texas.
The family came from Moravia in 1856 and
established the Fayette County community of Dubina
(“Land of Oaks”). Peter’s son Joseph, Jr.,
personified many Texas Czech immigrant stories. He began as a blacksmith, and
during the Civil War the young Peter hauled Confederate cotton to sell in Mexico.
After the war Peter became a successful merchant and cotton gin owner. In the
1890s he represented Fayette
County in the state
legislature. Among those who worked the lands of Joseph Peter, Jr., were Fred
Svecina and former slave Tom Lee.
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Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Peter, Jr., ca. 1860.
Courtsey of Edwin Peter.
Winedale Photograph Collection.
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Shadowbox Biblical scene by Johann Sladek.
Winedale Decorative Arts Collection
Czech immigration reintroduced Roman
Catholicism into the Fayette
County region, where the
Catholic religion had largely given way to Methodist, Baptist, and Lutheran
worship. Religious fraternal and benevolent organizations such as the Czech
Catholic Union of Texas (Katolicka Jednota Texaska, or KJT),
formed in Fayette County in 1889, helped nurture Czech community identity and
cultural cohesion. Czech craftsmen in Fayette County,
like their German counterparts, used Biblical stories as vehicles for
artistic expression. This scene from the Old Testament story of Joseph is
part of a series of shadowboxes created by Texas Czech artist Johann Sladek and exhibited in the McGregor House on the
Winedale property.
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La Grange Svoboda campaign issue, August 20,
1892.
Texas
Newspaper Collection
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SPJST celebration in Fayetteville, Texas, ca. 1910.
Courtesy of J. J. Stalmach.
Winedale Photograph Collection
At the same time that Czechs were embracing
the Texas
way of life, they developed powerful institutions to preserve their language
and cultural identity. One of these was a Czech-language press, represented
by this 1892 election issue of the La Grange Svoboda (“Freedom”), whose front
page lists all the candidates for local offices. In 1896, the Slavonic
Benevolent Order of the State of Texas (Slovanska Podporujici Jednota Statu Texas,
or SPJST), was created in Fayette
County as a regional
fraternal insurance organization. SPJST lodges have since provided places for
music and dances and have promoted Czech language and culture, including the
study of Czech at both the University
of Texas at Austin
and Texas A & M University.
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http://www.cah.utexas.edu/exhibits/WinedaleStory/blue7.html
Link to music page, featuring photographs of ethnic European
groups, such as “The Hayseed Band” of La Grange featured below