Westphalia Rural Historic District
Roughly bounded by County Road 383, Pond Cr.,
County Roads 377, 368, 372, 373, and the Falls Co. western boundary line
Westphalia, Falls County, Texas
Significant Year: 1879
Period: 1875 – 1899, 1925 – 1949, 1900 – 1924
Historic Function: Commerce / Trade; Education, Religion; Agriculture / Subsistence; Domestic
Historic Subfunction: Specialty Store; School; Church School; Agricultural Fields; Single Dwelling
Westphalia Rural Historic District
The Westphalia Rural Historic District encompasses nearly 5500 acres of upland
prairie in western Falls County in Central Texas. State Highway 320 runs
diagonally through the area, linking it with Marlin, the Falls County seat 20
miles to the northeast, and with Temple, the Bell County seat 10 miles to the
southwest. The district lies at the heart of an extended rural agricultural
community defined by strong German Catholic cultural traditions. The religious
institutions, schools and commercial enterprises in the village of Westphalia
serve as the focal point for this community, offering services to the area's
farming families. Beyond the physical boundaries of the village, the historic
district also incorporates 35 historic farmsteads with strong cultural ties to
the church. These farmsteads contain late 19th and early 20th century
agricultural and residential buildings surrounded by virtually intact cultural
landscapes. Despite the evolutionary nature of such agricultural environments,
farmsteads in the district retain a significant level of their historic
integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling and
association. As a result, these resources continue to convey a strong sense of
the region's agrarian past.
GENERAL SETTING
The Brazos River flows through Central Texas to the Gulf of Mexico, dividing
Falls County almost equally into eastern and western halves. A valley of rich,
reddish-brown alluvium flanks the Brazos extending approximately one mile east
and west. The valley land gradually rises to an upland of black, waxy soiled
prairie and gray, sandy soiled timberland. A number of streams and creeks drain
the upland, distributing fresh water across most of the county. Forests
containing several types of oak, ash, elm, pecan, hackberry, cedar, cottonwood,
and mesquite spread along the waterways and highlight the ever-changing levels
of undulating prairie.
The Westphalia community lies in the western half of Falls County. Its extended
boundaries once covered from 25 to 30 square miles, with Big Pond Creek forming
northern and eastern boundaries and Milam and Bell Counties establishing
southern and western boundaries respectively (Temple Weekly Times, 16 June
1888). Today, the extended community lies between Pond Creek on the north and
east, county roads (CR) 368, 372, and 374 on the south, and the Bell County line
on the west. This area corresponds to the boundaries of the Westphalia
Independent School District (WISD). Over one hundred individual properties and
groupings of properties scattered over 11,000 acres of the accompanying
landscape, comprise the built cultural environment. Westphalia's historic road
pattern follows the gridlike boundaries of its original individual farms.
Constructed on a diagonal through the area in 1938, State Highway (SH) 320
provides the only interruption to this historic grid pattern of development in
the rural historic landscape.
The historic district encompasses the all or part of the rectangular land
parcels from nine of the original land patents in Falls County. The largest of
these, the Martin Byerly patent, contains the 271-acre tract acquired in 1881 by
Westphalia's founder Theodore Rabroker. All of the William Lawrence and J.H.
Hale patents also lie within the district boundaries, as do the northern parts
of the Esther Clark and Hugh Owens patents, the eastern parts of the M. Hunt
surveys, the southern part of the David Barlow survey and a small part of the
western section of the J.H. Harvey survey. The strong grid pattern imposed on
the land by the initial German Catholic settlers remains visible, marked by the
fences, county roads, and vegetation that divide the land into roughly 270-acre
tracts. This organized spatial pattern survives despite division of some large
parcels into 50- to 80-acre tracts beginning in the 1910s. As second and third
generation Westphalians continued the patterns established by their forefathers,
the landscape today continues to reflect its late 19th century appearance.
Although dominated by its organized spatial pattern, the individual land units
within the historic district appear as one because of common land uses.
Widespread corn, cotton and livestock production create a fairly consistent
visual presence among the various parcels. Seasonal agricultural practices unify
the landscape throughout the year. Plowed rows of black land in the early spring
that turn to rows of cotton by late summer and fall, combine to form almost
uniform fields. Hay meadows and pastures of grazing livestock appear randomly
across the fields usually occupying land unsuitable for tilling. These landscape
elements result in sweeping vistas that are broken only by an occasional
elevated farmstead highlighted with native vegetation. Few large tracts of
timber exist except where they occur naturally along creek beds. Narrow graveled
and packed earth roads, fence rows sometimes dotted with vegetation, livestock
water tanks, and the village of Westphalia further break the landscape vistas.
The most striking features, however, are the twin steeples of the Catholic
church, visible from almost all points within the district. These serve as
visual reminders of the religious focus of Westphalia. Collectively, the land,
agricultural uses, farmsteads, fence rows, rural roadways, and village center
form a distinctive rural historic landscape. More detailed descriptions of its
principal components follow.
VILLAGE OF WESTPHALIA
Never formally platted or designated, the village of Westphalia lies toward the
northern end of the historic district. The staggered intersection of three
historic village roads (the Main Village Road, the Church Road and the Gin Road)
with SH 320 segregates four functional areas of the village. A complex of
religious and educational properties lies at the northernmost sector of the
village, accessed by the Church Road from SH 320. Several historic commercial
buildings and a modern meat market comprise a small commercial district near the
intersection of the major roads. Historic orientation to the Main Village Road
shifted to SH 320 following its construction in 1938. A single cotton gin,
comprising the district's only surviving historic industrial complex, occupies a
site east of the commercial area and adjacent to several large cotton fields. It
is accessed from the Main Village Road by a dirt road known locally as "the Gin
Road." Residential dwellings comprise the fourth functional area. Historically,
only a single dwelling faced the church on the southwest side of the Church Road
until the 1930s. Residents commonly built village dwellings along the Main
Village Road near the commercial complex. Subsequent residential construction
filled in the lots between historic dwellings in both areas. In addition, a
small subdivision of single-family houses platted on church property in 1961
occupies historically vacant tracts north and east of the church complex. The
subdivision contains a few historic houses that predate the plat, primarily
bungalows of the late 1930s. Single-family dwellings and commercial buildings
historically clustered at the crossroads closest to the church complex. Today
the church complex, historic buildings, and more recent church- related
subdivision together comprise the village of Westphalia.
The 1894 Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin (Site No. 91) dominates
the entire village complex with its pair of towering steeples. A modern brick
rectory (c.1970) stands to the east of the church facing southwest. Just to the
west of the church and rectory, the community's educational facilities include a
3-room, 1-story school building known as the 1896 Westphalia Little School (Site
No. 88) and a 1921 2-story school and convent known variously as St. Mary's High
School or the Sisterhouse (Site No. 89). Both schools are of frame construction.
A small playground and a grotto built in 1945 (Site 91C), stand between these
buildings and the church.
Completing the religious enclave, St. Mary's Cemetery (Site No.79;) lies across
the Church Road in the northwest corner of the original 100-acre church
property. The fenced cemetery encloses a carefully maintained gravel surface
with grass around the perimeter. Rows of headstones customarily face east,
toward the church, and appear as parallel lines with various individual and
family plots of almost uniform dimensions outlined in concrete curbing. Many of
the older headstones are topped with square German crosses, reflecting the three
similar crosses atop the church steeples. Viewed from the southwest, the
cemetery/church grouping presents a striking image. The western portion of the
cemetery contains the older tombstones and early wrought iron fencing while the
more recent graves extend along the eastern half. A chain link fence punctuated
by an arched metal entry encloses the section of later graves. A 1908 bronze
statue depicting the crucifixion of Christ rises approximately fifteen feet
above the tombstones in the cemetery's center. Graves of former priests, each
denoted by a large concrete slab inscribed with their name and photo, lie in
procession between the monument and the entry gate.
Facing south immediately to the east of the church, two modern buildings clad in
metal siding serve as WISD offices and as a parish hall. Both buildings replace
early 20th century frame buildings. All of Westphalia's historic educational and
religious buildings utilized frame construction and wood siding. Brick is the
dominant material for new church and school buildings, followed by metal.
The village's principal unpaved roads meet in two perpendicular intersections at
the center of the village. The diagonal crossing of the Church Road and the Main
Village Road by SH 320 creates a irregular configuration encompassing several
frame commercial buildings. The westernmost building contains the Thornton Store
(Site No. 47), a c.1907 dry goods and grocery store. The Westphalia Drug Store
(Site No. 55) occupied a 1914 commercial building currently known as the Hering
Store. A single gasoline pump sits under the store awning. The final commercial
building housed the Greener Garage (Site No. 54), built in 1931 but now vacant.
At its peak population, before SH 320 facilitated greater access to towns like
Lott and Temple, about a dozen commercial enterprises flourished in Westphalia.
New commercial buildings substitute pre- fabricated metal buildings with brick
or masonite veneers for the traditional frame construction methods.
In the third functional area, Westphalia's only surviving cotton gin complex
(Site No. 86) occupies the extreme eastern edge of the village. A large
2-1/2-story L- shaped metal building with several attached 1-story gable and
shed roofed additions comprises the bulk of a complex that faces north and east.
Westphalia boasted three gins in the 1920s. Today, however, the only other major
industrial complex is a grain and fertilizer storage facility (Site No. N16) at
the southwestern limit of the Main Village Road. Occupying the site of a
historic cotton gin, the new complex utilizes metal siding and roofing
materials. However, the modern units consist of pre-fabricated self-contained
buildings, while the historic gin is a rambling frame construction covered with
metal sheeting of various shapes and sizes. Both industrial complexes are
segregated from any concentration of dwellings.
Over 30 single-family dwellings scattered along the village roadways make up the
fourth functional area. These dwellings historically fronted onto the Main
Village Road or the south side of the Church Road. The earliest village
dwellings date to about 1890, although Westphalia's domestic buildings represent
a continuum of major design trends and plan types throughout the historic
period. These dwellings include 1- to 1-1/2-story frame dwellings built in the
L- Plan, T-Plan, center-passage, and bungalow plan forms. Westphalians
historically built frame dwellings, although many have been altered by the
application of synthetic siding. Although village residential lots typically
contain fewer secondary buildings than do farmsteads, agricultural outbuildings
such as barns, tool sheds, and chicken houses are not uncommon. After the
imposition of SH 320 across the principal roadways in 1938, new village
dwellings arose along the completed highway. Westphalians also moved some
historic bungalows to new sites along the highway. Still others reoriented their
houses to face the new highway.
Probably the earliest surviving building in the village is a small c.1890
center-passage dwelling (Site No. 84) that faces the Church of the Visitation.
This 1-1/2-story, 3- bay, sidegabled house carries a metal roof that extends
over an inset porch. Three gabled dormers with single 1/1 windows grace the
roof's eastern slope. A second type of historic village dwelling, the standard
plan bungalow form of the 1917 Frank Gausemeier House (Site No. 58) lies near
the commercial district. Its typifies second-generation farm houses throughout
the community. Set back several hundred feet from the road, this large
1-1/2-story pyramidal roof bungalow features a principal facade arranged in an
A-B-B-A configuration that faces northwest. A hipped dormer with paired windows
extends from the western roof slope. The 1921 Dr. B.A. and Katie Jansing House
(Site No. 57), represents Westphalia's later Craftsman-influenced bungalows.
Sited near the commercial center of Westphalia, the 1-story frame bungalow faces
northwest along the Main Village Road. Capped by a dominant gable-front roof,
this bungalow incorporates an inset gable-front on the west and a hipped roof
open porch on the north. Diagonal wooden slates decorate both gables. Although
bungalows enjoyed great popularity in Westphalia from about 1910 through the
historic period, as they did throughout America, the Jansing House is one of the
few in the historic district that employs modest Craftsman detailing.
Nearly all houses built in the area since 1945 employ brick or synthetic siding
houses. Examples are scattered among the bungalows and other historic properties
along the south side of the Main Village Road, across from the church, and in a
new subdivision to the the north and east of the church complex. These later
houses typically exhibit the design inflences of the Ranch style.
FARMSTEADS
The remainder of the historic district's built cultural environment consists of
54 historic properties, with 40 of these containing historic agricultural
resources. The two principal components of such farmsteads consist of a building
complex including the primary dwelling and the principal outbuildings and a
cultural landscape including cultivated fields, grazing pastures, meadows, stock
ponds, timber tracts, fallow land and other shaped features of the rural
environment.
First and second generation farms of between 80 and 200 acres comprise the
majority of Westphalia's historic farmsteads. Typically, about 80 percent of
this acreage was reserved for large expanses of flat land capable of extensive
cultivation. Farmers devoted between 60 and 70 percent of this acreage to cash
crops such as cotton, with the plantings of milo or grain sorghum, field corn
and hay in the remaining fields. Westphalians traditionally kept a substantial
percentage, roughly 20 to 30 percent of their farmland, for grazing cattle. They
also planted large vegetable gardens and orchards near the building complex. In
addition, historic farms contained timber plots along a creek bed, as well as
stock ponds. Building complexes on these farms contained the primary dwelling,
tenant houses or shelters for hired hands, animal and vehicle barns and sheds.
All buildings related to an individual farmstead clustered on a few acres of
elevated land near the primary dwelling.
Historic farmsteads tend to contain complexes of late- 19th and early-20th
century buildings and structures. A typical complex consisted of a 1- or 1-1/2-
story wood frame dwelling flanked by up to 20 agricultural buildings or
structures frequently grouped to the rear of the farmhouse. Occupying elevated
land as a rule, building complexes were oriented to take advantage of
unobstructed views of the surrounding countryside. Narrow graveled or packed
earth driveways led from county roadways to the main entry of the house, which
typically featured its most stylish details. A few farmsteads contained tenant
houses or other, sometimes temporary, accommodations for hands hired during peak
periods of agricultural activity such as the harvest season. All contained
outbuildings associated with agriculture. The number and type of outbuildings
varies, depending on the crops, livestock and scope of a particular farm.
While all of Westphalia's farmsteads historically possessed individual access to
county roadways, many maintained a substantial setback from the county
transportation newtwork. Positioning the building complexes midway between the
fields facilitated access to all parts of the farm for efficient cultivation and
harvesting. In addition, elevated sites for afforded farmers good drainage and
uniterrupted views of their agricultural operations.
Recent farmsteads carry some of the same site characteristics, although they
typically contain larger and fewer outbuildings. Most lie close to the main
roadways as modern equipment eliminates the need for proximity to the fields.
Orchards, fencerows and other historic vegetation patterns are also limited on
these properties, as all farmland is leveled and plowed for cultivation. This
pattern has also transformed a few historic farmsteads in the district. While
such properties no longer feature any discernable historic agricultural
resources, they remain in the hands of Westphalian descendants who maintain both
visual and cultural ties within the German Catholic community.
LAYOUT OF BUILDING COMPLEXES
Building complex configurations evolved over time as historic functions became
obsolete and farmers adapted their buildings and spatial arrangements for new
uses. Nevertheless, some patterns remain consistent throughout the district. In
nearly all cases, the driveway connecting the building complex with the main
transportation route also separates buildings by function within the complex.
Buildings associated with human use typically occupy space on one side of the
road while those used to house animals lie on the opposite side. This remains
true at modern farmsteads as well. Animal and tractor barns usually lie at a
discreet distance from the primary dwelling and auto garage. Within the historic
building complexes, a decorative fence often encloses the house and its
surrounding yard of about 90' x 100'. Buildings closely associated with domestic
use, such as hot water houses, smoke houses, root cellars, privies, cisterns and
wells, lie within or just beyond the fenced yard. Ornamental flower gardens and
occasionally vegetable gardens also occupied space within the fenced yard.
Animal and utility barns stand beyond the fenced yards and across the driveway,
usually about 70' from the fence line and 100' from the dwelling itself.
Historic vegetation within fenced yards includes roses, oleander, cedar, irises,
crepe myrtle and daffodils, as well as examples of recently planted material.
Such ornamental vegetation usually surrounds the principal house. Vegetable
garden plots often occur immediately next to the dwelling, occasionally
replacing the traditional front yard. Many garden plots and flower beds are
lined with fossilized shells from nearby limestone outcroppings, constitute a
local folk decorative tradition. Ornamental fencing usually encloses the primary
residence and special garden areas.
FARMHOUSES
Center passage and pyramidal roof forms comprise the majority of historic
farmhouse types in the district. Westphalia's earliest extant farmhouses date
from c.1880 to c.1900. They tend to reflect a hybrid of traditional American
forms modestly influenced by German folk traditions. Dwellings dating after the
turn of the century follow fairly standard American traditions in rural housing.
Virtually all historic dwellings in the district are frame constructions. Many
appear to have been culled from standard planbooks of the period, particularly
those built after 1900. Farmhouses generally exhibit little ornamentation or
stylistic influences, revealing the practical nature of the regional vernacular
architectural vocabulary. Drop and clapboard siding predominate. Lightning rods
are common on the primary dwellings and large secondary buildings. Many
dwellings reflect the area's rural conservatism, exhibiting plans or designs
popular in more settled or urban parts of the country a decade earlier than
their construction dates.
The center passage form is among the most common types in the historic district,
with local examples dating between 1880 and 1920. Sometimes called a dog-trot,
this form incorporates a center hall with flanking single rooms. A gable roof of
sheet metal or composition asphalt shingles typically covers the wood frame
construction. Gable front or hipped roof porches such as that on the Anton
Jansing Farmhouse (Site No. 66) extend from the principal facade, supported by
simple wood columns. Examples incorporating a second story comprise the I-house
form of the center passage plan. An anomaly in Westphalia, the I-house
associated with the Karnowski and Henry Meyer families (Site No. 22) is the only
2-story dwelling that survives in the historic district.
Other vernacular forms in the district include the L- plan, with local examples
such as Site No. 44 dating to the period between 1890 and 1920. Featuring rooms
arranged in an L-shaped configuration, these houses represent an evolution of
the center passage form. Intersecting gable roofs typically cover these
farmhouses, with shed roofed porches occupying the primary facade at the point
of intersection. Rear ells extending the form result in a a T- plan
configuration such as that found at the Bockholt- Lingnau House (Site No. 42).
Examples of this form in the district date between 1900 and 1920. Porches
generally occupy the lateral stem of these houses, with shed roofs and simple
supports typical. The final vernacular form in Westphalia consists of the
two-room, or double-pen, house such as that at Site No. 84. Typically built
between 1880 and 1920, this form features a condensed plan of only two rooms.
Local examples feature two single doors on the principal facade that give
independent access to each interior space.
Bungalows comprise the most prevalent house form in the historic district. Built
between 1900 and 1940, this 20th century popular form manifests itself in two
types in Westphalia. The most prevalent type features open bungalow plans capped
by pyramidal roofs. These doublepen, double- pile forms employ box or balloon
frame construction dominated by massive pyramidal roofs clad with sheet metal or
composite asphalt shingles. The roof sometimes incorporates an inset porch,
although shed or hipped roof porches occasionally extend from the roofline or
slightly below it. Gable or hipped roof dormers often allow light into upper
half-story spaces. The 1912 Frank and Julia Buckholt farmhouse (Site No. 78)
best represents the type in the historic district. The second type consists of
gable- fronted bungalows. These typically feature either an inset porch or
slightly projecting porch with a lower gable roof. Built both in the village and
on farmsteads, most of Westphalia's bungalows are simple, unadorned dwellings. A
few such as the Dr. J.A. Jansing House (Site No. 57) exhibit modest Craftsman
details.
AGRICULTURAL OUTBUILDINGS
Agricultural outbuildings dominate Westphalia farmsteads both in size and
number, thereby reflecting the multiple functions and needs of a rural property.
Generally clustered near the primary dwelling, their location within the complex
is largely determined by function (storage of corn, hay or equipment) and
relationship to nearby land use. These resources are best described based on the
penn, a square space of roughly even proportions defined by walls and a gable or
shed roof. Single pen outbuildings commonly house privies, tool sheds, or small
livestock. Double and triple pen secondary buildings more frequently shelter
livestock, house agricultural machinery or store grain. Pens aligned on either
side of a passageway within one large gable roof define a transverse barn.
Several variations on the basic transverse form exist in the district. Many of
these barns also feature lean-to additions encircled with corrals or fencing.
Fencing commonly takes the form of horizontal wood fence rails or barbed wire
connected to cedar posts. Some of the farmsteads retain root cellars typically
set on rock or brick foundations with gable roofs and horizontal wood siding.
Almost every historic farmstead maintains a cistern near the rear of the primary
dwelling, generally brick constructions with tin linings, concrete sheathing and
metal hardware. Several cisterns are incised with the date of construction. In
recent years, self- contained manufactured metal cylinders replaced traditional
brick cisterns. Some wells and pump houses still exist within the farmsteads.
Like the cisterns, most wells are of brick construction lined with concrete. A
few working windmills survive in conjunction with a cistern or in a nearby
pasture. Westphalians traditionally built large barns with open hay lofts above
individual stalls for horses. Separate cow sheds and pens held cattle for
feeding and milking. Nearly all Westphalia farmyards contain chicken houses with
well-ventilated screened windows and wood shutters. Some farmers raised turkeys,
geese and other poultry and their farms contain numerous related buildings
including hatcheries. Pig pens and houses abound as do cribs for storing corn
and other animal fodder.
HISTORIC LANDSCAPE FEATURES
In addition to the building complex, Westphalia's farmsteads historically
encompassed a large expanse of flat land for cultivation and a four- to
five-acre timber plots along creeks such as Pond Creek or North Elm Creek.
Timber plots provided fire wood both for heating and cooking. With the exception
of large pecan, oak and hackberry trees around building complexes and small
orchards, few trees interrupt the cultivated landscape. Planted trees shade
dwellings while native timber follows creek beds and fence rows. Fences lined
with such volunteer trees and other vegetation separate animal pastures from
cultivated fields and creek beds, defining property boundaries. Only a few farms
continue to keep three or four acres in natural prairie grass as a permanent
supply of hay for cattle. As mechanical vehicles replaced animal power on the
farm, many farmers plowed their hay fields. Both the Christopher Fuchs (Site No.
41) and the G.P. Hoelscher (Site No. 99) farmsteads retain unplowed hay meadows
(Voltin, 1994). Cattle graze on hilly or sloping land unsuitable for plowing.
Stock tanks or ponds to water livestock commonly appear at the lowest elevations
of a pasture. Dirt- or gravel-packed county roads generally follow the original
farmstead property lines. They link the farms to one another and to SH 320 which
has become the district's main arterial. Visually, the unpaved roads, cedar post
and barbed wire fencing, gently rolling fields interrupted by timber-lined
creeks and elevated building clusters, combine to create a unified landscape
pattern throughout the district (see Photo 17).
In contrast to the historic farmsteads, modern fields are plowed to the very
edge of the roads and yards to maximize crop yield. They retain few trees or
buffer areas of grass or swale for the same reason. Newer farms tend to have
larger, leveled fields and contain few fences around which to maneuver heavy
equipment. In some instances, modern buildings have replaced all historic ones.
In most cases, however, a few historic outbuildings are retained for their
ongoing utility.
Throughout the district, some of Westphalia's oldest farmsteads have been
abandoned. In many cases, property owners occupy new brick houses situated on
the main transportation routes. Often the owners, their relatives or neighbors,
continue to farm the associated acreage while the historic buildings fall into
disuse and disrepair. The high instance of neglect in such cases currently
constitutes the greatest threat to the historic integrity of the district.
Several abandoned farmsteads within the district warrant archeological
investigations to further document the community's evolution. In some cases,
historic outbuildings survive but the primary dwelling and possibly other
associated buildings have been removed. At the Karnowski (Site No. 21) and at
the Roessler-Rabroker (Site No. 108) farmsteads, foundation remnants and
plantings provide evidence of historic dwellings. In both cases, deteriorating
outbuildings also survive. Site No. N53, a farmstead historically associated
with members of the Hoelscher family, contains a c.1980 brick ranch house and
several manufactured metal buildings. The building complex is dominated by five
immense nonhistoric metal silos. However, traditional pasture lands and fencing,
along with two historic barns, identify this as a historic building complex
site. Isolated cisterns, windmills, cedar fence lines and other historic
agricultural features scattered throughout the district, indicate the potential
for substantive historic archeological inquiry.
DEFINITION OF CATEGORIES
Contributing resources include farmhouses, outbuildings, schools, religious
buildings and landscape features that add to the district's overall historic
character. Such resources were built before 1945 and appear much as they did
during the historic period. Contributing properties buildings not be unaltered
or survive in their original state, as few, if any, of the district's historic
resources would qualify under such rigid standards. Contributing resources must,
however, retain sufficient integrity of location, design, setting, materials,
workmanship, feeling and association to be recognizable to the district's period
of significance as a German-Catholic rural community. Although resources moved
from their original site typically lose their integrity, relocation was common
in the historic district. Westphalians often chose to move resources to more
convenient sites. When such moves occurred before 1945 and the resource retains
other aspects of integrity, it may still be classified as a Contributing element
of the district.
As a rural historic landscape, much of Westphalia's significance derives from
its historic agricultural fabric. Outbuildings such as barns, tractor sheds,
chicken coops and pig pens and other ancillary structures such as cisterns,
wells and windmills are counted at as individual elements of the historic
district. These outbuildings and agricultural support structures were integral
to the everyday life and successful operation of a farm and help establish its
historic character. Farmhouses and outbuildings alike reveal land-use and
cultural patterns. Their placement, orientation, materials, and scale should be
considered in determining integrity. If farm buildings retain their agricultural
associations as the focus of a historic farm, they possess integrity of feeling,
association and setting. Usually the aspects of integrity most critical for
determining if a historic resource is contributing involves materials, design,
feeling, and workmanship. Alterations that can affect these factors include
replacement of original or historic fenestration patterns or materials,
application of synthetic siding, enclosure of open spaces such as porches or
balconies, and the construction of additions. These changes do not necessarily
warrant classification as noncontributing, however. Mitigating factors include
the type of resource, the date of the change, and the combined effect such
alterations have on original or historic feeling, materials, workmanship, and
design. For example, the enclosure of an original front porch on a farmhouse
more adversely affects its historic character than a similar change to a rear
porch. The front porch presented the farmhouse's "public face" to the community.
Rear or side porches were often historically enclosed to meet changing needs.
For instance, rear or side porches were often enclosed as bathrooms when indoor
plumbing became available, screened as sleeping space in the summer, or enclosed
for storage or pantries. If such changes occurred before 1945, they represent
the building's physical evolution as well as broad trends in local history.
Adaption of rear porches as bathrooms, for example is the physical manifestation
of improvements to public infrastructure in rural areas during the mid-20th
century. If the historic property's basic form remains intact, such changes do
not prevent its classification as a contributing element of the historic
district.
In addition to dwellings and outbuildings, features that help define
Westphalia's rural historic landscape may also be listed as contributing
elements. Cisterns, wells, and windmills visually reinforce the agricultural
character of the landscape and may be classified as contributing elements.
Landscape features such as timber lots, cedar post and barbed wire fences,
driveways, field roads and traditionally cultivated fields also reinforce the
district's rural historic character. For instance, historic farmsteads dedicated
about 70% of available cropland to cultivation and another 20% to pasturage. The
remaining acreage was reserved for timber lots, orchards, hay meadows and stock
ponds, with barbed wire fencing and dirt roads delineating boundaries. Retention
of a significant percentage of such features allows classification of the
landscape as a whole as a contributing element of the historic district.
Conversely, the retention of historic buildings alone does not justify
classification of the farmstead landscape as a contributing element. While the
Frank and Julia Buckholt farm (Site No. 78) encompasses a historic building
complex, the associated acreage has been leveled for intensive modern
cultivation practices. While the individual components of the building complex
are designated as contributing, the surrounding landscape is a noncontributing
feature of the rural historic district. Other landscape features held in common
by the community such as the historic pattern of roadways, culverts and drainage
ditches also help tie the district together and may also be considered
Contributing elements as a whole.
Noncontributing elements typically detract from the district's historic
character. Resources in this category were typically built after the district's
period of significance and possess little or no architectural or historic
significance. They exhibit few of the physical attributes and characteristics
that distinguish the historic district and, therefore, are considered intrusive.
These properties are indicated by the letter "N" before the site number in the
following inventory.
This category also includes historic (pre-1945) properties so severely altered
that their original or historic fabric is unrecognizable. While not all
alterations detract from a property's integrity, severe alterations can
compromise a property's ability to convey its historic character. Common
alterations include the permanent enclosure of front porches, alteration of the
historic fenestration patterns and replacement of historic fenestration
materials. Many original wood-frame windows and wood doors in Westphalia have
been replaced with aluminum. While changes sensitive to the original size and
location of the opening are easily reversible, cutting of larger openings
permanently damage historic fabric. Resources with such irreversible changes are
listed in the following inventory as Noncontributing* elements of the historic
district.
In recent years several Westphalians have undertaken the rehabilitation of their
historic properties. Recognizing Westphalia's historic characteristics they
sought to return their properties to a historic appearance. While a few
accurately restored original facades, other rehabilitation projects either
removed characterdefining historic fabric or added psuedo-historic elements
inappropriate to the building's type, design or period. Although such changes
have often made a building more appealing they sometimes are not based on
historical precedent and detract from the building's historic character. In such
cases, a resource may be classified as Noncontributing*. If restored to their
original or historic appearances, historic buildings currently classified as
Noncontributing* may be reevaluated as Contributing elements. Property owners
should consult the Secretary of the Interior's Guidelines for Rehabilitation
before undertaking any restoration work. The Texas Historical Commission in
Austin provides copies of these standards and other technical assistance to such
rehabilitation efforts.
INVENTORY OF PROPERTIES
The following inventory lists all resources in the Westphalia Rural Historic
District. Organized by Texas Historic Sites Inventory (THSI) No., the list
includes information on the buildings, structures, objects, and sites at each
property. The status category identifies elements as Contributing or
Noncontributing components of the historic district.
Site #. Name of Property (description), Address; Date. Status
FAL/WE 20. Hoelscher/Heese Farmstead, CR 386;
20a. 1-1/2-story frame center-passage dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
20b. 1-1/2-story frame hay barn. Contributing
20c. 1-story frame animal barn. Contributing
20d. low shed roofed hog pen. Contributing
20e. 1-story frame tractor barn. Contributing
20f. 1-story frame vehicle shed. Contributing
20g. modern 1-story brick dwelling. Noncontributing
20h. 1-story metal barn. Contributing
20i. 1-story metal barn. Contributing
20j. associated landscape features (pond, meadows, fencing, fields).
Contributing
FAL/WE 21. Karnowski Farmstead, CR 386;
21a. house site. Noncontributing*
21b. 1- and 2-story hay barn, vertical board siding. Contributing
21c. 1-story animal barn, vertical boards and cedar posts. Contributing
21d. 1-story shed, vertical board and metal siding. Contributing
21e. 1-story hot water house, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
21f. shed roofed pump house with brick/concrete well. Contributing
21g. associated landscape features (fields, pasture, fencing). Contributing
FAL/WE 22. Henry Meyer Farmstead, CR 386;
22a. 2-story I-house dwelling, c.1900. Contributing
22b. 1-1/2-story 3-bay hay barn. Contributing
22c. 1-1/2-story frame animal barn with corral. Contributing
22d. 1-story frame privy. Contributing
22e brick/concrete well Contributing
22f 1-story frame shed Contributing
22g associated landscape features (timber lot, meadows, fencing) Contributing
FAL/WE 23. Farmstead, SH 320;
23a. 1-story bungalow, asbestos siding, c.1935. Noncontributing*
23b. 1-story front-gabled hay and animal barn. Contributing
23c. 1-story frame shed. Contributing
23d. frame, metal- and wood sided hog pen with corn crib. Contributing
23e. associated landscape features (timber lot, meadows). Contributing
FAL/WE 24. Xavier Frei Farmstead, CR 378;
24a. 1-story domestic building (extensive alterations). Noncontributing*
24b. 1-story metal vehicle storage and workshop building. Noncontributing
24c. 1-1/2-story pre-fabricated metal barn. Noncontributing
24d. multi-purpose equipment storage and hay barn. Contributing
24e. associated landscape features (pond, pasture, timber lot). Contributing
FAL/WE 25. Joe Rutschilling Farmstead, CR 378
25a. 1-1/2-story frame dwelling, c.1925. Contributing
25b. 1-story metal auto garage. Contributing
25c. front-gabled frame shed. Contributing
25d. hot water house with metal roof and siding. Contributing
25e. 1-story frame smoke house. Contributing
25f. 1-1/2-story 2-bay frame vehicle barn and garage. Noncontributing*
25g. 1-story rectangular frame oil tank shed. Contributing
25h. 3 circular ruins of cisterns, metal-lined with brick foundations.
Noncontributing*
25i. barn ruins. Noncontributing*
25j. 1/2-story frame corn crib.Contributing
25k. cottage garden. Contributing
25l. associated landscape features (pasture, fields, orchard). Contributing
FAL/WE 26. Front-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 27. Cross-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1940. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 28. Front-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1940. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 29. Front-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 30. Front-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 31. Front-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 32. Craftsman influenced bungalow, SH 320; c.1925. Contributing
FAL/WE 33. Side-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1935. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 34. Side-gabled Bungalow, SH 320; c.1935. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 35. 2-room House, SH 320; c.1900. Contributing
FAL/WE 36. Hoelscher Tenant Bungalow, SH 320; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE 37. Alois Hoelscher Farmstead, SH 320;
37a. hipped roof bungalow, c.1920. Contributing
37b. 1-1/2-story metal hay barn. Contributing
37c. 1 story frame garage. Contributing
37d. 1-story frame shed. Contributing
37e. 1-story new metal utility shed. Noncontributing
37f. 1-story metal tractor barn. Contributing
37g. 1-story metal utility building with porte cochere. Contributing
37h. cottage garden. Contributing
37i. associated landscape features (pasture, pond, siting). Contributing
FAL/WE 39. Xavier Frei farmstead, CR 376;
39a. 1-story frame hipped roof dwelling, c.1920. Contributing
39b. 1-story front-gabled frame barn, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
39c. large side-gabled frame tractor barn. Contributing
39d. frame pumphouse with cylindrical brick/concrete well. Contributing
39e. cylindrical concrete cistern, 4' high. Contributing
39f. cottage garden. Contributing
39g. associated landscape features (fields). Contributing
FAL/WE 40. Schilling/Frei Farmstead, SH 320;
40a. 1-story frame front-gabled bungalow, c.1925. Contributing
40b. 2-1/2-story frame hay barn, vertical siding. Contributing
40c. 1-story 3-bay metal tractor barn. Contributing
40d. 1-story rectangular chicken house. Contributing
40e. 1-story rectangular frame storage shed. Contributing
40f associated landscape features (pond, fencing, pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 41. Christopher Fuchs Farmstead, SH 320;
41a. 1-1/2-story frame center-passage dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
41b. 1-story, 2-bay storage barn, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
41c. 1-story modern frame storage shed, metal siding. Noncontributing
41d. 1-story front-gabled rectangular equipment garage. Contributing
41e. 1-story square privy, vertical siding. Contributing
41f. 1-story rectangular chicken coop, corrugated metal siding. Contributing
41g. 4 double-pen wood hog pens. Contributing
41h. 1-story, 2-bay rectangular frame barn. Noncontributing
41i. cylindrical steel fuel tank with conical cover. Noncontributing
41j. 1-1/2-story L-plan barn, vertical wood siding. Contributing
41k. 2-foot cistern with steel walls and cover. Contributing
41l. 1- and 2-story rectangular frame barn for cows and hay. Contributing
41m. 1-story, 1-bay frame horse barn, corrugated metal siding. Contributing
41n. 1-story rectangular hen house. Contributing
41o. 1-story, 3-bay, rectangular machinery storage barn. Noncontributing
41p. 1-1/2-story rectangular barn. Contributing
41q. cylindrical, brick/concrete cistern, c.1911. Contributing
41r. 1-story, 2-room tenant dwelling, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
41s. brick-lined cylindrical metal cistern. Contributing
41t cottage garden. Contributing
41u. associated landscape features (hay meadow, fields, pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 42. Bockholt-Lingnau Farmstead, SH 320;
42a. 1-1/2-story center-passage dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
42b. 1-story modern equipment and vehicle barn, metal siding. Noncontributing
42c. 1-story frame building (relocated Westphalia School music hall).
Noncontributing
42d. 1-story 2-car garage, synthetic siding. Noncontributing
42e. 1-story 1-bay garage, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
42f. 1/2-story metal tractor barn. Contributing
42g. windmill (Aeromotor brand). Contributing
42h. brick cistern with concrete lining. Contributing
42i. associated landscape features (corn fields, pasture, pond). Contributing
FAL/WE 43. Bungalow with asbestos siding, SH 320; c.1940. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 44. Dwelling, 1-1/2-story front-gabled, SH 320; c.1890. Contributing
FAL/WE 45. Modern dwelling with synthetic siding, SH 320; c.1950.
Noncontributing
FAL/WE 46. Craftsman bungalow, front-gabled, Main Vil Rd.; c.1925. Contributing
FAL/WE 47. Johnny Thornton Store/Old Store, Main Vil Rd.; c.1907. Contributing
FAL/WE 48. Walter Fiedler Farmstead, Main Vil Rd.;
48a. center-passage plan dwelling, c.1900. Contributing
48b. 1-story rectangular hay and animal barn. Contributing
48c. 1-story garage, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
48d. 1-story frame and brick hot water house. Contributing
48e. 1-story frame privy. Contributing
FAL/WE 49. Bungalow, SH 320;
49a. front-gabled dwelling with synthetic siding, c.1930. Noncontributing*
49b. 1-1/2-story frame barn with vertical board siding. Contributing
FAL/WE 50. 2-bay front-gabled garage, SH 320; c.1930. Contributing
FAL/WE 51. Bungalow, SH 320;
51a. Hipped roof bungalow with board-and-batten siding, c.1920. Contributing
51b. 1-1/2-story frame barn with hay loft. Contributing
FAL/WE 52. Bungalow with board-and-batten siding, SH 320; c.1920. Contributing
FAL/WE 53. Bungalow with aluminum siding, SH 320; c.1920. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 54. Greener Garage, Main Vil Rd.; c.1925. Contributing
FAL/WE 55. Westphalia Drug Store, Main Vil Rd.; c.1914. Contributing
FAL/WE 56. Bungalow with asbestos siding, Main Vil Rd.; c.1925. Contributing
FAL/WE 57. Dr. B.A Jansing Bungalow, Main Vil Rd.; c.1920. Contributing
FAL/WE 58. Frank Gausemeier House, Main Vil Rd.;
58a. 1-1/2-story hipped roof bungalow, c.1917. Contributing
58b. 1-1/2-story wood animal barn. Contributing
58c. side-gabled frame utility shed. Contributing
58d. cottage garden. Contributing
FAL/WE 59. Hipped roof Bungalow, FM 431; c.1920. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 61. G.P Hoelscher Farmstead, CR 371;
61a. 2-room dwelling, board-and-batten siding, c.1890. Contributing
61b. 1-1/2-story frame hay barn. Contributing
61c. 1-story hog barn, metal siding. Contributing
61d. shed roofed chicken house. Contributing
61e. chicken house. Contributing
61f. 1-story single bay tractor barn. Contributing
61g. 1-story metal garage, masonite siding. Noncontributing
61h. 1-story sheet metal shed. Noncontributing
61i. utility shed, board-and-batten and metal siding. Contributing
61j. 2-bay, 2-car garage. Contributing
61k. brick cistern with concrete sheathing, 1908. Contributing
61l. brick well with pump house. Contributing
61m. associated landscape features (pasture, pond, plank bridge). Contributing
FAL/WE 62. B.H. Wilde Farmstead, CR 371;
62a. 1-story front-gabled bungalow with asbestos siding, c.1925. Contributing
62b. 1-1/2-story metal hay barn. Contributing
62c. manufactured metal garage. Noncontributing
62d. metal shed. Noncontributing
62e. wood shed. Contributing
62f. frame bridge. Contributing
62g. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
62h. 1-story frame vehicle garage, metal siding. Contributing
62i. low shed roofed frame hog pen. Contributing
62j. brick well with concrete sheathing. Contributing
62k. associated landscape features (pasture, fencing). Contributing
FAL/WE 63. B.H Wilde Family House, CR 371; c.1890. Contributing
FAL/WE 65. Anton Jansing Estate Farmstead No. 1, CR 372;
65a. Center-passage plan dwelling, c.1930 additions; c.1890. Contributing
65b. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
65c. 1-story frame storage barn, vertical board siding. Contributing
65d. 1-story 3-bay frame garage. Contributing
65e. modern frame barn, metal siding. Noncontributing
65f. 1-story frame privy. Contributing
65g. 1-story frame barn and storage building. Contributing
65h. associated landscape features (pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 66. Anton Jansing Estate Farmstead No. 2, CR 372;
66a. center-passage plan dwelling, lap siding, c.1890. Contributing
66b. 2-story animal and hay barn, vertical board siding. Contributing
66c. 1-story metal garage with carport. Contributing
66d. 1-story frame barn. Contributing
FAL/WE 67. Lucy Biemer Family Farmstead, CR 378;
67a. 1-1/2-story frame dwelling, asbestos siding, c.1915. Contributing
67b. 1-story frame barn with vertical board siding. Contributing
67c. 1-story frame vehicle garage. Contributing
67d. 1-story modern shed with masonite siding. Noncontributing
67e. 1-story modern metal barn. Noncontributing
67f. 1-story cattle feeder, metal siding and roofing. Noncontributing
67g. associated landscape features (grove, pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 72. Joseph Kahlig Family Farmstead, CR 378;
72a. 1-story frame center-passage plan house, c.1890. Contributing
72b. 1- to 2-story metal hay barn. Contributing
72c. 1- to 1-1/2-story metal buggy barn. Contributing
72d. low pig pen. Contributing
72e. 1-story frame barn. Contributing
72f. modern shed, masonite siding. Noncontributing
72g. 1-story frame root cellar with brick basement. Contributing
72h. 1-story frame chicken house, metal siding. Contributing
72i. 1-story metal shed. Contributing
72j. 1-story metal tractor and auto barn. Contributing
72k. cottage garden. Contributing
72l. associated landscape features (pond, pasture, fencing, siting).
Contributing
FAL/WE 73. Rabroker Farmstead Division No. 1, CR 378;
73a. side-gabled bungalow with asbestos siding, c.1935. Noncontributing*
73b. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
73c. 1 story frame animal barn. Contributing
73d. 2-story metal hay barn. Contributing
73e. 2-story modern metal vehicle and storage barn. Noncontributing
73f. metal cistern. Noncontributing
73g. 1-story frame barn. Noncontributing
73h. 1-story metal barn. Noncontributing
73i. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
73j. associated landscape features (pond, fencing). Contributing
FAL/WE 74. Rabroker Farmstead Division No. 2, CR 378;
74a. front-gabled H-plan dwelling, asbestos siding, c.1900. Contributing
74b. 2-story metal hay and vehicle barn. Contributing
74c. 1-story frame side-gabled garage. Contributing
74d. metal storage shed. Noncontributing
74e. 1-story metal barn. Contributing
FAL/WE 75. Rabroker Farmstead Division No. 3, CR 378;
75a. front-gabled Craftsman influenced bungalow, 1928. Contributing
75b. 1-1/2-story metal hay barn with corral. Contributing
75c. 1-story frame garage. Contributing
75d. 1-story front-gabled frame shed. Contributing
75e. windmill on large stock pond Contributing
75f. 1-story side-gabled frame barn. Contributing
75g. associated landscape features (timber lot, stock pond, fencing).
Contributing
FAL/WE 76. Anton Fuchs Associated Farmstead, CR 370;
76a. front-gabled bungalow with Craftsman influences, c.1925. Contributing
76b. 2-story metal hay barn. Contributing
76c. 1-story cedar post barn. Contributing
76d. 1-story open sided metal barn. Contributing
76e. cylindrical metal cistern. Noncontributing
76f. 1-story metal gable-roofed shed. Contributing
76g. 1-story metal shed. Contributing
76h. 1-story metal shed. Contributing
76i. 1-story modern brick dwelling. Noncontributing
76j. quonset style metal barn. Noncontributing
76k. large manufactured metal barn. Noncontributing
FAL/WE 78. Frank J. and Julia Buckholt Farmstead, CR 379;
78a. 1-1/2-story hipped roof bungalow, 1912. Contributing
78b. 1- and 2-story hay and cattle barn, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
78c. 1-story chicken house, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
78d. 1-story garage/work shed, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
78e. 1-story storage building/garage, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
78f. 1-story chicken house, vertical board siding. Contributing
78g. low shed roofed frame pig pens with metal feed silo. Contributing
78h. cottage garden. Contributing
FAL/WE 79. St. Mary's Cemetery, Church Rd;
79a. swept gravesites, c.1895. Contributing
79b. statue of Jesus Christ on the Cross, c.1908. Contributing
79c. wrought iron fencing. Contributing
79d. wrought iron entry arch/chain link fence, c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE 80. Dwelling with aluminum siding, Church Rd; c.1956. Noncontributing
FAL/WE 81. Bungalow with asbestos siding, Church Rd; c.1930. Noncontributing
FAL/WE 82. Concrete block dwelling, Church Rd; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 83. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1950 Noncontributing
FAL/WE 84. Dwelling, Church Rd;
84a. 1-1/2-story with 2-room plan frame dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
84b. 1-story metal barn. Contributing
84c. small 1-story frame and metal shed. Contributing
84d. Well. Contributing
FAL/WE 85. Modified L-plan dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1900. Contributing
FAL/WE 86. Stefka-Hoelscher-Doscocil Cotton Gin, Cot Gin Rd.; c.1930.
Contributing
FAL/WE 88. Westphalia Little School, Church Rd.; c.1896. Contributing
FAL/WE 89. Corpus Christi Chapel, Church Rd.; c.1930. Contributing
FAL/WE 90. St Mary's High School/Sister House, Church Rd.; 1921. Contributing
FAL/WE 91. Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin, Church Rd.;
91a. frame church with twin towers. 1895. Contributing
91b. grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes. 1945. Contributing
91c. cistern, c.1911. Contributing
FAL/WE 92. Henry Rabroker House, Main Vil Rd.;
92a. 1-1/2-story center-passage plan dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
92b. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
92c. low shed roofed chicken house. Contributing
92d. 1-story 2-bay frame garage. Contributing
92e. cottage garden. Contributing
92f. associated landscape features (corn fields, pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 96. L. Wunsch Family Farmstead, CR 388;
96a. 1-story frame cross-gabled Craftsman bungalow, c.1925. Contributing
96b. 1-1/2-story 4-bay metal tractor barn. Noncontributing
96c. 1-story single bay metal tractor barn. Contributing
96d. 1-story chicken house, metal siding. Contributing
96e. 1-story utility shed, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
96f. 1-story frame shed, metal and asphalt siding. Noncontributing
96g. 1-1/2-story frame animal barn, horizontal frame siding. Contributing
96h. 1-story front-gabled garage, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
96i. 1-1/2-story metal equipment storage barn. Contributing
96j. associated landscape features (pasture, siting) Contributing
FAL/WE 97. Front-gabled bungalow, CR 388; c.1930. Contributing
FAL/WE 98. G. Hoelscher Family Farmstead, CR 388;
98a. center-passage plan dwelling, c.1893. Contributing
98b. 1-1/2-story frame barn. Contributing
98c. 1-story garage, vertical board siding. Contributing
98d. 1-story frame shed. Contributing
98e. associated landscape features (pasture, fields, timber lot). Contributing
FAL/WE 99. G.P. Hoelscher Associated Farmstead, CR 388;
99a. 1-story center-passage plan dwelling, c.1890. Contributing
99b. 1-1/2-story frame hay barn. Contributing
99c. 1-1/2-story frame garage. Contributing
99d. low shed roofed hen house. Contributing
99e. 1-story metal sided tractor shed. Contributing
99f. 1-story frame corn crib Contributing
99g. 1-story frame hot water house and workshop. Contributing
99h. frame privy. Contributing
99i. brick/concrete cistern. Contributing
99j. concrete sheathed brick well. Contributing
99k. cottage and formal gardens. Contributing
99l. associated landscape features (timber lot, fencing, fields). Contributing
FAL/WE 100. Wilde-Gottschalk Farmstead, CR 388;
100a. center-passage plan dwelling with rear ell, c.1890. Contributing
100b. 1-1/2-story metal barn. Contributing
100c. 1-story modern metal barn with standing seam roof. Noncontributing
100d. 1-story frame 2-car garage, c.1925. Contributing
100e. 1-story frame tool shed. Contributing
100f. brick/concrete cistern. Contributing
100g. cottage garden. Contributing
100h. associated landscape features (siting, orchard, fencing). Contributing
FAL/WE 101. Joseph Frenzel Sr. Farmstead, CR 388;
101a. 2-room plan frame dwelling, c.1900. Contributing
101b. 1-1/2-story hay barn, 1940. Contributing
101c. metal cistern. Noncontributing
101d. 4 frame shed roofed poultry houses. Contributing
101e. smoke house/tool shed, board-and-batten siding Contributing
101f. frame grain storage shed with metal roof. Contributing
101g. tractor/car garage. Contributing
101h. manufactured metal shed. Noncontributing
101i. associated landscape features (pond, pasture, siting). Contributing
FAL/WE 102. John and Otilia Frei Farmstead, CR 388;
102a. 1-1/2-story hipped roof bungalow, c.1918. Contributing
102b. 1-1/2-story 6-bay animal/hay barn, metal siding. Contributing
102c. 1-story metal side-gabled equipment storage barn. Noncontributing
102d. 1-story side-gabled 3-bay garage. Contributing
102e. front-gabled well house. Contributing
102f. flat roofed privy, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
102g. cottage garden. Contributing
102h. associated landscape features (fields). Contributing
FAL/WE 103. Center-passage dwelling, CR 388;
103a. 1-1/2-story center-passage frame dwelling. C.1900. Contributing
103b. associated landscape elements (timber lot, fields). Contributing
FAL/WE 104. B.J. Hoelscher Associated Farmstead, CR 388;
104a. frame dwelling, historically moved, c.1900. Contributing
104b. 1-1/2-story animal barn, metal siding. Contributing
104d. hipped roof garage with a shed roof addition. Contributing
104e. collapsed frame hay barn. Noncontributing*
104f. side-gabled frame utility shed. Contributing
104g. associated landscape features (fields, pasture). Contributing
FAL/WE 105. Front-gabled bungalow, alterations, CR 380; c.1930. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE 107. Farmstead, CR 378;
107a. 1-story brick ranch house, c.1970. Noncontributing
107b. 1-1/2-story frame barn with wood shingled roof. Contributing
107c. 1-story frame vehicle barn/garage. Contributing
107d. 1-story frame utility building with metal roof. Contributing
107e. associated landscape features (pastures, pond, siting). Contributing
FAL/WE 108. Roessler/Rabroker Associated Farm, CR 378;
108a. 1-story modern brick dwelling, c.1970. Noncontributing
108b. 1-story modern frame garage. Noncontributing
108c. 1-story modern metal barn. Noncontributing
108d. 2-room dwelling/hot water house, board-and-batten siding. Contributing
108e. frame barn ruin. Noncontributing*
108f. 1-story equipment storage shed, wood siding. Contributing
108g. cylindrical water tower with a conical metal cap. Contributing
108h. large windmill next to a stock pond off North Elm Creek. Contributing
108i. side-gabled frame storage shed with metal roof. Contributing
108j. side-gabled frame shed. Contributing
108k. large chicken house, wood siding. Contributing
108l. chicken house, wood siding Contributing
108m. brick/concrete cistern. Contributing
108n. Roessler family house foundation ruins and plantings. Noncontributing*
108o. 1-story sanitary privy, built by CCC, c.1938. Contributing
108p. associated landscape features (timber lot). Contributing
FAL/WE 109. Bungalow, Inner Loop; c.1930. Contributing
FAL/WE 110. Bungalow, Inner Loop; c.1940. Contributing
FAL/WE 111. Bungalow, Inner Loop; c.1935. Contributing
FAL/WE 112. Historic road network (SH 320, county roads, field roads, etc.).
Contributing
FAL/WE 113. Historic infrastructure (plank bridges, 1940s culverts, etc.).
Contributing
FAL/WE 114. Historic landscape features (fences, gardens, stock ponds, etc.).
Contributing
FAL/WE 115. Historic artifacts (windmills, abandoned ag. Equipment, etc.).
Contributing
FAL/WE n2. Ranch style dwelling, Inner Loop; c.1975. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n4. Ranch style dwelling, Inner Loop; c.1965. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n6. Ranch style dwelling, Inner Loop; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n7. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n8. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n9. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1960. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n10. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n11. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n12. 1-1/2-story dwelling, SH 320; c.1990. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n13. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n14. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1950 Noncontributing
FAL/WE n15. Commercial building, modern addition, SH 320; c.1930.
Noncontributing*
FAL/WE n16. Industrial complex, CR 379; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n17. Ranch style dwelling, Main Vil Rd.; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n18. Ranch style dwelling, Main Vil Rd.; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n19. Ranch style dwelling, Main Vil Rd.; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n20. Ranch style dwelling, Main Vil Rd.; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n21. 2-story metal storage barn, Main Vil Rd.; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n22. Ranch style dwelling, SH 320; c.1990. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n23. Ranch style dwelling, Main Vil Rd.; c.1975. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n24. 1-1/2-story dwelling, CR 371; c.1980 Noncontributing
FAL/WE n25. Ranch style dwelling, CR 371; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n26. Farmstead, CR 371;
26a. brick ranch style dwelling, c.1970. Noncontributing
26b. modern metal barn. Noncontributing
26c. modern metal barn. Noncontributing
26d. modern metal garage. Noncontributing
26e. 1-story frame garage. Contributing
FAL/WE n27. Ranch style dwelling, CR 378; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n28. Ranch style dwelling, CR 378; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n29. Modern dwelling, CR 370; c.1975. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n30. Ranch style dwelling, CR 371; c.1975. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n31. Modern dwelling, CR 371; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n32. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n33. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1950. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n34. Modern dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1960. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n35. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n36. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1960. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n37. Church Rectory, Church Rd.; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n38. Church School, Church Rd.; c.1989. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n39. Prefabricated-metal school building, Church Rd.; c.1970.
Noncontributing
FAL/WE n40. Church School, Church Rd.; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n41. Prefabricated-metal building, Church Rd.; c.1970. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n42. New Parish Hall, SH 320; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n43. Metal garage, SH 320; c.1980. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n44. Old Parish Hall, SH 320; c.1940. Noncontributing*
FAL/WE n45. 1-story metal outbuilding, Church Rd.; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n46. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1985 Noncontributing
FAL/WE n47. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n48. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n49. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n50. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1985. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n51. Ranch style dwelling, Church Rd.; c.1965. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n52. Modern dwelling, CR 388; c.1990. Noncontributing
FAL/WE n53. Hoelscher Family Associated Farm, CR 379;
53a. 1-story brick ranch dwelling, c.1980. Noncontributing
53b. 5 large connected metal silos. Noncontributing
53c. 1-story manufactured outbuilding, metal siding. Noncontributing
53d. 1-story manufactured outbuilding, masonite siding. Noncontributing
53e. 1-1/2-story metal barn with standing seam metal roof. Contributing
53f. 1-story metal barn with metal roof. Contributing
53g. associated landscape features (pasture, fencing). Contributing
FAL/WE n54. Modern dwelling, CR 379; c.1990 Noncontributing
FAL/WE n55. Mobile home, CR 378; c.1980. Noncontributing
Set amidst the blackland prairie of western Falls County, the Westphalia Rural
Historic District encompasses a cohesive collection of late 19th and early 20th
century farms surrounding the small village of Westphalia. This rural historic
landscape continues to evoke the cultural traditions of the community's German
Catholic founders. Initially settling the region in the 1880s, these pioneers
established agricultural patterns still evident in building and cultivation
characteristics, spatial organization of farmsteads and methods of boundary
demarcation. Consistent vegetation patterns, construction methods and road
networks further reinforce this continuity. As a result, this rural historic
landscape retains strong visual evidence of its late 19th and early 20th century
development patterns. The Westphalia Rural Historic District is therefore
nominated to the National Register of Historic Places under Criterion A for its
agricultural associations. It is also eligible at the local level of
significance under Criterion C as an illustrative example of community planning
and development in a rural setting.
INTRODUCTION
A group of six German Catholic families established the community of Westphalia
in the early 1880s. Most had emigrated from the Westphalia district of Germany
to Texas in the decade following the American Civil War. They followed Theodore
Rabroker from the village of Frelsburg in northeastern Colorado County to the
unbroken grass land of the Martin Byerly Survey in Falls County. The desire to
farm their own land, educate their children according to their religious beliefs
and practice their Catholic faith without interference compelled them to break
new ground. On these founding principles, they built a church and school
facilities at the heart of an extended rural agricultural community. Guided by
tradition and faith, the community of Westphalia prospered for more than 100
years. Today, the village and surrounding farms comprise a rural historic
landscape that bespeaks the region's agrarian past.
EARLY HISTORY OF WESTERN FALLS COUNTY
Early Anglo-European settlement in Falls County concentrated in the fertile
bottomlands of the Brazos and Little rivers in the eastern portion of the
county. Farmers considered the blackland prairie of the western half of the
county undesirable for agriculture (Efnor, 105). In the decade preceding the
Civil War, the region's few residents primarily engaged in stockraising on the
vast unfenced range. Although immigration into the county virtually ceased
during the Civil War, thousands of displaced southern farmers came to Texas in
the period after the war. These new settlers, particularly those from the red
clay regions of the southeast, shunned the blackland prairie, however. An
immigrant of this period refused to trade a gun for a half section of land [320
acres] because "the land was black, and no one believed that anything but red
soil was good for raising cotton" (St. Romain, 53). With bottomland at a premium
during this period, however, some immigrants opted to raise cattle in the
relatively inexpensive grasslands of western Falls County.
Cattle ranged freely across the region's prairies throughout the 1870s and early
1880s. The entire area remained unfenced until about 1884 (St. Romain, 55). A
few cattlemen like Elijah Davison, who raised stock near present Westphalia,
achieved success. When Davison established his herds in western Falls County
during the 1860s and early 1870s, "it was then on the border land of the
limitless prairie; there were no mesquites, except very old and hoary ones, as
the periodical prairie fires that swept the plains kept them burned back" (St.
Romain, 58).
The free range allowed Texans to raise beef for about the same cost as chickens.
As a result, Texas became the dominant cattle producing state, with major
markets in New Orleans, Shreveport and Alexandria (Murray, 29). From the late
1860s until the mid 1880s, cattlemen like Davison and his partner George H.
Gassaway conducted annual drives to market, linking up with the Chisholm Trail
at Proctor's Spring in present Waco (St. Romain, 69). Successful stock raisers
achieved a comfortable, if not luxurious, livelihood from the open range. A
successful rancher like Davison, for example, often lived in a small log cabin
with dirt floors (St. Romain, 60). Enough ranchers lived in the vicinity of Pond
Creek by the late 1870s to support a school in the area. Willow Springs School
was established near Davison's ranch about 1877. Encouraged by high beef prices
and improved access to rail transportation between 1880 and 1885, area stockmen
increased their herds until the range in the western part of the county became
overcrowded. Concurrently, farmers began buying land in the open range area,
fencing it for cultivation. By 1884-85 these fences began impeding the free
range of cattle and the cattle drives.
Seeking a practical solution to market access, both ranchers and stock farmers
encouraged construction of rail lines through the region. Poor quality roads and
the region's thick clay mud hampered travel, particularly after a rain. Farmers
often struggled to get their products by ox cart to the nearest market in
Houston, about 180 miles to the south (Efnor, 187). Construction of the Waco
trunk of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad (H&TC) through the southeast
quadrant of the county revolutionized the transportation of cattle and farm
products. The San Antonio and Aransas Pass (SA&AP) extended a trunk line into
western Falls County during this period (St. Romain, 70). The Texas Townsite
Company of Waco purchased 1,600 acres of Gassaway's ranch in 1889, donating a
right-of-way to the SA&AP in exchange for the privilege of developing the town
of Lott (St. Romain, 74). Lott's access to the rail line subsequently drained
the populations of small rural communities in the region (St. Romain 1951:102).
By the 1880s the blackland prairie achieved recognition as "the great cotton
belt of the Brazos River" (Efnor, 186). Statistics for the county in 1880
documented river valley production of 500 pounds of lint cotton and 50-75
bushels of corn per acre. Consisting "of rich prairie and well- timbered lands,
about equally divided," the upland prairie produced 35-50 bushels of corn per
acre, 15-30 bushels of wheat, 50-75 bushels of rye and barley, and 350-500
pounds of lint cotton per acre (Efnor, 186). Unimproved land in Falls County
varied from $2.00 to $5.00 per acre and nearly all Brazos Valley lands were in
cultivation, planted primarily in cotton and corn. The population of the county
was estimated at 20,000 with people from every state and many from foreign
countries (Efnor, 187). A contemporary writer described an idyllic scene in
Falls County: "numerous schools are scattered over the county, all
well-attended; church spires rear their heads in the midst of every community, a
sure indication of morality and peace" (Efnor, 187). It was apparent that the
prairies were no longer considered inferior lands and it is in this context that
the first German immigrants came to the place in western Falls County that
became known as Westphalia.
GERMAN SETTLEMENT IN THE COTTON BELT
Three major waves of immigration brought German settlers to Texas. A small
number of Germans came to Texas in the last years of Mexican sovereignty and in
the Texas Republic period. Most settled together along the coast and adjacent
territory that defines the southeastern region of Texas. Among the earliest of
these communities are Industry and Cat Spring, both in Austin County, and
Frelsburg, in northeastern Colorado County. Frelsburg played an important role
in Westphalia's history because it was one of the first German Catholic parishes
in Texas (established 1836) and most of Westphalia's original settlers came from
that community. Frelsburg's historic Catholic church, rectory, school and
cemetery occupy the highest promontory in the area, with the family farms
spreading out over the surrounding countryside. This may have been the model for
Westphalia's later village and farmstead landscape.
Following this first small wave, the largest concentrated efforts at soliciting
German emigration to Texas resulted from the actions of the Adelsverein, a
German colonization association that formed in response to political unrest in
Germany and operated from 1844 to 1847 (Webb, 685). The organization had both
philanthropic and economic goals: its managers hoped to provide a safe haven for
thousands of German emigrants as well as realize a profit on their investments
as land values increased (Jordan, 43). During this period, the Texas German
towns of New Braunfels (1845) and Fredricksburg (1846) were established as way
stations for immigrants traveling between the coastal ports of Indianola and
Galveston to the tract of verein land in west-central Texas known as the
Fisher-Miller Grant (Jordan, 43). Although the loftier aims of the Adelsverein
went largely unfulfilled, the association succeeded in attracting thousands of
German settlers to present Comal, Gillespie and Llano counties. From there they
spread to the western counties of Guadalupe, Kerr, and Kendall. The Adelsverein
also encouraged greater German settlement into the southeastern region into
present Calhoun, Victoria, DeWitt, Lavaca, Colorado, Austin, Washington,
Fayette, and Bastrop counties (Webb, 685), in what some have called the
"German-belt". By the outbreak of the American Civil War, the German population
of Texas numbered about 30,000 (Jordan, 54).
After a temporary halt in immigration during the Civil War, the German influx
resumed (Jordan, 54). Catholic immigration, in particular, increased during the
latter half of the 19th century as a result of Otto von Bismark's kulturkampf,
an effort to modernize Germany and purge the country of old-fashioned customs.
Von Bismark targeted Catholicism as an impediment to progress and German
Catholics suffered under his leadership. His efforts to increase
industrialization of the Ruhr Valley, including the Muensterland and Westphalia,
ultimately displaced traditional farming, the occupation of most Catholics in
that region. German Catholic farmers had little choice but to emigrate if they
wanted to continue their traditional lifeways. Arriving at the ports of
Indianola and Galveston, these immigrants were farmers who moved inland in
search of good crop land near established German communities. By the 1870s,
however, the land around German towns like Frelsburg, Industry New Braunfels and
Fredricksburg had been settled for 30-40 years. Most German families divided
their farms among their sons and by the 1870s, little was available for new
immigrants. Recent immigrants were forced to look beyond the established German
communities for new farmland.
WESTPHALIA'S GERMAN CATHOLIC FOUNDERS
Most of Westphalia's earliest male settlers, including Theodore Rabroker,
arrived in the United States following the American Civil War. Many spent up to
ten years in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois or Iowa before traveling to Texas
(U.S. Bureau of the Census 1900). By 1879, however, Theodore Rabroker, John G.
Bockholt, Caspar Hoelscher, Henry Glass, Frank Glass, Fritz Schneider, and
Theodore Schneider all lived in Frelsburg (Beach, 7). Welcomed by Frelsburg's
Catholic community, these more recent immigrants probably found little available
farmland.
Resolution of this dilemma came as the collapse of the plantation system in
Texas opened up large tracts of previously undeveloped or underutilized lands.
Typically, large land owners divided their holdings into small farms to be sold
or leased to the new arrivals (Jordan, 55). At the same time, railroad companies
expanding into Texas offered homesteads to those willing to develop property in
the vast tracts of land granted to them along new rail lines. Such development
added to the value of other railroad property and the companies realized great
profits from the sale of their "free" land. Railroad companies actively
solicited German settlement in their interior lands, offering attractive
bargains to land-hungry farmers (Jordan, 55). Although details are vague,
Theodore Rabroker apparently served as an agent or liaison to recruit other
German Catholic settlers to railroad company-owned land in Westphalia (Rabroker
State Marker File).
Both written and oral accounts indicate that the land itself enticed Rabroker
and his compatriots to leave Frelsburg. The wholly undeveloped tract contained
sufficient acreage to create a new agricultural community. Rabroker's inspection
of the property in 1877 determined its high fertility. To former residents of
Germany's Ruhr valley, the most highly industrial and densely populated region
of western Europe at that time, the expansive prairie held limitless
agricultural possibilities.
In addition, the settlers intended to build a community based on their German
Catholic religious and cultural values. They may have been influenced in this
endeavor by the colonization efforts of Carl and Emil Flusche, two devout
Catholic brothers who were also from Westphalia, Germany. The brothers purchased
large parcels of land and recruited German Catholic settlers throughout the
midwest, particularly in Kansas, Missouri, and Illinois, to colonize their
property (Webb, 243). Flusche communities in Iowa and Kansas bear the name of
their German homeland of Westphalia (Voltin 1993). The brothers realized a
modest profit through the resale of land but their driving zeal was religious
rather than secular. Between 1889 and 1907, they founded five separate
communities in Texas: Muenster (1889) and Lindsay (1891) in Cooke County, Pilot
Point (1891) in Denton-Grayson County, Fulda (1895) in Baylor County and Mount
Carmel (1907) in Wichita County (Jordan, 56). Although these communities
post-date Westphalia, it is likely that Rabroker knew of the Flusche communities
in Iowa, before he moved to Texas.
Since his arrival in the United States in 1866, Rabroker had lived in
Pennsylvania (until 1874) and near Des Moines, Iowa before moving his wife Mary
Ann (Brucktrops) and their four children to Texas (Berres, n.p.). In the fall of
1876, Theodore Rabroker and his family traveled for six weeks by covered wagon
from Iowa to Tarrant County, Texas in search of a milder climate for Mrs.
Rabroker who was not well. The family remained in Tarrant County only one year
before pulling up stakes again for northern Colorado County and the little
German settlement of Frelsburg (Berres n.d.). Rabroker passed through western
Falls County on the way to Frelsburg in 1877 and, according to local tradition,
Rabroker was so impressed with the fertile prairie and the possibility of
establishing a German Catholic community there, that he abandoned Frelsburg for
western Falls County two years later. On 9 November 1879, Rabroker, his wife and
three children arrived at their homestead, about two miles west of the current
village of Westphalia, becoming the first German Catholic settlers in western
Falls County (Rabroker State Marker File).
The Rabrokers worked the land for another two years before they purchased the
parcel and built a permanent home. During that time the family lived in their
wagon and a small wooden shed (Didner 1993). In 1881, Theodore Rabroker
purchased 271 acres from William Neyland who had acquired a large parcel of land
from descendants of Martin Byerly, recipient of the original patent in 1850
(Falls County Deed Records). At that time, Rabroker entered into an agreement
with Neyland to serve as an agent for further land sales (Rabroker State Marker
File). Possibly in response to the ill-treatment of Catholics in Germany,
Rabroker determined to reserve the surrounding territory within a five-mile
radius of the village, exclusively for German Catholic settlement (Berres, n.p.;
St. Romain, 107). This decision shaped the character of the community for a
century to follow. Rabroker actively solicited fellow German Catholics from
Frelsburg to move to Westphalia by offering 270-acre homesteads to the first
families who joined him in the venture (Berres, n.p.; St. Romain, 107). To ease
the transition to the undeveloped territory, he provided his own home, and later
separate guest houses, as temporary quarters for new families (Berres n.p.).
Rabroker's family house burned in a fire in 1975 (Berres n.p.).
Johann [John] Bockholt was the first to respond to Rabroker's land offer and in
1881, he brought his wife, Theresia, and their children to western Falls County.
A few months later, Caspar Hoelscher, Frank Glass, Henry Glass, Fritz Schneider,
and Theodore Schneider, together with their families, traveled from Frelsburg as
a group to the new settlement (St. Romain, 107). Within the year, a second group
of settlers arrived from Frelsburg, giving the fledgling colony a total of 13
families, each situated on 270-acre parcels surrounding the Rabroker farmstead
(Beach, 8). By the time the immigrants formed their new community, most had
lived in the United States for ten to fifteen years and had traveled and lived
throughout the mid-west and Texas before settling on a permanent home. At a
community gathering, the group decided to call their community Westphalia, after
their former in the Westphalia province of Germany (Voltin 1979, 7).
LIFE ON THE PRAIRIE, 1882 - 1900
According to a retrospective written to commemorate the community's 50th
anniversary, little is known about the activities of the pioneers' first year,
"probably because every man had his own to build, his soil to till, and his
family to provide for" (Beach, 8). Several local accounts relate that the
pioneer settlers first erected shelters for their families and livestock. The
earliest dwellings were two-room cabins which were either enlarged or replaced
as time passed. Ervin Kahlig recalled that his grandfather's two-room cabin
survived on his property, near the creek until recently (Kahlig 1993). Later the
grandfather built the current Kahlig House (Site No. 72). John Bockholt's
grandson, John Lingnau, also described his grandfather's original dwelling, a
two-room affair, as a cabin. When Bockholt built a permanent house on his site a
few years later, he moved the cabin to the agricultural area of his complex and
used it as a blacksmith shop. Today, only a few two-room dwellings of this early
period of development survive in the Westphalia Rural Historic District. The
Joseph Frenzel Sr. farmstead (Site No. 101) retains its original two-room
dwelling dating to the 1880s. Site No. 84, across from the church, also dates to
the earliest period of development but its detailing and construction materials
indicate that it was a permanent dwelling, unlike the two-room "cabins" that
provided only temporary shelter.
In addition to the dwelling, pioneers built shelters for their livestock which
included cattle, horses, mules, pigs and poultry. Simple barns, sheds, pig pens
and hen houses were among the first construction priorities for the pioneers.
Today, historic barns, chicken houses, storage sheds, garages, and root cellars
are in continued use at farms like the Joseph Kahlig (Site No. 72) and the
Christopher Fuchs (Site No. 41) farmsteads. They built privies and dug wells or
erected cisterns. Examples of privies, wells, cisterns and numerous types of
agricultural outbuildings exist but most probably date to the early 20th
century. Again, the G. P. Hoelscher (Site No. 99), Christopher Fuchs (Site No.
41) and Joseph Kahlig (Site No. 72) farmsteads retain many of their early
outbuildings and agricultural structures including privies, cisterns and wells.
Once the family and animals obtained rudimentary shelter, the farmers wasted
little time putting their plows to the soil.
Although farmers originally doubted the prospects for cotton on the blackland
prairie, by the time Rabroker and his colonists arrived in the Westphalia area,
cotton cultivation was widespread throughout the region. The German settlers did
not immediately plant the cash crop, however. Instead, they initially raised
pigs and cattle, grew feed for their livestock, and developed subsistence- level
plots to sustain their families (Voltin 1993). In fact, during the early
settlement period, the inhabitants of Westphalia, Texas generally followed the
agricultural practices and techniques of their countrymen in the Westphalia
district of Germany. In 19th century Europe, German farming was characterized by
an emphasis on small grains, improved pasture and manure-producing livestock. In
the Muensterland, of which Westphalia was a part, rye was the dominant grain,
followed by oats, but nearly all German farmers grew hay and oats to feed their
livestock (Jordan, 33). The Westphalians followed this tradition in Texas and
their first crops consisted of corn and feed crops to harvest and store for
animals during winter months. By the second generation, however, cotton
predominated in Westphalia and became the community's principal cash crop
(Voltin 1993). By 1900, the community was well-involved in cotton cultivation
and supported a commercial cotton gin.
When the Westphalian pioneers arrived at their farmsteads, ranchers continued to
raise cattle on the open range and participate in annual drives to Waco for
railroads bound for northern markets (Voltin 1993). Since the farmers
necessarily built fences to control protect their fields and gardens from
wandering livestock - their own and others - it was inevitable that the two
cultures would clash. Rabroker was one of the first to fence his fields,
sparking the anger of local ranchers who periodically cut the wire. Local
sources record several instances in which cowboys resorted to violence against
Rabroker and John Bockholt for fencing the prairie (Voltin 1993). The day of the
open range was fast coming to a close, though, and the arrival of the German
farmers signaled the beginning of a new era for western Falls County in which
crop cultivation and managed stock raising became the dominant occupation of the
land.
Livestock, in particular, played a pivotal role in the German agricultural
system and the Westphalians carried on those traditions in Texas. They raised
cows, chickens and pigs for meat, milk, and eggs, not only for domestic
consumption but for cash and trade. Mules, horses and oxen pulled the farmer's
plows and provided transportation. Equally important, the animals supplied
manure for fertilizer. Farmers sheltered cows in barns during the winter both to
protect them from the cold and to accumulate a good supply of fertilizer for
spring planting (Voltin 1994). Some farmers raised livestock almost exclusively.
Theodore Rabroker, for instance, made his living by raising hogs and corn, with
most of his corn going to feed his livestock (Berres, n.p.). The Joseph Frenzel
family (Site No. 101) also concentrated on livestock and eventually managed a
large poultry operation from their farm. Other early products included oats,
wheat, corn, hay and seed crops, some of which was sold for cash (Voltin 1993).
The history of livestock in Westphalia dates to the district's origins when the
first families left Frelsburg herding sixty head of cattle before them across
the prairie. In addition to their cattle, the early settlers brought mules,
oxen, and pigs from Frelsburg (Voltin 1979, 3). Animal husbandry and meat
processing have continued to be important Westphalian occupations to the
present.
CHURCH AND SCHOOL
Soon after they secured shelter for themselves, the pioneers addressed their
need for a church. Because their Catholic faith formed the group's foundation,
the construction of a house of worship was an essential spiritual and symbolic
component of the community's continued existence. As soon as the first families
joined Rabroker in 1881, they met each Sunday at his homestead for prayer
meetings until they could organize a parish. The Rev. John Lauth, C.S.C. of St.
Edward's University in Austin, oversaw the parish organization and the
celebration of the first Mass on 6 October 1882, at the Rabroker home. From that
time onward, the community members gathered at Rabroker's to read and pray, and
on the infrequent occasion that a priest traveled to join them, to celebrate
mass. The Rabroker house served other quasi-religious functions; the community's
first baptism (for Anton Bockholt, on 6 October 1882) and its first weddings
(between Adolph Haltnar and Ana Wakely on 25 May 1884), were celebrated in
Rabroker's house (Berres n.p.). As the community increased in size, however, the
elders recognized that they needed to build a real church.
On 7 December 1882, T. H. Rabroker, J. G. Buckholt (sic), and Caspar Hoelscher
paid brothers A. and John Frierson two hundred dollars as a down payment on 100
acres of land to build a church. At the same time, they signed promissory notes
for two additional payments of $200 at 10% interest, payable in the following
two years. The Frierson brothers held a vendors lien on the property which they
conveyed to Louis N. Gallagher, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Texas (Bedford
County, Tennessee Deed Records Vol. S-42, in Church of the Visitation State
Marker File). The church property lay adjacent to a second 100 acre tract that
Caspar Hoelscher bought from the Frierson brothers the same day (Bedford County,
Tennessee Deed Records Vol. S-42in Church of the Visitation State Marker File).
Hoelscher, Wunsch, Bockholt, Frank Glass and Rabroker each contributed to the
purchase (Voltin 1979) which appears to have been purchased for church use. Each
farmer dedicated his labor to the common farm, the proceeds of which paid for
the construction and maintenance of the church and a school (Berres n.p.). Thus,
the Westphalians made substantial personal and financial commitments to their
church.
On 28 October 1883 Theodore Rabroker, John Bockholt, Herman Biemer and Frank
Glass formed a committee to plan and oversee the construction of a church. Funds
were collected and construction commenced by January 1884. The church was
sufficiently complete to conduct Mass in the building by 24 February 1884. On 16
May 1884, only three months after its completion, a terrific storm completely
demolished the building. The church's destruction was a terrible blow to a
community that had sacrificed greatly for its construction. Parishioners
immediately reconstructed the building and after two months of work, they
dedicated the rebuilt church as the Church of the Visitation of the Blessed
Virgin, on 27 July 1884 (Voltin 1979).
Although the pioneers were almost exclusively farmers, they placed a high
premium on education. According to the Falls County School Records, Westphalia
hired Stephen Geiser to teach school as early as 1881, in the first year of its
existence as a community (St. Romain, 107). Classes were probably conducted in
private homes until the completion of the first church. Teacher J. H. Pels
assumed teaching duties in the rebuilt church in November 1884, after the
harvest (St. Romain, 108; Webb, 888). From that time to the present, Westphalia
has supported a school for its young people. Census records reflect the
importance the Westphalians placed on education. Virtually every member of the
community beyond the age of ten could both read and write, even though quite a
number of the older people and the more recent immigrants did not read or write
in English. In fact, according to the 1900 census, the only people in the
Westphalia district who could not read and write were a single young man listed
as an invalid and a few servants not of German heritage (U.S. Bureau of the
Census 1900). The establishment of the church and school not only provided
spiritual and educational nourishment to the parish, they were vital to the
group's continued identity as an exclusively German Catholic community.
The group persevered and by 1885, only four years after Bockholt joined his
compatriot in the western Falls County settlement, 21 German Catholic families
claimed residency in Westphalia (Webb, 888). A decade later, Rabroker's colony
increased to 120 families, with nearly 130 students enrolled in the village
school (Southern Messenger, 11 April 1895 and 6 September 1894). Throughout most
of that period, however, the deeply religious community lacked a permanent
pastor to guide the congregation.
On 23 March 1893 the Reverend Michael Heintzelman of La Grange, Texas, was
called to Westphalia as its first permanent priest (St. Romain, 108).
Heintzelman's assignment aroused:
...great joy in the growing community. For ten years these pioneers had watched
their little settlement grow, and for ten years they had battled the elements
that they might have a church and a spiritual director to keep alive in their
breasts the Faith of their fathers (Beach, 13).
Shortly after starting his pastorate in 1893, the rebuilt church suffered
extensive damage from yet another storm. Rather than rehabilitate the damaged
building, Heintzelman persuaded the congregation to build a new, larger church
to accommodate Westphalia's growing flock, the present Church of the Visitation.
Foundation work on the new church commenced early in 1894 and firms in Temple,
Waco, Lott and Cameron competed for Westphalia's patronage by bidding on
contracts for hardware supplies and other materials (St. Romain, 108). A quarry
in Moldoon, Texas shipped the foundation stone and timber arrived from Waco.
According to contemporary diocese sources, missionary Rev. P.M. Simoni, designed
the building in the shape of a Latin cross. A. Fuchs, a contractor and builder
from Tours, Texas, oversaw the actual construction and B.A. Sokolowski of
Bernardo Prairie executed the interior artwork and painting (Southern Messenger
11 April 1895).
While building materials had to be purchased and certain skills contracted out,
the parishioners themselves contributed much of the labor to erect the new
building. In a single day, they hauled 80 loads of building materials from the
nearest railroad at Lott, about eight miles away. Frank Glass and Emmanuel
Raabe, two of the earliest settlers, provided their carpenter and wood working
skills. The Frank Glass family donated the main altar in the present church
(Voltin 1979). When completed in April 1895 the church building cost $8,000. At
the time, the Catholic newspaper The Southern Messenger declared the 120' x 55'
building, with its 20' by 30' transept and two 80' towers, to be the largest
frame church in "this part of the State" (Southern Messenger, 11 April 1895).
According to local tradition, the church was designed so that a traveler could
see the twin steeples for a days ride in any direction and know that he was
within the parish of Westphalia. This visual link further reinforced the German
Catholic presence within a fivemile radius of the church. The distinctive towers
are visible from nearly every farmstead in the Westphalia Rural Historic
District. A reporter for the newspaper described Westphalia and its citizens at
the time of the church construction:
Westphalia is a small village in Falls County and is situated on a commanding
prominence, surrounded by the most fertile and charming prairie farms. The
principal buildings of this place are the Church, Priest-house, and school which
fact evidences strikingly that the thrifty and industrious farmers, who chiefly
constitute this parish, are not only intent upon making a comfortable
livelihood, but are also desirous of performing their Christian duty towards
themselves and their children. There are upwards of one hundred families that
belong to the congregation. When we take into consideration that twelve years
ago there was no farm in this vicinity, but all open, uncultivated prairie, we
must certainly admire the zeal of these good people, for what they have done. In
such a brief space of time, for the cause of their religion (Southern Messenger,
6 September 1894).
Through the determination and single-minded goals of its founders, Westphalia
had grown from a tenuous pioneer venture to "the largest rural parish in the
Galveston diocese" in little more than a decade (St. Romain, 108). Local
historians credit Rev. Heintzelman with much of the community's early success.
For 36 years, until his death in 1929, Heintzelman guided the parish in both
spiritual and secular matters. During his tenure, he led the congregation in
numerous building programs including the present Church of the Visitation
(1895), Priest house (demolished), Sister house or Convent (St. Mary's High
School, 1921), and school (Westphalia Little School, c.1896). The present
church- school complex is largely the result of Heintzelman's inspiration and
leadership.
GROWTH OF THE VILLAGE, 1890 - 1920
Westphalia grew tremendously in the decade since its founding and was included
on the official U.S.G.S. map of the Temple area in 1890. By that time, its
associated rural population supported several businesses. While the church and
school complex was taking shape on the 100 acres dedicated for that purpose, the
community's first commercial enterprises appeared on land adjacent to and east
of the church property. The main village road that evolved along original
property boundaries also separated the church from the commercial space. Stephan
Geiser may have opened the community's first place of business, a general
merchandise store about this time (St. Romain, 108). In 1890, P.A. Heckman
opened a store and post office where he served as both proprietor and postmaster
(Webb, 888). The store lay to the north of the present Hoelscher/Thornton Store
and was among the first businesses to define a small commercial node on the main
village road.
As the community grew and prospered, commercial and service operations,
particularly those that supported the stockraising and farming livelihood of the
residents, sprang up in the village. In 1890, nearly all of Westphalia's adults
engaged in farming as their primary occupation. By 1900, however, the community
counted a small but significant number of residents employed in non-agricultural
pursuits. Census records report several dry goods stores, a cotton ginning
operation, a dressmaker, blacksmith, two carpenters, and a boarding house in
Westphalia at the turn of the century (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1900). Surnames
in the census records indicate that most of Westphalia's trades people and shop
keepers were relatives, often the children, of the earlier settlers, rather than
outsiders. These merchants and tradesmen tended to own only their homes without
any additional acreage, i.e., they were not also farmers. Rather, a small number
of second-generation Westphalians had begun to specialize in service occupations
or skilled trades. At the same time, a few individuals began to build houses in
the village, near their work places. Within a generation of its founding,
Westphalia supported three general merchandise stores, a cotton gin, a post
office, a drug store, sheetmetal and blacksmith shops, and a doctor (Church of
the Visitation State Marker File). Westphalia's oldest surviving commercial
building is the Hoelscher-Thornton Store (Site 47), also known as the Johnnie
Thornton or the Old Store. Built in 1907, it is a community landmark at the
intersection of the main village road and SH 320.
A PROGRESSIVE COMMUNITY
At the turn of the century, Westphalia claimed sufficient population to
patronize such businesses. Census tracts for 1900 confirm that Westphalians were
prolific and healthy. Large families consisting of five to nine children were
standard and the ratio of living children to live births enumerated in the 1900
census indicates that most babies survived well into childhood (U.S. Bureau of
the Census 1900). Conversely, non-German white families in western Falls County
and adjacent Limestone County, had slightly fewer children per mother but
greater mortality rates (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1900). Reasons for such
differences are unknown but it is possible that the Westphalian group enjoyed a
better diet than their neighbors. From the earliest period of settlement, local
sources indicate that Westphalians varied their diets with fruits, vegetables,
milk, eggs, bread and different types of meat. Their knowledge of fertilizers
ensured productive crops. Although independent, the group shared a sense of
communal responsibility that guaranteed its members a minimum standard of
welfare. Unrelated families regularly adopted orphans and elderly people within
the community. Also, the nearly 100 percent literacy of Westphalian adults may
partially account for the general health of the community. Westphalians
typically subscribed to several periodicals - sometimes German language papers -
covering scientific farming and homemaking techniques, so they kept abreast of
innovations in health care and related fields (Beach 1994). Conversely, other
non-German white families in the same census district were remarkable for their
high rates of illiteracy (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1900).
Westphalians prided themselves on their progressive farming methods. During the
50th anniversary celebration in 1933, descendants of the pioneers displayed some
of the early farm implements such as home-made walking planters, walking
cultivators, Georgia single stock plows and double shovels that were used from
1880 to the turn of the century (Voltin 1979, 2-3). As new farming equipment and
techniques became available, however, the German farmers eagerly experimented
with them on their farms. Theodore Rabroker explored a variety of new farming
techniques and was a pioneer in the use of modern farm machinery in the area.
Rabroker foresaw the future of power-driven equipment and devised a
rotary-powered turntable and had a power windmill as early as 1895. He was also
one of the first in the area to use threshing and grinding machines to replace
or augment manual labor (Berres n.p.). They used fertilizers, inoculated their
livestock, and held night classes in modern farming and husbandry for adults. By
the 1920s, the community considered itself a model of progressive farming
(Beach, 7).
CONFLICT OF CULTURES: WORLD WAR I
Until the outbreak of hostilities between the United States and Germany in World
War I, the German-American enclave of Westphalia enjoyed the good will of its
neighbors in Falls County. What little hostility the transplanted German colony
experienced from the larger community was likely a result of their Catholic
religion rather than their German heritage (The Southern Messenger 6 December
1894). The community members generally viewed themselves as thrifty,
industrious, and devoutly religious citizens of their adopted country (Beach
1933), and they were shocked to learn that other Americans viewed them
differently after the United States entered the war. At that time, however, the
community remained distinctively German and its residents were easily recognized
and associated with the enemy. They had German names and accents and many of the
older men wore their beards and clothing in styles that were identified as
German. Particularly galling rumors circulated that the Westphalians hoarded
food, possibly for use by the enemy. Because they had large families, the
Westphalians often stored large quantities of provisions but it was a difficult
charge to defend against (Beach 1994).
The community's physical and cultural isolation, partially self-imposed, further
alienated Westphalians from its neighbors. Children either attended the local
parochial school or went to Catholic boarding schools outside the community.
Their common religion bound them to the local church and they rarely married
outside the church community. Further, no major highways or railroad spurs
passed through the community so the Westphalians had limited outside influence.
As a result, they were slow to adopt prevailing American customs and they
appeared distinctively foreign to outsiders. By 1915, the second generation had
assumed leadership roles in the community but many German traditions,
particularly religious and social rituals and food preparation, survived well
into the 20th century. It was not uncommon to find second- and third-generation
Westphalians who were fluent in German as well as English. Parish minutes and
church programs and celebration pamphlets were written in German. In fact, the
church conducted services in both German and English for the benefit of the
surviving immigrants, until the early 1950s. Most Westphalian families
maintained familial ties with German relatives decades after immigrating to the
United States. They corresponded with relatives and some even traveled back to
the land to visit aged parents or siblings (Beach 1994).
The United States' entry into the war against Germany, created conflicting
allegiances for many Westphalians. For instance, John Beach (formerly Bietch)
had just returned from a family visit to Bremerhaaven in northern Germany, when
Britain and France declared war against his former homeland. All three of his
brothers who had remained in Germany died in the war while his son, Mike Beach,
was drafted into the United States army to fight against them (Beach 1994). A
total of 36 Westphalian men served in the United States armed forces during
World War I (Voltin 1979). Despite their contributions of draftees, Westphalians
endured the hostility of their neighbors throughout the war. Partially as a
result of wartime hostilities, some Westphalians changed their names to more
Americanized spellings. Others were more fiercely determined than ever to retain
their German heritage (Beach 1994).
INCREASE AND DECLINE: 1920’s - 1930s
Although they were reluctant to adopt many new American customs, Westphalians
enthusiastically accepted new agricultural technologies and methods. The
post-war period was one of general prosperity for Westphalian farmers, largely
due to their eagerness to improve farm productivity and keep abreast of
agricultural trends. Cotton became the most important crop and, while
Westphalians continued to raise cattle, pigs and chickens, and grow corn, they
planted more acreage in the cash crops.
Mechanized farming fueled a major increase in cash crop production, particularly
cotton cultivation, at this time. Until then, many area farmers plowed less than
a quarter of their approximately 270 acre farms, leaving large tracts unimproved
until they were divided among the children. Typically, the Germans did not hire
seasonal labor or encourage tenant farming except among family members (Beach
1994). They worked only what the individual family could manage with help from
their neighbors for thrashing or hay baling. German women and children worked in
the fields alongside men during peak periods in the growing cycle. Family
members worked from dawn to dark during such times, baling hay and picking
cotton by hand. Because the work required the labor of all family members, local
institutions accommodated the agricultural season. For instance, the school year
started upon completion of the harvest (Voltin 1994). Not surprisingly,
Westphalian farmers readily embraced modern technology and they purchased
tractors and harvesting equipment as soon as they were able.
Power vehicles and agricultural tools immediately affected the rural landscape.
In addition to easing the work load, power machinery allowed farmers to increase
the amount of acreage in cultivation. At the same time, power machinery reduced
the amount of work animals needed and, correspondingly, the amount of pasture
and hay meadows required to feed them. In addition, because tractors and
harvesters enabled farmers to grow much more than what their families and
animals consumed, they could put even more land into cash crop cultivation. As a
result, farmers plowed up fields formerly reserved for field corn, hay and
grazing and leveled fields for cotton, which quickly became the dominant cash
crop.
Reliance on cash crops and reduction of animal labor resulted in other changes
on both the farm and in the village. Tractor barns and auto garages replaced
wagon and buggy sheds. Fewer oxen and mules reduced the barn space required to
shelter and dress them. In town, the garage replaced the blacksmith. Increased
cash flow gave families greater purchasing power and the local dry goods store
stocked current catalogs for ready-made clothing, furniture, household goods and
farm equipment. County roads were graveled and improved for vehicular traffic
throughout the community giving Westphalians easier access to farmers markets in
Temple. Still, before the first all-weather road (SH 320) was built in the
late-1930s, the black prairie mud made travel almost impossible after a rain.
People traveling to Temple commonly sent a team of mules ahead to pull their car
through the mud holes. Others placed shocks of cane hay in the ruts so the car
could make it through the mud (Voltin 1979).
Other changes occurred in social arrangements and building patterns. By the
1920s, many of the original settlers had passed their large farms on to their
sons and daughters. New households established new farmsteads. Most of the new
dwellings built from the 1910s onward reflect typical American trends of the
period. As a result, most of the dwellings dating from the 1910s, 1920s and
1930s, are bungalows. More construction occurred in the village and bungalows
sprang up there, too. Their proliferation reflects the increasing influences of
the outside world as improved roads and automobiles gave Westphalians greater
opportunities to experience them.
During the 1920s, the county built a public school for the few families who
either weren't Catholics or who did not want their children to attend parochial
school. The new school building (razed), resembling a hipped roof bungalow, was
constructed in the church/school complex. It was the state's first major
incursion into Westphalia's educational system. In 1921, the community built a
parochial high school (Site No. 90) with rooms for the Sisters of Divine
Providence on the second floor. The new school construction is indicative of the
prosperity and growth of the community at this time. It may have also been an
attempt to retain local control of high school education.
With the exception of a drought in 1926, the majority of Westphalians enjoyed
relative prosperity throughout the 1920s. Their shared religious and cultural
values continued to sustain the people of Westphalia but cash crops and
mechanized farming eased some of the drudgery of rural life. As farmers were
able to work more land with less effort, children gained more educational
opportunities. Some, like Walter Beach, received higher educations and left
their farms altogether.
Reliance on cash crops took its toll when cotton prices crashed during the Great
Depression. Westphalians, although cash poor, were spared the grinding poverty
of tenant farmers and share-croppers. Many returned to subsistence farming and
at least one gin operation went out of business. Federal government programs
including Works Progress Administration (WPA) road projects reached even to
Westphalia. Funded under the WPA, parishioners volunteered labor, clay and
gravel to build the short road connecting the commercial node to the church and
school (Voltin 1979). Another WPA program installed "sanitary toilets" - privies
with poured concrete tanks - on farms in the district. Several still survive
(Huser 1994).
In 1933, during the height of the Great Depression, the Church of the Visitation
celebrated its Golden Jubilee, marking the fiftieth anniversary of its founding
in Westphalia. Walter Beach's compiled and translated excerpts from the diary of
Martin Roessler, an early settler, to trace the history of the community but his
own narrative reflected its condition in 1933. Beach described,
a peaceful and progressive little village . . . far enough removed from any
large city to prevent its citizens from becoming urban-minded, and yet . . .
near enough to three railroads to facilitate the marketing of its annual
abundance of farm products" (Beach, 5).
The author further declared that their abundance was due to,
rich black soil which, under the ideal and healthful climatic conditions
prevailing at all times, seldom fails to produce a normal or above normal yield
. . . [and the] use of the natural gifts of the Lord, . . . the typically
conservative, thrifty, and hard-working German families, for the greater part,
have become property owners of more or less financial independence (Beach, 5).
At the time of the jubilee, at least six businesses operated in the village:
Gausemeier & Fiedler (Groceries and Drugs, Site No. 55); Gottschalk Brothers
(cotton gin); Herman Hoelscher (Dry Goods and notions) together with Kleypas
Grocery (Site No. 47); Greener's Garage (Site No. 54); Zeig's Shop (Tin work and
welding). With the exception, perhaps of Zeig's Shop, these businesses continue
to operate in their original locations to the present. The onset of the
Depression, however, coincided with major changes in Westphalia. The community
boasted its largest population (1,100 people in 212 families) to date in 1927
but by 1931, the numbers had been reduced to 980 people in 204 families. In his
memorial booklet written in 1933, Beach explained the decrease as "due to
migration to other parts of [the] state because of over-crowded condition of
[the] territory embraced by [the] community" (Beach, 13). Certainly by the early
1930s, the original tracts Rabroker acquired from Neyland had been divided again
and again for second- and third-generation family members and the influx of
later German immigrants.
In 1935, with the aid of a $40,000 Works Progress Administration project, the
town of Lott built a new school and gymnasium. The facility offered better
opportunities than Westphalia could provide its students and the community
negotiated an agreement with the county to carry transfer to Lott by bus (St.
Romain, 86). At the same time, the parochial school in Westphalia became a
public school. Although the sisters continued to teach and were paid by the
State of Texas for their efforts (Westphalia Little School State Marker File),
for the first time in its history, secular influences exerted substantial
control over Westphalia's educational system.
AN ALL-WEATHER ROAD: STATE HIGHWAY 320, COMPLETED 1938
The greatest challenge to Westphalia's autonomy was also one of the community's
greatest triumphs. In 1938 SH 320, the community's first "all weather" road, was
completed through Westphalia linking it with the city of Temple to the west and
Marlin, the county seat, to the east (Church of the Visitation State Marker
File). Until its construction, a trip to Temple, twenty miles away by the
gridded county roads, was an all-day affair. If it rained, travelers were forced
to stay because it was impossible to drive through the thick mud. The new
highway cut across the county roads, reducing the trip to only twelve miles.
More important, it made the outside world accessible regardless of the weather.
Most Westphalian farmers viewed the road as a godsend and property owners gladly
offered the right of way for its construction. Although it gave Westphalian's
access to markets and services they couldn't receive before, the highway also
ended the isolation that had protected the German Catholic community from
outside interference and influence.
At that time, the population of the community rebounded from the decline of the
early 1930s to 205 families with 1,088 residents (Church of the Visitation State
Marker File; Beach, 13). The temporary increase gave way to decline by the end
of the 1940s, with the population dropping to 734 people in 175 families. This
trend continued through the 1950s, 1960s so that by 1974, the community declined
to only 110 families with 512 members, half the number counted in 1922 (Church
of the Visitation State Marker File; Beach, 13).
Correspondingly, many of the businesses that were sustained by a larger
population, closed their doors or moved to larger communities beginning in the
late 1940s, particularly after World War II. Although the official postal
station closed in 1906, mail was collected and distributed from one of the
commercial stores until 1947 when the postal service routed mail to Lott. About
the same time, Dr. B. A. Jansing who had served the community for more than 30
years, died and the drug store closed its pharmacy. The sheet metal business
moved to Hearne where it had better rail connections (Church of the Visitation
State Marker File). The decline in local businesses and services forced
Westphalian families to patronize stores in Lott, Rosebud and other larger towns
in the area. The inconvenience was made easier by the good highway and increased
automobile ownership. At the same time, greater mobility to and from the
previously cloistered community brought it into much greater contact with the
outside world.
A comparison of church records for the years 1937 and 1941 shows the beginning
of a decline in Westphalia's parishioners. In 1937, the parish recorded 197
families with 1,025 souls and 650 communicants and 243 pupils. Four years later,
records show only 190 families with about 880 souls, including 615 communicants.
There was a big change was in school enrollment. Only 177 pupils were registered
in 1941, a reduction of 66 students. Over the following decades the numbers
slowly declined. High School students took the bus to Lott and by 1978-79 there
were only 57 pupils enrolled in the Westphalia School.
Farm size and use changed as well. First generation Westphalians owned and
farmed between 200 and 270 acres of land but they were divided into smaller
parcels for their many children. Typically, the resultant farms contained
between 70 and 100 acres. By the third generation, farmers could not further
divide their farms without jeopardizing their viability. It was simply not
feasible to separate farms into plots that were incapable of sustaining a
family. By the 1930s, farmland in Westphalia was scarce. As a result, many young
families had to look elsewhere for new farms. Some married into local families
that had available farms. Others began buying nearby properties outside the
traditional Westphalia community boundaries. Still others moved out of the
community altogether to new German Catholic communities like Rowena, in West
Texas. Too, some of the younger Westphalians chose other occupations and moved
to Temple, Waco, and other cities.
POST-WAR CHANGES IN WESTPHALIA
After World War II, many of Westphalia's young men who saw military service and
traveled outside the community chose not to return to farming. Some joined other
family members and friends in obtaining jobs in Temple and Waco. Still others
left central Texas altogether. By the 1950s and 1960s, a new farming trend
developed in which a few farmers leased large tracts of land for production of
cash crops, particularly cotton. Few of the older farmers actually sold their
farms and today many continue to live on their traditional farmsteads while
younger farmers cultivate their fields as part of large-scale operations. While
fewer farmers overall are employed in agriculture in Westphalia, many third and
fourth Westphalians have returned to the community to raise their families. They
work in Temple, Marlin or other towns, but have built new brick homes in
Westphalia. In the past decade, school enrollment has increased as a result.
Despite the pressures of modern society, the strong GermanCatholic foundation
established by Westphalia's founders and nurtured by their descendants is
evident in the tight-knit community today. Nearly all the inhabitants of the
village and surrounding farms are descendants of pioneer settlers who settled on
the land before the turn of the century. It is a place in which everyone knows
everyone else. There is a pervasive sense that each resident's welfare is the
concern of the whole community. The families whose histories are intricately
entwined with one another work together, pray together and recreate together.
Although the Westphalia Little School discontinued classes in 1989, a new modern
brick school building holds kindergarten through eighth grade classes today. The
church remains the center of all social and community activities. In addition,
Westphalia supports a dance hall, a baseball field, and an annual Community
Homecoming celebration. Businesses that remain in operation include two grocery
stores, a meat market, a cotton gin, trucking firm, fertilizer and grain
outfits, and two land cleaning and conservation services. The Volunteer Fire
Department has two trucks and a wealth of volunteers. Today, as when it was
founded, farming is the main focus of the community which supports an active
Young Farmers Organization. Ironically, few of the young families in Westphalia
engage in farming as their primary occupation. While the large farms of the
original settlers were divided for successive generations of their descendants,
today many of the small farms have been combined into larger parcels which are
farmed by a handful of families. And, while the number of farm families declined
sharply from its peak in the 1920s and early 1930s, the cause may be due to the
lack of available farmland rather than lack of interest.
HISTORIC PATTERNS OF DEVELOPMENT
Introduction
The significant historic building and agricultural patterns that set Westphalia
apart from the surrounding rural landscape of western Falls County are perhaps
best explained by an analysis of their functional components and phased
development over time. Westphalia's pioneer phase started with its founding in
1879 and involved surveying property boundaries, erecting shelters and plowing
the unbroken prairie. During the second phase, lasting from about 1882 until
about 1890, pioneer settlers established many of the historic rural building and
landscape patterns that characterize the community to this day. Between about
1890 and 1920, most of the district's core farmsteads were well-established and
community attention turned to building the church/school complex, enlarging the
village and sectioning off new farms from the original ones for second-
generation Westphalians. Progressive farming, motorized equipment and an
emphasis on cotton cultivation characterized the period from about 1920 through
the 1930s when auto garages and tractor barns replaced buggy sheds and
blacksmith shops. Completion of the community's first all- weather road, SH 320,
in 1938, profoundly altered historic transportation routes and ultimately,
economic and social traditions in the community. After World War II,
Westphalia's population dwindled and little new construction took place until
the 1970s when families began moving back into the district. Since the
mid-1970s, a resurgence of construction including new brick houses and metal
manufactured storage buildings has occurred along the country roads and in the
church subdivision. Intensive cotton cultivation has altered the appearance of
the appearance of traditional farms by the removal of fences, swales, timber
stands and pasture and by leveling the natural pitch of the landscape. However,
many of the rural patterns established in the 1880s and continued throughout the
period of significance, remain intact in the core community of farms surrounding
the church and village. They provide the common thread that links the community
visually to its historic agricultural roots.
PIONEER SETTLEMENT PATTERNS, 1879 - 1882
For the first several years following Theodore Rabroker's arrival in 1879, the
pioneers who followed him to the unbroken prairie surveyed their adjacent
270-acre farms, cut rudimentary field roads, built simple shelters for their
families and livestock, and engaged in subsistence farming. This pattern
continued as new settlers arrived in the vicinity and purchased acreage
adjoining the core farmsteads. Thus, for some of the later arrivals this process
occurred as late as 1900. By that time, patterns were well-established and few
families had to start out wholly on their own.
The farms offered to the pioneers consisted of rectangular parcels containing
between 100- and 270-acres apiece. Westphalians typically purchased the largest
farms they could afford, so the majority of the first farms tended to be
270-acre parcels. Surveyed parcels appeared as rectangular plots, one abutting
another, within the larger, rectangular patents. Individual farm boundaries
appear to have been arbitrary but consistent, with little or no allowances made
for natural land forms such as creeks or hills. Rabroker's farm served as the
base property and subsequent farms abutted his in a consistent, gridlike
fashion. John and Theresia Bockholt's 270-acre farm, was plotted adjacent to
Rabroker's property on the northeast. Subsequent farms formed on the survey
lines of these original parcels, spreading outward in all directions. Thus, the
rectangular grid was the first pattern established by the pioneers. It remains
highly evident today as the county roads throughout the district follow the
original property boundaries.
The earliest pioneers including the Rabrokers and the John and Theresia Bockholt
family merely camped on the open prairie in their covered wagons, sometimes for
several years, before building even a small dwelling. The pioneers' main
priority appeared to be establishing their farms and because nearly all brought
livestock with them from Frelsburg, they undoubtedly erected some type of
shelter for the animals as soon as possible. Within a year or two, the pioneers
built two-room houses for their families. Some families in the area, including
the Kahligs (Site No. 72), built two-room log houses. The earliest dwellings
were generally rude shelters that later served for storage or other purposes and
ultimately abandoned. No log houses are known to survive in the district but
several two- room side-gabled frame houses remain (Site Nos. 84 and 103). Some
original buildings may be incorporated into current dwellings or outbuildings.
The Bockholt's original two-room shelter served the farm as a blacksmith shop
and later as storage until a storm destroyed it about 1978.
Little else is known about the construction methods and cultivation patterns of
the first pioneers "probably because every man had his own to build, his soil to
till, and his family to provide for" (Beach, 8). According to all accounts,
though, the farmers immediately put plough to the soil and began farming to feed
their families and livestock. Most likely each farmer plowed as many rows of
corn and small grains as he and his family could manage close to the dwelling.
ESTABLISHING PERMANENT PATTERNS, 1882 - 1890
Within about five years of their arrival in the community, Westphalia's pioneer
families enlarged or replaced their rude two-room dwellings and created a
building complex of substantial outbuildings that became the basis for virtually
all of the district's extant historic farmsteads. During this phase they also
established the landscape patterns that today define the district's recognizable
rural identity. They cultivated fields, planted orchards, laid fence lines, dug
stock ponds, and reinforced the major parcel boundary roads that remain the
principal transportation routes through the district. They also selected a
church site and purchased an additional farm to provide for the construction and
maintenance of a church and cemetery. This formed the basis of the present
village. As new arrivals joined the pioneers, they followed the established
agricultural landscape and building patterns by which the community is now
identified. Further, the model defined the substance and relationship of the
district's two principal components -- the church complex, which formed the
basis for the village, and the surrounding farmsteads.
By 1882, 13 farms clustered around Rabroker's original parcel. Early in the
community's evolution, farmers defined their property lines with paths that
became the main roads from one farm to another. Typically, each farm family
built a hard-packed dirt road leading from the nearest main road to the front
entry of their dwelling. The dwelling, a 1- or 1-1/2 story frame house with a
porch, was the focal point of a building complex with agricultural buildings
lying behind or across the drive from it. Nearly all dwellings were sited to
retain sweeping views of the countryside unobstructed by agricultural buildings.
Farmers usually reserved the highest spot of land nearest the center of their
property to take advantage of breezes and reduce the possibility of flooding or
damage by standing water or marshy ground. Good drainage was imperative on the
blackland prairie. Settlers who built their first shelters alongside area
creeks, later constructed their permanent dwelling and farm buildings on higher
ground due to mud, marshy conditions and danger of flooding. A second important
factor in siting the building complex involved its relationship to the fields.
In an era of animal-powered vehicles and plows, farmers tried to construct their
buildings mid-way between fields to reduce distances whenever possible. Rarely
were dwellings and barns sited at the farthest reaches of the farm. An ideal
location, mid- way between fields, offered the farmer quickest access to all of
his fields.
A typical farm building complex of this period included the dwelling and its
related buildings and structures, and the barn and its related buildings and
structures. In general, the driveway or field road separated the sections.
Farmers built picket or wire fences around the primary dwelling and its yard, an
area of about 90' by 100'. Flower and vegetable gardens grew inside the
protected yard area. Cisterns, root cellars, smoke houses and hot water or wash
houses, and sometimes privies, also occupied space in the yard. Storage garages
for tools and equipment sometimes lay near the dwelling. The barnyard area
contained shelters for horses, cows, pigs and brooders for baby chicks, as well
as implement barns and storage facilities. Farmers constructed buggy sheds to
shelter their vehicles and sometimes maintained their own blacksmith shops in
this area. Nearly all buildings of this period were of frame construction with
wood-shingled roofs.
While some farms maintained gardens within the yard, others had large, fenced
vegetable gardens outside the yard but near the house. Farms of this period also
planted large orchards near the building complex because that area usually had
the best drainage. All of the buildings and the were within easy walking
distance from the houses since family members visited most of the buildings
several times each day (Voltin 1994). The complex was compact, usually
containing fewer than two or three acres, so that the bulk of the property could
be devoted to agriculture.
Although cotton was fast becoming an important crop on the blackland prairie,
most of the Westphalian farmers during this period grew corn and raised
livestock. They divided their acreage to provide grazing land for their cattle,
natural hay meadows, and cultivated fields for crops. Unlike the gridlike
demarcations of the larger property boundaries, fields, meadows and grazing land
tended to follow natural design. Large expanses of generally flat land were
ideal for plowing while sloping or hilly land was left for grazing. Farmers
retained four or five acres of natural prairie grass meadows for hay. Timber
stands along creek beds were valuable for fire wood and farmers of this period
did not cut trees to put more land into cultivation.
As early as 1884, only a year after barbed wire was introduced in Texas, the
Westphalians built barbed wire and cedar post fencing to delineate property
boundaries and protect their crops from cattle. They also built fences along
creek beds and standing water to keep cattle and horses from polluting the
water. Water was often scarce and farmers dug stock ponds and wells as well as
underground cisterns to capture ground water, to provide for their livestock and
families.
At the same time Westphalians began shaping their farmsteads, they also
established the basis for the village of Westphalia. On 7 December 1882
Rabroker, Bockholt and Casper Hoelscher purchased a 100-acre parcel of land
adjacent to Hoelscher's farm for a church and school. In addition to the church
site, they purchased a second 100- acre parcel to farm its construction and
maintenance. Like their own building complexes, the Westphalians chose an
elevated site on which to build their first frame church, in 1884.
VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS, 1890 - 1920
Over the following several decades, from about 1890 to 1920, the village
increased substantially with the construction of the Church of the Visitation in
1894, several schools including the Westphalia Little School in 1896, a rectory
and parish hall, and the first commercial buildings and non-farm dwellings. The
community supported a doctor, several merchants, a milliner and a post office.
Changes occurred on the farmsteads, as well. Cotton emerged as an important cash
crop during this period and more agricultural acreage was devoted to its
cultivation. Individuals constructed the community's first gin and it was
followed by several others in the immediate vicinity. New technologies came into
use in the community and windmills dotted the landscape. At the same time,
livestock of all kinds increased and individual farmers began to sell their
surplus crops and meat, both in the village and in the markets of Temple and
Lott. By this time, many of the first- generation farmers divided their original
270-acre parcels into smaller farms for their children. Although the major
roadways remained unchanged, new fence lines and cultivation patterns, as well
as new building complexes, appeared on the landscape.
PATTERNS OF INCREASE AND DECLINE DURING THE 1920’s AND 1930’s
Cotton increasingly dominated farm production in the 1920s and 1930s. The
greatest boon to its production, as well as nearly every other aspect of rural
life in Westphalia, was the advent of mechanized farming equipment. Trucks and
tractors reshaped the landscape and habits of the community. Gas-powered
vehicles and equipment supplanted field animals and horses for labor and
transportation, thus reducing the amount of acreage needed for grazing and feed
production. They allowed farmers to level sloping fields for more efficient and
intensive cultivation, thereby reducing former grazing land and eliminating more
vacant land, hay meadows and timber stands. Power equipment also meant that
fewer people were required to farm larger parcels of land. Not surprisingly,
Westphalians eagerly embraced new technologies and the community generally
flourished during the 1920s.
During this period, the community reached its peak, both in population and size.
The "boundaries" of the extended German Catholic community embraced nearly 25
square miles and extended into Bell and Milam counties. As new generations came
of age to start their own farms, families found it untenable to further divide
the now 70- to 80-acre farms into smaller pieces. The younger farmers built new
farm building complexes, resembling in form and layout those of their parents
and grandparents. They replicated the agricultural patterns of their
predecessors, as well. New pastures, cultivated cotton and corn fields, hay
meadows and patches were plotted and fenced for new generation of farmers.
Beginning in the 1930s, and continuing through the post- World War II era,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren or the pioneers either moved to new
farming communities further west or took jobs in the cities. As a result,
Westphalia's historic farm parcels survive as 70to 80-acre second- generation
tracts, to a large degree.
One of the most notable landscape changes that occurred during this period was
the construction of SH 320, the community's first "all weather" road. Completion
of the highway, in 1938, opened many new opportunities for the farmers who
remained in Westphalia. At the same time, it led to the demise of the village as
the community's principal center of commerce because residents could easily
travel to Temple, only fifteen miles away to do their shopping and service
errands. Ease of travel outside the community led to some dilution of
traditional community lifeways. The highway, which immediately became the
community's primary arterial, also altered historic transportation patterns and
spatial relationships, particularly within the village. Due to its profound
effect on the community, the 1938 completion date is significant one in
Westphalia's evolution.
WESTPHALIA TODAY
Today, after a period of decline spanning the 1950s through the early 1970s,
many families have moved back to Westphalia, primarily to raise their children
or live out their retirement years. So many have moved back into the community
that the Westphalia School District has increased enrollment over the past
decade. The traditional school boundaries define the largest concentration of
historic Westphalia farmsteads. Families cite the lack of crime, traditional
values and enjoyment of the rural lifestyle among their reasons for returning
home. Most of the young families live in new brick houses built on parceled lots
on their parents' or grandparents' property. Typically, these lots lie directly
on the county roads and contain only a few outbuildings, such as a garage.
Workers commute to Temple, Waco, or Marlin, the county seat. Few, if any, of the
returnees engage in farming. In fact, only a handful of Westphalians continue to
farm today although most of the land within the Westphalia Rural Historic
District is under cultivation. Modern conditions require that a few farmers with
extensive equipment to work several farms to sustain themselves and their
families. They manage by leasing the farms of their friends and neighbors. Today
Westphalia is a thriving rural community whose historic landscape endures
despite modern challenges. Its historic rural patterns are preserved in the
farmsteads and village properties that comprise the core of the German Catholic
community.
LAND USE PATTERNS ON HISTORIC FARMSTEADS
A typical historic building complex consists of a one or one-and-a-half story
frame farm house and several agricultural buildings including barns, storage
sheds, garages and animal shelters. Many of the residences have additions on the
rear portion regardless of age or plan type. Primary facades generally retain
their original appearance but several (Site Nos. 37 and 102) have screened in
their front porches. At least four farm houses and one village house appear to
date from about 1890 and appear similar in plan and appearance. The central hall
dwellings typically are side-gabled with two or three small gabled or hipped
roof dormers punctuating the roof. Examples in the district include the G. P.
Hoelscher Farmstead (Site No. 99), the Joseph Kahlig Farmstead (Site No. 72),
the Anton Jansing Farmstead (Site No. 66), the Christopher Fuchs Farmstead (Site
No. 41) and the Millie Hoelscher House (Site No. 84). In addition to central
passage dwellings, the district contains several T-plan and L-plan houses, and
many bungalows. In fact, nearly all of the center-passage dwellings contain T-
or L-shaped additions to the rear.
A very few farms had resident tenants. Ray Hoelscher's farm (Site No. 37)
contains a tenant house down the hill from the main house. Both oral accounts
and census records indicate that children often farmed as tenants on their
parents' farms until they could buy land of their own. Hoelscher worked as a
tenant and lived in the small house on his father's farm until he acquired the
family farm (Hoelscher 1993). The Christopher Fuchs farmstead (Site No. 41) also
contains an old two-room house that may have served as a tenant house. It lies
mid-way between SH 320 and the main building complex.
Independent Germans traditionally identified and secured their property with
fences. Today virtually all property boundaries are marked with fencing of some
type. Pastures, creeks and plots were also fenced because nearly every family
owned livestock that had to be controlled. Historic properties generally display
fences of barbed wire and cedar posts. The Westphalians were the first to
install barbed wire fences in western Falls County and the practice was not
appreciated by local ranchers. Irate ranchers roped Theodore Rabroker off his
front porch and dragged him nearly to death before cutting him loose. Ranchers
lost the war, however and today it is rare to see an unfenced piece of property.
After a few years, seeds deposited by birds and animals brought forth trees and
bushes. As years passed, grapevines and dewberry bushes began to flourish along
these dividing lines. In the spring and summer, youngsters spent hours
harvesting dewberries for jam and jellies and made pies. Late in the season,
they scoured the fence rows for grapes for jellies and juice. These natural
gifts provided meals for families during the winter months (Voltin 1994).
Nearly all historic domestic yards are fenced. Although partly for
ornamentation, the fences also served to keep free-ranging fowl from eating
vegetables and flowers in the yard. Even if the domestic yard is open, the
vegetable is sure to be fenced for protection. Common yard fences in the
district include picket, cast iron and looped wire although some owners have
installed chain link fences around historic properties.
Historic properties contain extensive vegetable and flower s. Irises and
daffodils are popular and plentiful. Old rose bushes are less plentiful but
continue to grow untended on some of the abandoned farmsteads. In some cases
foundations of demolished houses are defined by surviving clumps of irises or
rose bushes. Baseball-sized fossilized shells culled from limestone outcroppings
along Pond Creed define several flower beds and walkways in the district.
Landscape designs can be rather formal with entry might have trees of same type
and size equidistant from front door. The G. P. Hoelscher farmstead (Site No.
99) contains such a formal design with identical holly bushes flanking the front
porch, followed by crepe myrtles at each corner and pecan trees spaced at each
corner of the front yard.
All Westphalian farm families grew large vegetable gardens and this tradition
endures in the district. Each spring families purchased an ample supply of
seeds. Some saved seeds from prior years s. Early plantings of onions, cabbage,
greens, and potatoes were followed by beets, squash, cucumbers, and tomatoes.
When the produce could not be readily consumed, the excess was canned or
pickled. Most of the cabbage became sauerkraut, a German favorite. If a family
didn't have a cellar, the potato crop was harvested and placed underneath the
houses which were on piers. The potatoes stayed cool and ventilated to prevent
spoilage (Voltin 1994).
Agricultural buildings in the complex typically include storage buildings and
shelters for animals, vehicles and implements. Barnyards often contained several
animal and hay barns, sheds, corn cribs, pig and cow pens, pig and cow houses, a
hen house or chicken coop and brooder. All contain tractor and automobile
garages. Some outmoded farm buildings have been removed or replaced but others
survive, usually in a different capacity. An old buggy barn survives on the
Kahlig farm (Site No. 72). Long after the demise of the buggy, Kahlig's father
stored cotton in the barn (Voltin 1994). Today it serves as general storage.
Like historic dwellings in Westphalia, virtually all historic outbuildings were
originally frame, although some used metal roofing materials. Some newer
outbuildings, particularly grain storage containers, may be metal. Some root
cellars or spring houses, below-ground enclosures made of brick or stone, remain
in use while others, like that of the Bockholt- Lingnau farm (Site No. 42), have
been converted to other uses.
Nearly all Westphalian farms raised a variety of livestock for food,
particularly hogs, chickens and cattle and provided special shelter for them.
Although chickens were the predominate foul, some farmers raised turkeys and
guineas also. Each family had between 100 and 250 laying hens. This supplied an
ample supply of eggs for family use such as baking and with some left over to
sell. The eggs were taken to the grocery store to pay for staples such as flour,
sugar and coffee. The laying hens were bought as baby chicks supplied by a local
hatchery. Each farmer had chicken houses, to shelter the chickens at night, and
a smaller building a brooder house to house baby chicks. The pullets were kept
for laying hens while the roosters provided many Sunday dinners of fried chicken
or chicken and dumplings. Chickens were able to roam as they pleased during the
day. This cut down on feed supply needed (Voltin 1994).
The barns held corn, hay and other feed supplies for the horses, cattle, hogs,
and fowl. It also provided shelter for the cattle and horses. The horses and
mules were the primary work animals. Sometimes horses were ridden for
entertainment. Most of the cattle were kept to supply milk for the family and
they were milked in their pens both morning and night. The cows provided milk,
cream for butter and cash sales, and cottage cheese which was on the diet of
most Germans each day. Cattle were mainly kept in barns only during the cold
winter months. This supplied an ample supply of manure which farmers used as
fertilizer for their spring crops (Voltin 1994). In Germany the farm animals
were housed on the first floor of the house while the family occupied the upper
floor but Westphalians practiced standard American methods in this regard
(Voltin 1994).
Pigs stayed in low pens or pig houses with a short, fenced yard and a sloping
roof. Most German farm families butchered and processed their own meat supply.
This time usually brought families and neighbors to help. After stuffing
sausage, processing the lard, and getting hams and bacon ready for curing, each
family that helped went with some sausage and fresh hog meat as a "thank you"
for the help (Voltin 1994).
In addition to shelter and storage barns and sheds, typical farms contain
specialty buildings such as smoke houses and hot water or wash houses. Before
Westphalians had indoor plumbing and hot running water, they built separate hot
water houses for laundry and special purposes such as killing hogs. One day each
week was a general wash day for each family and Westphalians typically had very
large families. This warranted a special "wash houses" where washing machines,
wash boards, tubs, and other laundry items were stored. Generally the hot water
houses lie in or very near the domestic yard, behind the primary dwelling. Since
water had to be heated in a cast iron wash pot, some families placed the wash
pot, encased in concrete or mortared brick forms, inside the wash house as a
convenience. Some built cast iron or copper pots right into the brick fireplace
above the firebox. Since wash day came each week regardless of the weather, this
provided a little more comfort to the one doing the job. Each farm had an
adequate supply of wood, corncobs, and kerosene to heat the water. A constant
necessity was the wash line - a heavy wire strung between two posts. Sometimes
large-member families ran out of clotheslines and many overalls and other
wearing clothes dried on the wire yard fences (Voltin 1994). Several sites still
contain hot water houses including the G.P. Hoelscher farm (Site No. 99).
Smoke houses stood outside most farm houses in Westphalia. They were usually
built directly on the ground so that a small smoldering fire could be started on
the dirt to smoke all pork and some beef products. Since each family raised
hogs, several were slaughtered and processed each year. The smoking process gave
a means of preserving the meat for future use. The sausage, hams and bacon were
all hung in the smoke house and were cured by the wood fire. Women rendered and
stored lard in the smoke house. After the German families smoked their sausage
they stacked layers of rendered lard and smoked sausage, repeating the layering,
until a large crock was filled. By this method, the sausage was well-preserved
and many farm youngsters packed a lunch pail of this sausage and made bread for
school each day (Voltin 1994).
Some families dug cellars to store canned fruits and vegetables. Since the
cellars were cool, many people kept their milk there before refrigeration. Some
Germans brought the custom of brewing beer and making wine with them when they
came to America and cellars were an ideal place for storing their brews (Voltin
1994).
Of course, all farms had outdoor privies. Today, although they now have indoor
plumbing, many privies remain in the barnyards and behind the domestic yards of
Westphalian building complexes. Virtually all are frame "one- holers" but
several "sanitary toilets" installed by the Works Progress Administration during
the 1930s survive.
All older farms have cisterns and/or wells. Village properties had wells, too.
An extant well, with the date "1911" inscribed in the concrete sheathing, stands
next to the church. The house (Site No. 84) across the street also has a well in
the yard. Many of the farms in the Westphalia district contain underground
cisterns for collecting rain water off the house roofs. This was necessary
because deep wells usually contained warm mineral water unsuitable for household
use. Some underground cisterns such as those on the Ervin Kahlig,
Wilde-Gottschalk and Christopher Fuchs farms, stand on or near the back porch of
the house (Voltin 1994). Ervin Kahlig's 30' cistern remains in use today. Many
farmers dug shallow water wells which were only useful during periods of
adequate rainfall due to the low water table. If the farm didn't have an
underground cellar the wells provided a cooling place for milk before
refrigeration was available (Voltin 1994). Only shallow wells with underground
springs or seeps at depths of 15 to 25 feet could supply needed water. Many
farmers depended on these spring fed wells during drought seasons. During a
drought in 1926, only a few of these shallow wells were able to provide water
for many. Many farm families depended on their neighbor farmers for water as not
everyone had spring water. Almost everyone had a water wagon which was a basic
flat-bed trailer pulled by horses or tractors containing 100 gallon cisterns or
55 gallon barrels to hold water. This supply provided family water for drinking
food preparation, bathing and washing clothes and sometimes water for farm
animals. Some farms have 1,000 gallon cisterns to catch water from the house
roof. This was another source of water for household use.
Since farmers depended on surface water for much of their needs, establishing
stock ponds were very important. In the beginning, ponds were dug by spade and
shovel, and later by horses or mules pulling a frenzo (fresno) -- a blade-like
scoop used to dig out a layer of soil and deposit it to create a dam. Rainwater
and runoff filled the pond (Voltin 1994). According to John Lingnau, farmers
worked on the stock pond whenever they got caught up on their farm work,
"Everybody got a scraper and a team and would go down and dig a tank, dig a
hole, dig it bigger. . . Every chance they'd go down there and scrape. They
called it running the scraper. It was [water] storage for whole cattle -- horses
and all the livestock." (Voltin 1979)
The primary purpose of the farm pond was to provide water for horses mules and
cattle. Since early farm houses did not have many bathroom facilities, farm
ponds provided bathing and swimming experiences for many farm youngsters. All
during the summer months, after working the fields all day most people got a
daily bath in the ponds. Most learned the "dog paddle" method of swimming in the
family farm "pool". Neighborhood boys enjoyed "skinny dipping" many late
evenings (Voltin 1994). During the migratory seasons, ducks and geese sometimes
landed on the ponds where farmers lay in wait for them to further vary their
food supply. They often stocked their ponds with catfish to supplement their
diets (Beach 1994).
In addition to the stock ponds, farmers dedicated a few acres out of their
farms, usually near creek beds, for timber lots and reserved 4 to 6 acres hay
meadows. Farmers often planted orchards close to the building complex because it
usually contained the best drainage (Beach 1994).
Throughout most of the history of Westphalia, the entire community has been
focused on securing and improving its family farms. In fact, all the
institutions of the community accommodated the agricultural lifestyle. The
school year usually began in October to enable the youngsters time to help with
the crop harvest (Voltin 1994). German children provided the work force for the
family. Cotton was the cash crop. All harvesting was done by the hands of the
family members. After a wagon load of cotton was picked, it was taken to the gin
to be ginned. This was usually the task of the father. The children remained in
the field to pick more cotton for the next bale. The reward for their work was
usually fresh apples and crackers purchased by father on his way from the gin.
The sons drove the horse-drawn machinery to plant and plow the crops.
Cotton remains a principal crop in Westphalia, although only a few commercial
farmers cultivate it. Still, the rural traditions established in the late 19th
century remain firmly entrenched in the community customs and values and are
evident in its rural historic landscape. The following properties are selected
as representative examples of farmsteads and agricultural patterns in the
Westphalia Rural Historic District. Not all contain every aspect of the area's
rural historic landscape but each retains significant Contributing elements that
help define the district's character.
THE EVOLUTION OF THE RURAL HISTORIC LANDSCAPE: THE BOCKHOLT-LINGNAU FARMSTEAD AS
A CASE STUDY
One of the pervasive themes of this rural landscape is its evolving nature. The
Bockholt-Lingnau Farmstead is both a representative property within the district
and an illustrative example of a farmstead that has changed over time while
retaining historic significance.
An analysis of the Bockholt-Lingnau Farmstead (Site No. 42) offers additional
insight into the evolution of Westphalia's historic landscape. Straddling SH
320, southeast of the village center, the first generation farmstead shares
landscape elements common to many of the historic farmsteads in the district.
The farm typifies the evolutionary process that began with the first generation
farmsteads and persisted throughout Westphalia's historic period of
significance.
The Bockholt-Lingnau Farmstead lies at the center of the Westphalia Historic
District roughly one and one-half miles southeast of the village. Historical
research conducted by Raye Virginia Allen in 1978 traced land titles to the
present and revealed clues about the farmstead's development from 1881 to the
present. The property's evolution is typical of many first generation farmsteads
in the Westphalia community and is a useful prototype for understanding its
cultural environment. The Bockholt- Lingnau Farmstead is sited at an elevation
about 570 feet above sea level, just southeast of the centerpoint to a 270- acre
tract of land acquired by Johann and Theresia Bockholt in 1881. The Bockholts
followed Theodore Rabroker to Westphalia and were the second settlers in the
community. Their land adjoins Rabroker's original farmstead on the northeast.
Like nearly all the original parcels, the Bockholt's original 270-acre farm was
rectangular in shape. As soon as he arrived on the land, John Bockholt surveyed
and marked his property boundaries. For the first year, the Bockholt family
lived in their covered wagon on the open prairie. According to John Lingnau,
grandson of John Bockholt, "they stayed in the wagon . . . there was no (other)
place . . they just staked them off some land. It was for sale. . . . Some of
them lived a year or two in the covered wagons until they got their residences
built or shack or house . . . got started." (Voltin 1979).
Bockholt immediately built a small shed to augment living quarters in the wagon.
As soon as he was able, Bockholt chose an elevated portion of his farm to
construct a cabin. The cabin site developed into the building complex that
exists today. The original house (c.1881) was a simple two-room, side-gabled
wooden frame dwelling containing a bedroom and an attached kitchen, with a
second sleeping area in a loft above the kitchen. The downstairs bedroom
measured about 12' square and the kitchen added another 8' to the length. A
front door opened entered directly into the bedroom which faced east. The
kitchen, at the rear of the house, had its own exit to the outside, on the west.
Although a temporary affair, Bockholt cut four windows in the bedroom and two in
the kitchen (Voltin 1979). The dwelling's interior spaces served multiple
functions, with dining, sleeping and meeting occurring in the same room.
After a few years, Bockholt moved the cabin, as it was called. It served as a
blacksmith shop for many years. Its replacement (c.1883) was a 2-story,
center-passage dwelling that began to segregate interior uses more rigidly. By
about 1885 a rear addition was added providing more opportunity for segregated
uses. The completed house formed a T-plan, with the c.1883 center-passage
dwelling as the "top of the T" and the c.1885 addition making the "tail".
According to John Lingnau, Westphalians favored T-plan houses because they
believed they could withstand higher winds than other houses.
During this period a building complex took shape that remained intact for many
decades. Domestic space included the primary dwelling and auxiliary buildings,
structures and spaces related to domestic function. For the Bockholt- Lingnau
Farmstead, the domestic space is approximately ninety by one hundred feet with
an average distance of eighteen to thirty feet from the primary building to the
perimeter. A wooden picket fence originally encircled the space which contained
a , ornamental flowers, and access to the wash house, cellar, smoke house and
privy. Area farmsteads typically fenced or partially domestic yards with looped
wire, cast iron or wood pickets. Much of the food preparation, laundry,
gardening and other household chores took place in this space. Primarily
supervised by women, these domestic endeavors often embodied more of the
traditional German folkways than activities conducted elsewhere on the farm.
Separated from the domestic space by a field road were the agricultural
buildings and work space which included cow sheds and pens, a horse barn, buggy
sheds, a blacksmith shop, and pig pens and houses. Horses were kept in a large
barn, each in its own separate stall. Auxiliary buildings on the
Lingnau-Buckholt Farmstead underwent a similar evolution. For example, the first
house transformed into a blacksmith work area and storage space and the root
cellar became a garage. These, much like the primary dwelling, underwent an
evolution over time in order to adjust to prevailing cultural mores and/or
technological advancements.
The Bockholt's organized their land by use, allocating most of their acreage for
cultivation of crops, the second largest portion for cattle pasture, and the
remaining for domestic space, circulation networks, and area transportation
routes. They dug stock ponds in the cow pasture to water their livestock and
built fences along the creek bed to keep the animals out.
After John Bockholts' death, three of his children divided the land equally.
Mary Katherine, the Bockholt's only daughter, inherited "the place" which
included the original building complex and adjacent one hundred acres. Mary
Katherine and her husband Bruno Lingnau continued to work her father's farmstead
and it eventually passed to their son, John and his wife Helen. Bockholt sons
established building complexes of their own on their smaller farms, somewhat
like satellites of the parent farmstead. Once divided, the property followed
similar land use patterns although the total acreage was greatly reduced.
Cultivation of cotton occupied the majority of the land use with cattle pasture
comprising the second greatest area. Domestic and agricultural space occupied
roughly the same area but transportation and circulation routes took less.
The primary dwelling dominates the domestic space and farmstead as a whole. In
the example of the Bockholt- Lingnau House, the 1-1/2-story dwelling served as a
focal point for the farmstead. It also received better siding, windows, doors,
paint, ornamentation, and in general, reflected the preferred image of the
family. Most folklorists believe that house forms reflect cultural mores over a
long period of time and with a large geographic dispersion. These mores may
respond to the climate, prevailing winds, or some other overriding cultural
trend. This appears to be true in the Bockholt-Lingnau House. Since the
introduction of SH 320, planned in 1936 and completed in 1938, alterations have
been made to the orient the house to address the new principal road. This is
true of several farms whose dwellings are visible from the state highway. Other
posthistoric period changes include replacement of several old barns, the
addition of the Song House and a new garage, and the removal of fences and
ornamental flowers to facilitate mowing machines. Nevertheless, the original
farmstead retains sufficient historic integrity in both rural landscape and
architectural characteristics to be a contributing feature of the rural historic
district. Its associated property retains its original hilltop siting, graveled
drive, corn fields, pasturage, and tree-shaded stock pond, in addition to
extensive cotton fields. Unlike many Westphalia cotton farms that have been
completely leveled, the Bockholt- Lingnau fields retain a slightly undulating
slope, reflecting the natural land form of the region as well as historic trends
pre-dating bulldozers.
REPRESENTATIVE PROPERTIES
The following properties illustrate significant trends in the development of
Westphalia's rural historic landscape.
The Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Site No. 91.
The parish church historically provided the physical and cultural focus of this
community, occupying a 100-acre tract at the heart of Westphalia. The initial
German Catholic settlers built their first church atop one of the highest points
in the area. Its visibility helped establish the boundaries of the community,
traditionally defined as farmsteads within five miles of the church. The
religious complex also eventually encompassed several schools, a rectory, a
convent, a parish hall and a cemetery. Although modern buildings replaced the
parish hall, public school and rectory, surviving historic buildings include the
Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin, the Westphalia Little School,
St. Mary's Cemetery, and the convent.
A storm destroyed Westphalia's initial church within three months of its
completion in 1884. Another severe storm damaged its replacement in 1893. The
parish's first permanent pastor, Reverend Michael Heintzelman, encouraged the
congregation to meet the needs of the growing population by building a new
church rather than repairing the damaged one. Records indicate that the
Westphalia Little School may incorporates the ruins of this second edifice.
The parish began work on the new church in 1894, completing it the following
year. Missionary Reverend P.M. Simoni designed the building on a Latin cross
plan. In addition to contributing funds for the undertaking, parishioners
provided much of the labor. They hauled 80 loads of building materials from the
railroad depot at Lott in a single day, including foundation stone shipped from
Moldoon and timber from Waco. A contractor from Tours, Texas, A. Fuchs oversaw
the work of locals such as experienced wood workers Frank Glass and Emmanuel
Raabe. Artist B.A. Sokolowski of Bernardo Prairie, Texas, designed and executed
interior decoration incorporating images of angels, stars, comets and the moon
painted on the ceiling. Members of the congregation also commissioned stained
glass windows, some of which bear their names. The completed church cost about
$8,000, a considerable sum for a community of farmers. It received publicity as
the largest frame church in "this part of the state" upon its completion
(Southern Messenger, 1895).
With a symmetrical facade dominated by twin bell towers, the new church
reflected the traditional designs for Catholic churches in the Westphalia region
of Germany. While modest by German standards, the Church of the Visitation
exhibits the traditional construction methods and design features of the German
Catholic homeland. Similarly, the church's position at the heart of the village
represents the endurance of cultural traditions in the new community on Texas'
blackland prairie. Churches customarily dominated Westphalian villages, with all
roads leading to a kirche platz at the center of the community. The Church of
the Visitation occupies a similar position in this village.
The church measures 120' by 55', with a 20' by 30' transept and two 80' bell
towers. Depite the application of asbestos shingles and perma-stone sheathing,
it retains the historic form and architectural detailing originally crafted by
the parishioners. Ornamentation includes Gothic windows, fishscale shingles, and
twin towers surmounted by copper clad domes and Maltese crosses. Recent
restoration efforts returned the historic paint scheme of distinctive blue and
white folk patterns seen in early photographs of the church.
To the west of the church lies the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes (Site No. 91b)
built by Anton Fuchs in 1945. The rock altar commemorates the appearance of the
Virgin Mary at the grotto in Lourdes, France. Devotees participate in a
candle-lit procession to the grotto during the months of May and October, which
the Catholic faith dedicates to the Virgin Mary. The final historic element
associated with the church consists of a concrete lined cistern (Site No. 91c),
a remnant of the community's rural water supply.
St. Mary's Cemetery Site No. 79.
Occupying a slightly sloping hill within the original 100-acre church tract, St.
Mary's cemetery also reveals the community's German heritage. The swept cemetery
incorporates gravel paths between family plots surrounded by low concrete curbs.
Most graves are kept neatly graveled and free of weeds, although grass covers a
few. Headstones all face the church on the east. Most older monuments feature
inscriptions in German topped by the Maltese cross, a typical German symbol. The
resultant image of row upon row of regimented grave stones topped with crosses
creates visual continuity with the Maltese crosses surmounting the church. A
bronze statue depicting Jesus Christ on the cross commands the center of the
cemetery. Several pioneer families donated the larger-than-life crucifix,
imported from France in 1908 (Voltin 1979). A single file of seven rectangular
concrete slabs leading from the entrance of the cemetery to the crucifix marks
the graves of Westphalia's parish priests. These elements also face east toward
the church in precise rows. Expansion removed much of the original wrought iron
fencing, although some survives on the north side. A wrought iron entry arch
dating to about 1950 marks the ceremonial entry to the grounds. Chain link
fencing at the rear of the property coincides with the western boundary of the
church tract.
In August 1884 H.T. Rabroker dug the first recorded burial in the cemetery for
Henry Lenz, the infant son of Fritz Lenz. German Catholic Westphalians continued
to use this final resting place, forming a Cemetery Society to care for the
grounds. By the mid-1920s the society's membership reached 164 volunteers
overseen by a board of three trustees.
Westphalia Little School Site No. 88.
Westphalia's German Catholic families implemented an educational program for
their children soon after arriving from Frelsburg. The earliest classes were
held in the church. In 1884 they drew up a contract with J.H. Pels to teach five
months of public instruction and three months of private school for a salary of
$30 per month. The cost of private parochial instruction was paid directly by
the parishioners. This early commitment to establishing a school reflects the
cultural importance of education, and particularly parochial education, to the
community founders.
In 1887 Falls County drew new district boundaries creating the Westphalia School
District No. 45. The county accommodated the community in an unusual partnership
that lasted nearly five decades, channelling public education funds to the
parochial school. Brother Stefan Geiser and his assistant, Tom Sullivan, taught
65 district pupils and 7 transfer pupils in the 1889-90 school year. Geiser
received $50 per month for a seven month term. Pels resumed teaching the
following year, with the assistance of Professor Kerkoff. Nuns from the Sisters
of Divine Providence in San Antonio also taught in Westphalia during this
period. The sisters taught reading, writing and arithmetic, stressing religious
instruction and preparing students for their First Communion. Finishing classes
in all three rooms constituted a complete education in Westphalia.
The community built its first school house on the hill next to the church in
1896. Now known as the Westphalia Little School, the building is an outstanding
example of the community's vernacular educational architecture. The frame
three-room school approximates contemporaneous center- passage dwellings such as
the Rabroker House. A third wing added to the rear gives the building a T-form,
a phenomenon that typifies expansion of Westphalia's farmhouses. The pedimented
entry portico, fishscale shingles and double hung sash with pedimented surrounds
also characterize residential buildings in the district. The Westphalia Little
School remained in service to the community until 1989. Current restoration
efforts will convert it into a community heritage museum.
Minnie Hoelscher House Site No. 84.
By 1890 the earliest known dwelling in the village appeared on land belonging to
the Hoelscher family. Minnie Hoelscher, a dressmaker and milliner according to
the 1900 census, occupied the dwelling for many years. The property includes a
barn, shed and a well in addition to the dwelling. The 1-1/2-story frame house
resembles the 2-room form seen at historic farmhouses such as the c.1889 Joseph
and Clothilde Kahlig House. Modest decorative elements include turned porch
brackets and paired turned posts. According to census records, several people
boarded with Minnie Hoelscher.
Like several other late 19th- and early 20th century dwellings situated in the
village, the property remains strongly associated with the community's
predominant agricultural heritage. Its retention of historic agricultural
outbuildings indicates service as one of the early Hoelscher family farms,
although it was partitioned off as an individual site at an early date.
Dr. B.A. and Katie Jansing House Site No. 57.
Built in 1921, this 1-story frame bungalow lies near the commercial center of
Westphalia. Influenced by Craftsman tenets, it features a battered foundation
skirt, triangular knee braces, geometric gable ornaments and simple box columns.
Despite the application of asbestos siding, the bungalow remains recognizable to
the historic district's period of significance.
Dr. Jansing purchased this property in December 1920, dedicating .75 acres for
the road in front of the house and retaining 1.7 acres for the house lot. This
is a typical lot size for dwellings along the Main Village Road. Tom Roberts of
Lott served as the primary contractor, with assistance from Westphalian Will
Ranly (Boeselt 1992).
Born in October 1879 at Flatonia, Texas, Jansing moved to Westphalia with his
parents in 1883. Jansing earned his medical degree from attended St. Louis
College of Physicians and Surgeons between 1904 and 1908. While still in medical
school, Jansing married Katie Bernsen of Lott. For several years Jansing
practiced medicine in Roans Prairie, Texas, making house calls by horse and
buggy. At Reverend Michael Heintzelman's urging, Jansing returned to Westphalia
in 1914. He eventually purchased a Model-T Ford to facilitate his rounds. The
difficulty of navigating the black clay mud roads made Jansing an avid proponent
of good roads. Jansing's work in Westphalia epitomized the country doctor's
experience. He often took chickens or sausage in exchange for his services and
only entered charges on his books if he knew the patient could afford them.
Before the completion of SH 320, Dr. Jansing was the only doctor accessible to
the entire Westphalia district. He delivered more than 3,000 Westphalian babies
during his 40-year career (Voltin 1979). According to descendant Joe Boeselt,
"right after World War II everyone in that area put siding on their homes"
(Boeselt 1992). Dr. Jansing followed suit in 1947, applying asbestos siding and
shingles to his bungalow. These changes constitute the only apparent alteration
since the dwelling's construction. Jansing's death on 17 June 1948 marked the
end of Westphalia's resident medical service.
Hoelscher/Thornton Store Site No. 47.
Built in 1907, the Hoelscher/Thornton Store is the oldest extant commercial
building in the historic district. The 1-story frame building faces east onto
the Main Village Road, with a second entrance at the rear of the building on SH
320. The principal (east) facade sports a false-front with a stepped parapet of
horizontal boards. The store retains its original materials and architectural
features to a remarkable extent, boasting a virtually intact interior.
In a historically isolated community such as Westphalia people often bartered
for goods and services. Some ran based businesses like milliner and dressmaker
Millie Hoelscher. Few buildings were constructed specifically for business
purposes. H.A. Hoelscher's father built this store for him in 1907. The
Hoelscher sold dry goods from this building and groceries in an adjacent
building destroyed by fire. Current owners are Hoelscher granddaughter Charlotte
Kleypas Thornton and her husband Johnny. The store serves as a regional landmark
and community gathering place.
Stefka/Hoelscher/Doskocil Cotton Gin Site No. 86.
Built about 1930 on a cruciform plan, the Stefka/Hoelscher/Doskocil Cotton Gin
evolved as technologies changed. Although it original form remains apparent,
both historic and nonhistoric modifications affected its appearance. Flanked by
extensive cotton fields on the outskirts of the village, it continues to evoke
the important historic agricultural and economic associations of the district's
agrarian past.
Traditionally, steam and water-cooled gins prevailed in cotton growing country.
During the fall months, one could see or hear the cotton gin engines for miles.
Gins operated in the Westphalia area from the 1890s forward. Joseph Hoelscher
constructed one of the first local gins about 1.5 miles west of the village on
property now owned by the Eugene Beach family. About 1930 Will Stefka purchased
the gin, moving the machinery into this building closer to the village. Stefka
operated the gin until 1937, whereupon A.C. (Tony) Hoelscher assumed ownership.
Hoelscher ran the concern until selling it in 1944 to R.V. Doskocil, who renamed
it Farmers Gin. Doskocil's sons continue to run the plant, the only operational
gin in Westphalia.
Christopher and Mary Fuchs Farmstead Site No. 41.
The Christopher and Mary Fuchs farmstead includes one of the oldest dwellings in
Westphalia, built about 1890, and more than a dozen associated outbuildings.
Christopher and Mary Fuchs founded this farmstead after immigrating to America
from Germany in 1852 and 1867 respectively. Initially settling in the Frelsburg
area, the Fuchs obtained title to a 200-acre tract of land from J.G. Childers in
January 1890 (Falls County Deed Records). The Fuchs owned their farm outright by
1900, although they no longer actively farmed (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1900).
Of their eight children, five lived at home, with the oldest farming the lands.
The farm was later divided among the children, with the house passing to the
eldest son, Anton.
Anton and his brother Stephen traded farms in 1921. Stephen received the family
house and an 88 acre strip of farmland, while Anton obtained a larger 111.85
acre tract. Stephen and his wife Katie subsequently deeded the family farm to
their son Leo and daughter Louisa, who recently bequeathed the land to the
Church of the Visitation. Leo and Louisa Fuchs also inherited an additional
20-acre tract from the Anton Fuchs Farmstead. As a result, the farm encompasses
87.1 acres of cropland and 20.3 acres of pastureland, including a six acre
prairie grass hay meadow that was never plowed. This rare remnant of the vast
rolling grasslands that historically covered the Westphalia area greatly
enhances the significance of the property.
Apparently the original Fuchs family dwelling, the farmhouse appears relatively
unchanged over the years. Built about 1890, the 1-1/2-story frame dwelling takes
a vernacular centerpassage form with a rear ell. The symmetrical 5-bay facade
incorporates a full width porch with chamfered posts, a central door with side
lights, and a gabled roof incorporating twin dormers. This outstanding example
of a late 19th century farmhouse epitomizes those built by the first generation
of Westphalian farmers.
The farmstead's historic outbuildings cluster in a typical barnyard
configuration separated from the house by a hard-packed drive. The barnyard
consists primarily of animal pens and shelters such as chicken coops and hog
pens. Among the most noteworthy, a 1-story rectangular chicken coop at the
southeast corner of the complex incorporates a chimney. According to area
informants, such chimneys allowed farmers to incubate baby chicks as early as
January. In addition, four hog pens in the yard consist of double pens enclosed
by board fences. Each pen contains a cylindrical metal storage bin for feeding
the hogs. The barnyard also contains several large-animal barns, including a
1-1/2-story rectangular barn with a hay loft. This barn and an adjacent 1- and
2-story rectangular barn with open pens were used to shelter cows, while another
1- story one-bay outbuilding served as the horse barn. Several historic storage
sheds and garages co-exist in the barnyard with a large vegetable and flower
plot, an old privy and a well. Nearly all these contributing outbuildings are
frame constructions with wood-shingled roofing or metal roofing. Noncontributing
outbuildings include several metal storage buildings dating to the 1960s.
The layout of the Fuchs farmstead conforms to the typical Westphalian pattern.
The building complex occupies high ground near the center of the cultivated
fields. A cedar post and barbed wire fence with wild vegetation separates the
dirt road leading to the building complex from the fields. A decorative wire
fence segregates the barnyard from the house's yard, which is filled with flower
beds, old roses and large trees. As it contains representative examples of
nearly every historic element of a farmstead, the complex is one of the best
examples in the historic district. Relatively few modern alterations mar the
buildings or the landscape.
Anton Jansing Estate Site No. 66.
Arriving in 1888, Anton Jansing became one of the earliest German Catholic
settlers in Westphalia. He helped establish the parish church before his death
on 14 August 1898. This historic farmstead preserves part of his original 227
acre tract. While his dwelling and several outbuildings remain largely intact,
however, modern commercial farming has transformed the surrounding fields to an
extent that destroyed much of the landscape's historic character.
Jansing evidently built an outstanding center-passage plan farmhouse about 1890.
Decorative detailing includes a pedimented front door with sidelights and
transom, pedimented 4/4 windows and a pedimented porch incorporating fishscale
shingles. Its primary facade approximates those of the contemporaneous Rabroker
House (destroyed) and the Hesse House (Site No. 20).
Separated from the dwelling by the short hard-packed drive leading from the main
county road, three major outbuildings are all that remain of a more extensive
historic barnyard. A 2-story animal and hay barn incorporates open bays for
cattle and board corrals. A second 1-story frame barn stands nearby, as does a
metal garage featuring hasp hinged doors. These outbuildings typify the
substantial barns and garages in the district, although most barnyards also
contained a variety of smaller storage buildings and animal shelters.
Elizabeth Biemer Farmstead Site No. 67.
Theodore Rabroker solicited Herman and Elizabeth Biemer to homestead land near
his own farmstead. A Texas-born native of the Frelsburg area, Herman and his
German-born wife settled in Westphalia as a result. Within a few years, however,
Herman's death left his 30-year old widow and four young children to run the
farm. Elizabeth Biemer held a mortgage on the farm in her name, eventually
leaving it to her children. Lucy Biemer owned this farm and an adjacent 244-acre
tract for many years. It eventually passed to Joe Ketterman Sr. and his wife, a
Biemer descendant.
Built about 1915, the farmhouse typifies many second- generation dwellings in
the historic district. A high- pitched hipped roof surmounts this standard plan
house from the early 20th century. As at most Westphalia farmsteads, the
agricultural outbuildings stand apart from the house on the Biemer farm. These
outbuildings consist of a 1-story historic frame barn and a 1-story frame
vehicle garage with large hasp-hung doors. The complex also contains three
Noncontributing outbuildings, including a 1-story modern shed, a 1-story metal
barn with front gabled and a new cattle feeder.
The original farmstead is now divided into a historic tree-shaded pasture and a
section in which intensive cultivation practices eradicated many historic
landscape elements. Some elements, such as the fence line demarcating the
property's boundary, continue to embody rural historic landscape qualities that
characterize the district.
The intensively plowed fields on the adjacent tract provide a startling contrast
to the surviving historic pastures.
Joseph and Clothilde Kahlig Farmstead Site No. 72.
An excellent example of the ideal Westphalia farm, this farmstead remained in
the same family since Joseph A. Kahlig filed a deed for the property on 15
October 1884. Kahlig and his wife Clothilde lived in a small log house near the
creek for a few years before building the present house about 1889 (Kahlig
1993).
The 1-1/2-story farmhouse and its historic outbuildings are among the oldest in
Westphalia. The combination of a center-passage form with a rear ell occurred
regularly in the community. Associated outbuildings include a 2-story metal hay
barn, a 1-1/2-story metal animal barn, a pig pen, chicken house, and tractor
barn. In addition, the farmstead contains a 1-story frame root cellar, a working
well, and a historic buggy barn. Equally significant landscape elements include
flat land for cotton cultivation, an elevated building complex, sloping grassy
land and a large stock pond for grazing cattle.
G. P. Hoelscher Farmstead Site No. 99.
The historic G. P. Hoelscher farmstead, encompasses ten historic buildings and
an ornamental garden. The original 200-acre farmstead was subsequently divided,
with these features associated with the initial operation and a second house
dating to about 1908 associated with one of the subdivided tracts. This c.1890
1-1/2-story house conforms to the vernacular center-passage form common in the
historic district. Nearly identical to the Christopher Fuchs House, it features
three gabled dormers and a front porch replaced during the period of
significance. Its associated outbuildings include a 1-1/2-story frame hay barn,
a 1-1/2- story frame garage with hasp hinged doors, a hen house, a 1- story
tractor shed, a 1-story frame corn crib, a frame privy, a brick cistern and a
concrete-sheathed brick well, as well as a hot water house, or wash house.
The Hoelscher farmstead also retains landscape features such as cedar post fence
rows, a timber stand along the creek bed and an elevated site for the building
complex. A decorative metal fence and gate enclose the domestic yard, with
symmetrical plantings of shrubs and trees enframing the house. Holly and crape
myrtles flank the front porch. Pecan trees stand at the fence corners to shade
the house. Rose bushes grow on the east side of the dwelling. This domestic
yardscape represents the ordered arrangement typical of the district's historic
farmsteads (Voltin 1979).
Henry Meyer Farmstead Site No. 22.
Originally associated with the Karnowski property, this property was farmed by
the Henry Meyer family for many years. It contains the only example of an
I-house in Westphalia. While the I-house is the sole example of its type in the
historic district, it represents a once-popular local vernacular architectural
form. Local informants recall several other examples of this form, including one
of the original church rectories. Built about 1900, the 2- story centerpassage
plan house also featured the rear ell typical of local farmhouses. The collapsed
full-width porch testifies to the fragile condition of vacant houses in the
historic district. Associated outbuildings include a 3-bay hay barn of 1-1/2
stories, an open sided animal barn with corrals and a 1-story frame shed. Nearby
lies the concrete foundation of a c.1935 sanitary pit toilet built by the WPA.
The house yard encompasses a dilapidated frame privy and a brick well sheathed
in concrete. Although these features are in extremely poor condition, they
retain sufficient integrity to be recognizable to the farmstead's period of
significance.
Frank J. and Julia Buckholt Farmstead Site No. 78.
This farmstead represents the district's second generation farmstead patterns.
Alois Buckholt established the farm on a tract purchased out of the Martin
Byerly Survey in the initial wave of settlement at Westphalia. Born 11 January
1884 and raised in a 2-room house on the property, his son Frank went on to
study music at St. Edward's, a Catholic college in Austin. Upon his return to
the community Frank played the organ and directed the men's choir at the Church
of the Visitation for the next 50 years (Buckholt 1992). In 1912 Frank and his
wife Julia commissioned a new house from carpenters Crier and Sapp. They raised
their family in the 1-1/2-story hipped roof bungalow that replaced his father's
house. The house has changed little since its completion.
The farm layout remains typical of the district's historic farmsteads. The field
road segregates the house yard from the barnyard, for example, with buildings
neatly aligned to facilitate farming chores. Extant historic outbuildings
include a 2-story hay and cattle barn, two 1- story chicken houses, a 1-story
garage/work shed and a 1- story storage building/garage. All feature frame
construction methods with board-and-batten or vertical board siding. Several pig
pens and a metal feed silo complete the ensemble. Beyond the confines of the
building complex, however, the associated landscape no longer exhibits
distinguishing characteristics from the historic period. As the property is
currently leased for commercial cotton farming, intensive agricultural practices
obliterated nearly all historic landscape elements such as field patterns and
fence rows.
CONCLUSION
More than a century after its founding Westphalia maintains its German Catholic
identity. Homogenous settlement patterns, an education program based in religion
and ongoing rural isolation bolstered the community's strong cultural identity
throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Today the rural community
encompasses a cohesive collection of historic farmsteads on which residents
worked and the village where they traded, worshipped and educated their
children. This rural historic landscape bears witness to the impact of cultural
traditions on the region's historic resources. Westphalia's fields, roadways,
farmsteads, dwellings and institutions reflect the traditional cultural and
occupational patterns that survived on the Texas blackland prairie for more than
100 years. Significant at the local level as a rural historic landscape, the
Westphalia Rural Historic District is therefore nominated under Criterion A for
its agricultural associations and under Criterion C as an example of rural
community development and planning that continues to demonstrate its traditional
agricultural patterns.
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