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EARLY IMMIGRANTS
These articles were written individually by
Silesian Profiles authors after the
publication of both books.
We are pleased to be able to offer these articles here. More articles will
be added as they are completed.
Bąk
/ Bonk
Jędruś – Jendrusch
Joschko, Jacob / Yosko Family
Kowalik, Melchior
Król [Kroll], Franz, an Immigrant from Zębowice
Lyssy, Franciszek and Katarzyna
Moy,Lucas
Piegsa
Smialek - Schmialek
Zigmond
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Bąk / Bonk
Anton Bąk
/ Bonk: A Shepherd from Silesia
by Janet Dawson Ebrom
Anton Bąk was born around 1823 in Silesia to Jakob
and Anna Bąk. When Anton was about 28 years old, he married Caroline Hunsa.
The couple was blessed with three children in close succession: Marianna
(ca. 1852); Joseph (ca. 1853); and Francisca (ca. 1855). Anton was a
shepherd whose family resided in the village of Zębowice which lies about 20
miles east of the regional capital of Opole in present day
southwestern
Poland.
As members of the Wniebowzięcia NMP parish, their sacramental
records from the 1800s were destroyed during wartime, so the exact dates of
births, baptisms, and marriage cannot be documented.
With a wife
and three young children, Anton decided to register with an immigration
agent named Julius Heinrich Schüler who toured Silesia gathering people to
tell about Texas and offering to arrange their transportation. Fortunately,
the Schüler Agency’s detailed application, dated March 6, 1856, reflected
the names and ages of the Bąk family before they left their motherland:
Anton “Bunk,” age 33; Caroline Hunsa, age 32; Marianna, age 4; Joseph, age
3; and Franciska, only eleven months old (passengers 152-156). Anton’s
occupation was listed in German as a “shäfer” [shepherd] who departed from
Silesia with his family on April 1, 1856. They crossed the Atlantic Ocean
and set foot on Texas soil in Galveston in pursuit of a new life.
Anton and
Caroline initially settled with their three children in Karnes County among
other Silesian immigrants. In the springtime, two years after leaving
Silesia, Caroline gave birth to twin daughters and named them Catharina and
Monica. A day after their birth, the Texas-born twins were proudly
presented to the parish priest in Panna Maria and baptized on April 11,
1858. Rev. Anthony Rossadowski, the second pastor of Immaculate Conception
of the BVM Catholic Church, recorded Anton’s surname as “Bąk” and Carolina’s
maiden name as “Honza” (entries #56 and #57).
Sometime
between this young immigrant family’s departure from Silesia and the 1860
census, they experienced the death of their only son, Joseph Bąk. This is
significant not only as a family tragedy in losing a little boy but also as
the end of the family’s surname in Texas.
By 1859,
Anton was taxed in Karnes County on two head of cattle worth $12 and hogs
valued at $11. Anton made the transition from herding sheep in Silesia to
acquiring Texas stock soon after his arrival. On July 28, 1860, the census
taker enumerated the family in Panna Maria, Karnes County, Texas, as: A.
Bonk, age 38; Caroline, age 36; Mary, age 9; “F” [Francisca], age 5; and the
twins Katrina [Catharina] and Mariana [Monica], age 3 (dwelling #1127).
Following
this census, two more daughters were born to Anton and Caroline; Josephine
was born about 1861, but her baptism record has not yet been located. Four
years later, Barbara was born on December 1, 1865, and baptized in Panna
Maria the next day (entry #276).
After almost
thirteen years of labor coupled with ambition, Anton was able to realize his
dream of owning a Texas homestead. On January 4, 1869, he purchased 215
acres from John Pawlik. The land bordered the property of Joseph and
Catherine Kirish on the west bank of the Cibolo Creek (Karnes County Deed,
Volume B, p. 128).
With their
six daughters settled in the family’s new home, Anton and Caroline were
visited by the census taker on August 20, 1870. They were listed as:
“Antone B.,” Caroline, age 45; Mary, age 18; Frank [Francisca], age 15; “Cathran,”
age 12; Monika, age 12; Josephine, age 8; Barbara, age 5 (dwelling #5).
Their oldest
daughter, who had been only four years old when she left Silesia, announced
her intention to marry another Silesian immigrant. On September 12, 1871,
Mary Bąk married Laurence Mutz in the Panna Maria church (entry #61).
Eight
days after the wedding, Anton exercised his right as a 48-year-old citizen
of the United States when he registered to vote at the original Karnes
County Courthouse in Helena (p. 393). Later his creatively designed cattle
brand was recorded on October 10, 1873 (Karnes County Marks and Brands, Vol.
1, p. 3, #1040). The base letter “A” was supporting a horizontal “B” as
shown.
A summer wedding took place in Panna Maria when one of Anton and Carolina’s
twin daughters, Monica, married Anton Sekula on June 12, 1877 (p. 4, 1st
entry). This was the final Bąk family celebration in the Immaculate
Conception Church because a new parish in Cestohowa was formed. The
founders of the parish bearing the name of the Nativity of the Blessed
Virgin Mary included Anton Bonk (Texas Pioneers from Poland: A Study in
the Ethnic History. Jacek Przygoda, p. 51). On February 10, 1878, the
Cestohowa church was dedicated (The First Polish Colonies of America in
Texas, Rev. Edward J. Dworaczyk, p. 130). This church was the setting
for the nuptials of Francisca Bąk and her bridegroom Emanuel Esparsa on
November 12, 1878 (p. 257, entry #1).
By the time
of the 1880 census, three of the Bąk daughters had been married. On June
12, 1880, the family was recorded: Anton Bonk, age 58; Caroline, age 57;
Kate, age 21; Josephine, age 18; and Barbara, age 14 (dwelling #68). On
August 9, 1881, Josephine Bonk married John Szczepanik in Cestohowa (p. 259,
3rd entry). This was the last time Anton would give a daughter
in marriage.
According to
witnesses, Stephen Titzman and John Brysch, “A short time before he
died…while his hand was trembling in the throes of death…,” Anton Bonk
signed his last will and testament. He sold his youngest daughter Barbara
215 acres including the farm and house for $600. Barbara was still single,
and her dying father requested that she “…keep my wife Karolina Bonk her
mother by her and cloth [clothe] her and give her free meals to her last
hours of her life.” Anton added that he would like for his daughter to give
Karolina “…a respectable funeral.” The will also specified that each of the
other daughters would receive $100 except for Mary, the oldest daughter, who
had already gotten her share. Anton left his wife Karolina $150 and three
stock horses (Karnes County Probate Records, Vol. I, pp. 310, 313-315). At
the approximate age of 62, Anton died on July 10, 1882, and was buried the
following day in the Cestohowa parish cemetery (p. 345, 1st
entry).
Four months
later, Anton and Caroline’s daughter Catharina married a young man from St.
Hedwig, Texas. Simon Kolonko and Catharina’s wedding was celebrated on
November 28, 1882, in Cestohowa (p. 262, 1st entry). The
following year, on November 27, 1883, Barbara, the youngest Bonk daughter,
married Joseph Kotara in Cestohowa (p. 264, 3rd entry).
After all six
of her daughters were married, Caroline remained on the family homestead
with her daughter and son-in-law, Barbara and Joseph Kotara. On December
11, 1884, Caroline Hunsa Bonk, the family matriarch, passed away and was
laid to rest next to her beloved husband Anton (p. 348, 1st
entry). Even though Anton and Caroline left no male descendants with the
Bonk surname, most of their daughters married Silesian men. The Bonk Polish
ancestry will go down in history through the maternal side of these
families.
Spelling
variations:
·
Surname: Bąq, Bonk, Bunk
·
Maiden name: Hunsa, Honza, Hondza, Chondza
Reference
Notes:
· Anton
Bąk’s family is listed in the “Ravaged by War” section (p. 241) of
Silesian Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s.
· The
in-law families who have been fully profiled in the Silesian Profiles
books are:
Mutz and Sekula (Vol. I) and Kolonko, Kotara, and Szczepanik (Vol. II)
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Jędruś – Jendrusch
Anton Jendrusch
by John and Kathy Korus
Beard
In the
spring of 1856, Anton Jendrusch made arrangements to emigrate to the United
States with his young wife Marianna Brysch and their baby Victor. A
contract was made with the agency of Julius Schüler to provide
transportation from Upper Silesia, Poland, to the State of Texas. For
Anton, the agency listed the village of Osiecko as his home. This village
is part of the parish of Wniebowziecia NMP (Assumption of the BVM), and it
is located
halfway
between Olesno and
Dobrodzień, just
west of the highway between the two towns. The occupation indicated for
Anton is einlieger, or free agricultural laborer. Since he is
described as 30 years of age and his wife 22 years, Anton would have been
born in the year 1825 and Marianna in the year 1833. The sacramental
records of their parish were among those destroyed when the Red Army passed
through the area in World War II, so all of the European information about
the Jendrusch family came from the Schüler Agency.1
After crossing the
Atlantic, the Jendrusch family arrived in Galveston, Texas, in mid-1856.
Just over a year later on August 26, 1857, a son Louis was born and baptized
the same day in the Immaculate Conception of the BVM Catholic Church at
Panna Maria.2 Records do not provide the answer to the question
of when Anton and baby Louis lost their wife and mother, nor have any
additional records of young Victor Jendrusch been found.
Two years after his wife
died, Anton remarried. On November 22, 1859, Anton Jendrusch was united in
matrimony with nineteen-year-old Catharina Kowalik, daughter of Melchior and
Anna Kowalik, at the Immaculate Conception of the BVM church in Panna
Maria. Church records list the parents of Anton as John and Catalina
Jendrś.3 Interestingly, the Kowalik family was registered on the
Schüler list right after Anton and his first family. Kadłub
Wolny is the home village listed for the Kowaliks, and it is immediately to
the south of Osiecko, the village listed for Anton.
Anton and Catharina had eleven children, and their births4 and
marriages,5 including two sets of twins, are listed below:
| Child |
Birth |
Spouse |
Marriage
Date |
|
Cecilia |
1860 |
Frank Niemietz |
28 October 1884 |
|
Frank |
circa 1861 |
Victoria Anderwald |
23 January 1895 |
|
Elisabeth |
5 November 1863 |
Peter Kotara |
23 January 1888 |
|
Stanislaus |
5 November 1863 |
Julia Wiatrek |
10 November 1885 |
|
Anton |
1 January 1866 |
Mary Urbanczyk |
25 November 1889 |
|
Peter6 |
4 October 1868 – lived seven days and was
buried in Panna Maria |
|
|
|
Julia Albina |
14 December 1872 |
Alex Moczygemba |
31 January 1893 |
|
Adam |
8 September 1874 |
Rosalia Sekula |
15 June 1897 |
|
Maria Joanna |
19 August 1877 |
Julian Moczygemba |
6 February 1900 |
|
Helena |
24 February 1880 |
Charles Polok |
17 June 1902 |
|
Alexander |
24 February 1880 |
Florentina Kyrish |
24 January 1905 |
 |
Like in Poland,
agriculture was the primary endeavor of the Jendrusch family in Texas. In
1866 Anton registered a “JA” cattle brand at the courthouse (see left).7
Four years later, Anton appeared in the 1870 census of agriculture with
8 improved acres of land, 14 woodland acres, 1 horse, 4 milk cows, 3 working
oxen, 21 other cattle, 8 swine, and 14 bushels of corn.8
On November 26, 1869, Anton appeared at the courthouse in Helena with fellow
Silesians in order to declare his intention of becoming a citizen of the
United States.9 Citizenship was granted on November 20, 1876.10
Just over a year later, Anton spent a day performing jury duty for the
February term in Karnes County and was compensated $1.75.11
In 1883 Anton acquired
500 acres of land that is part of the F. Carillo Survey and is situated on
the east side of Cibolo Creek, just west of the present-day road between
Cestohowa and Pawelekville. The land was purchased from Jan Pawlik, Jr.,
for $675. Eighteen years later, Anton and Catharina sold their property in
equal parts to five of their children. The four surviving sons, Frank,
Anton, Adam, and Alexander, each paid $250, and the only daughter unmarried
at the time, Helena, paid $10.12
By 1890 Anton was taxed
$18.14 for a wagon worth $40, five horses and mules valued at $55, forty
head of cattle at $5 a head, twelve hogs worth $12, miscellaneous property
worth $5, and 700 acres of land valued at $2235,13 a substantial
increase in twenty years time. The federal census of 1900 indicated that
Anton and Catharina owned their farm free of mortgage.
Catharina Kowalik Jendrusch is called Kate in the 1880 and
1900 federal censuses14 and in deed records, but she signed her
name in those deeds with the Polish spelling “Katarzyna.” Both Anton and
Catharina enjoyed long lives. Ten of their children reached adulthood and
appear to have remained in the area, although their half-brother Louis moved
to Laredo to work with baker Emanuel Rzeppa. Louis married Emanuel’s
daughter Mathilde on June 6, 1880;15 they owned and operated the
Lion Bakery16 many years.
Anton Jendrusch lived to the age of 78 and passed away on
January 23, 1903. He was laid to rest the following day.17 In
the period after Anton’s death, the 1910 federal census reveals that
Catharina lived with her youngest son Alex and his family.18
Catharina Jendrusch, Anton’s companion for 43 years, died twelve years later
on December 29, 1915, and was buried the next day in the Cestohowa parish
cemetery not far from their homestead.19 The joint tombstone
reflects their heritage; the marker is engraved in the Polish language, as
is the family’s name in their sacramental records, “Jędruś.”20
References:
All Panna Maria church records are from Immaculate Conception of the BVM
Catholic Church, LDS Microfilm #0025335, and all Cestohowa church records
are from Nativity of the BVM Catholic Church, LDS Microfilm #0024960. All
references except the first are from the State of Texas.
1. Silesian Profiles Committee. Silesian Profiles II: Polish
Immigration to Texas 1850s – 1870s. Panna Maria, Texas: Panna Maria
Historical Society, 2004, pp. 239 – 240. The Schüler Agency list was made
available by the late Professor Karol Jonca of
Wrocław University.
2. Panna Maria Baptism Records, entry #26
3. Panna Maria Marriage Records,
pp. 7 – 8,
entry #16
4. Panna Maria Baptism Records provide birthdates for Cecilia (#132),
Stanislaus (# 238), Elisabeth (#239), Anton (#278), Peter (#332), Julia
(#442), Adam (unnumbered page, first entry), and Maria (p. 21, third
entry). Cestohowa Baptism Records provide the birthdate for Helena and
Alexander (p. 9, entry #38).
5. Karnes County Marriage Records, Volume 1, contains documentation for
Cecilia (p. 120), Stanislaus (p. 134), Elisabeth (p. 164), Anton (p. 189),
Julia (p. 255), Frank (p. 332), and Adam (p. 434). Marriage Records, Volume
2, contains documentation for Maria (p. 56) and Alexander (p. 387).
Cestohowa Church Marriages Records provide information for Helena (p. 301,
second entry) and a different marriage date, 10 February 1897, for Adam (p.
290, second entry).
6. Panna Maria Church Burial Records, p. 3, entry #12
7. Karnes County Marks and Brands, Volume 1, p. 1, #130, April 28, 1866
8. U.S. Agriculture Census of Karnes County, 1870, p. 5, line 5
9. Karnes County Commissioner’s Court Minutes, Volume A, p. 70, entry #220
10. Karnes County County Court Minutes, Volume 1, p. 15
11. Ibid, p. 62
12. Karnes County Deed Records, Volume I, pp. 32 – 33; Volume Z, pp. 176 –
179, 572 – 574; Volume 28, pp. 345 – 346; Volume 47, p. 211
13. Karnes County Tax Assessments, 1890
14. U.S. Population Census of Karnes County, 1880, p. 12; 1900, p. 239B
15. Brown, Angel Sepulveda and Gloria Villa Cadena. Sacramental Records
of the Catholic Church of San Agustin at Laredo, Texas, Volume II, p.
320
16. Laredo City Directory, 1900, p. 56
17. Cestohowa Church Burial Records, p. 368, second entry
18. U.S. Population Census of Karnes County, 1910, p. 227B
19. Cestohowa Church Burial Records, p. 10, fifth entry
20. Nativity of the BVM Parish Cemetery, Cestohowa
Additional references
available:
1.
U.S.
Population Census of Karnes County, 1870, p. 13
2.
Karnes
County Tax Assessments, 1862, Polander Poll No. 1
3.
Karnes
County Marks and Brands, Volume 1, p. 236, #2071, January 16, 1878, hog mark
The in-law families of
Anton Jendrusch who have been profiled in the Silesian Profiles books
are: Anderwald (Vol. I), Kotara (Vol. II), Kyrish
(Vol. I), Moczygemba (Vol. I), Polok (Vol. II), Rzeppa
(Vol. I), Sekula (Vol. I), and Wiatrek (Vol. II).
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Melchior Kowalik
An Original Silesian Immigrant to Texas
by Janet Dawson Ebrom
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|
Photo
courtesy of Betty and George Kowalik who note that this house was
constructed by Albert Czerner (Hedwig’s father) in the mid-1860s. |
A man who
left few clues about his life has become prominent through his legacy of
determination. Melchior Kowalik was born about 1814 in Silesia where
he grew up in the parish of Wniebowzięcia NMP (Assumption of the BVM) in
present-day Zębowice, Poland. The records of the Kowaliks’ parish church
were destroyed during World War II, so Melchior’s baptism and marriage
cannot be documented precisely. He was a young groom of about 23 years when
he married Anna around 1837. Without sacramental records, her maiden name
cannot be confirmed. The couple resided in Kadłub
Wolny where their eight children were likely born: Franz (ca. 1838),
Catharina (ca.1840), Johann (ca.1842), Marianna (ca.1847), Johanna
(ca.1849), Thomas (ca.1852), and twins, Joseph and Josepha (ca.1856).
Tragedy must
have befallen this vibrant family after the twins were born. It is highly
possible that Melchior’s beloved wife Anna died in childbirth or shortly
thereafter. When a German transportation agent named Julius Heinrich
Schüler was working in the Opole area of Silesia in 1856, Melchior
stalwartly arranged with him to take his family to America. Their contract
included a list of the family members with their ages, so the approximate
years of birth above are based on these ages that Melchior must have recited
to Mr. Schüler: “Malcher Kowolik” [Melchior Kowalik], age 42; Franz, age 18;
Catharina, age 16; Johann, age 14; Marianna, age 9; Johanna, age 7; Thomas,
age 4; Joseph and Josepha, infants whose names have not yet surfaced in any
other records. Melchior’s farming occupation was noted in German as
“freigärtner” which translates literally as “free gardener.” Some of the
children’s names also reflected German spellings as written by Schüler.
Melchior’s wife, the mother of his eight children, is noticeably absent from
the agent’s list indicating a terrible hardship for this courageous family.
They left Europe in April of 1856 destined for Galveston, Texas. Imagine the
older children on board ship crossing the Atlantic Ocean helping to care for
the younger ones who missed their mother. It was this resilience in the
face of difficulties that the Kowalik family brought to Texas—a strength
that would manifest itself in their new Texas home.
From a tiny
Silesian village to a fresh beginning in Panna Maria, this family
persevered. Finally, a cause for celebration came with the wedding of
Melchior’s eldest daughter. Catalina [Catharina] Kowalik married Anton
Jendruś [Jendrush] on November 22, 1859. Their Immaculate Conception of the
BVM marriage record translated from Spanish gives the names of the bride’s
parents as Melchior and “Ana” with her mother’s name very hard to read. It
has sometimes been misinterpreted as “Eva” (entry #16). Next, John [Johann]
Kowalik married Anna Dziuk on January 16, 1866 (entry #34). The following
year, Melchior’s oldest son, Francis [Franz] Kowalik, married Eva Jarząbek [Jarzumbek]
on October 18, 1867. The groom’s parents are clearly given as Melchior and
Anna Kowalik with Latin endings on their names (entry #40). Maria
[Marianna], who was only nine years old when she made the voyage, got
married in Panna Maria to John Wiatrek on January 12, 1869 (entry #47). At
the end of that year, Anna [Johanna], who was seven when she left Silesia,
married John Moczygemba (son of Thomas) on November 16, 1869 (entry #51).
Both of these 1869 marriage records in Latin confirm the names of the
brides’ parents as Melchior and Anna Kowalik. The last wedding of Melchior’s
children was celebrated on July 13, 1875, when Thomas Kowalik married Hedwig
Czerner (p.1, 2nd entry).
It is
uncertain how many of his children’s weddings Melchior attended since his
name in Texas records has been limited to the marriage documents of his
daughters and sons. If Melchior had been present for the last wedding in
1875, he would have been about 61 years old. He would have witnessed the
newlyweds, Thomas and Hedwig Czerner Kowalik, moving in to the lovely little
rock home that still stands as a testament to a family with endurance. The
house and land where the youngest Kowalik couple settled has remained in
family hands for over a century. It is now owned by Betty and George
Kowalik, the great-great grandson of Melchior, the family patriarch.
Reference Notes:
 |
Melchior Kowalik’s family is listed in the
“Ravaged by War” section (p. 239) of Silesian Profiles II: Polish
Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s.
|
 |
The in-law families of Melchior Kowalik who have been fully
profiled in the Silesian Profiles books are: Czerner
(Vol. I), Dziuk (Vol. II), Jarzumbek (Vol. II),
Moczygemba (Vol. I), and Wiatrek (Vol. II). |
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Franz Król [Kroll],
an Immigrant from Zębowice
by Mary Ann Moczygemba Watson
A humble man whose surname translates to “king” emigrated
from Silesia to Texas in 1856. On February 28, Franz Król contracted with
agent Julius Heinrich Schüler for passage to America scheduled to depart
Bremen, Germany, on April 1, 1856, bound for Galveston, Texas.
Franz was
from the village of Zębowice in Upper Silesia. On the Schüler Agency
List, Franz declared in 1856 that he was 33 years old, determining his
birth year circa 1823, and that he was an einlieger by occupation
[free agricultural laborer]. The sacramental records for his parish were
destroyed during World War II, so his birth date cannot be confirmed.
Though
documentation is not available, the wedding of Franz Król and Anna Respondek
was probably celebrated around 1849 when Anna was about 20 years old. Two
children were born to this union and later cleared for travel to America
with their parents: Anton, age 6 [born circa 1850] and Maria, age 1 7/8
[born circa 1854].
The Król’s
first Texas-born baby was named Josepha, and when eight days old, she was
baptized on September 21, 1856, in Panna Maria at the Immaculate Conception
of the BVM Catholic Church (entry #22). Next, a son Joseph was baptized on
March 12, 1859 (entry #84).
In 1859,
Franz appeared in the tax records of Karnes County. His miscellaneous
property was listed as 6 hogs valued at $6, and he paid a poll tax of $1.
Franz and Anna experienced their dream of becoming property owners on
December 27, 1859 (Volume B, p. 488, Karnes County Deed Records).
The 1860
census enumerated the Franz Król family in Karnes County with personal
property valued at $300. In this same year, the Król’s fifth child Jadwiga
was born. She was baptized on October 7, 1860 (entry #128). In 1862, tax
records of Karnes County verified ownership of five acres of land appraised
at $10 and seven head of cattle valued at $42. The following year, another
daughter Francisca was born on September 8, 1863, and baptized three weeks
after her birth (entry #233).

In the new year of 1866, Franz registered his cattle
brand on January 6 in Karnes County. Life in Texas appeared promising for
this growing family.
On November
20, 1866, a baby son Francis was born. He was baptized on November 25, 1866,
in Panna Maria with a tragic notation added to his baptismal record (entry
#301). The priest recorded in Latin that the child was the son of Anna
Respondek and Francisci Krol “qui obit die septima Octobris hujus anni”
[who died October 7 this year]. The child was obviously named in memory of
his recently deceased father. A tombstone in the Panna Maria cemetery
engraved with the name “Franc Krol” marks the final resting place of the
Król progenitor.
Anna appears
as head of household in the 1870 Karnes County census, but by 1880, Anton,
her oldest son, had assumed this role. Anna, with three of her children,
Josepha, Francisca and Francis, were listed as residing with Anton and his
young family. Anna celebrated the marriages of six of her children:
Anton:
married Anna Kowalik, daughter of John Kowalik, 31 January 1876, Immaculate
Conception of the BVM Catholic Church, Panna Maria, Texas (p. 2, 2nd
entry).
Mary:
married Felix Gabryś, son of Gervas Gabryś, 19 November 1878, Immaculate
Conception of the BVM Catholic Church, Panna Maria, Texas (p. 5, 4th
entry).
Josepha:
married Francis Bronder, son of Caspar Bronder, 3 February 1885, Nativity of
the BVM Catholic Church, Cestohowa, Texas (p. 267, 2nd entry).
Joseph:
married Mary Pruski, daughter of Jacob Pruski, 9 February 1886, Nativity of
the BVM Catholic Church, Cestohowa, Texas (p. 268, 3rd entry).
Jadwiga/Hedwig: married Alexander Gabryś, son of
Gervas Gabryś, 11 February 1890, Nativity of the BVM Catholic Church,
Cestohowa, Texas (p. 276, 1st entry).
Francisca:
married Thomas Grier, son of Robert Grier, 13 December 1881, Immaculate
Conception of the BVM Catholic Church, Panna Maria, Texas (p. 8, 1st
entry).
Franciscus/Francis:
died 30 June 1889 and was buried on 1 July 1889 at the Nativity of the BVM
Catholic Church Cemetery, Cestohowa, Texas (p. 351, 1st entry).
According to
the sacramental records of the Nativity of the BVM Catholic Church in
Cestohowa, Anna died on November 10, 1898, and was buried at the parish
cemetery the following day (p. 363, 6th entry). She was recorded
as 70 years old at the time of her death.
Spelling Variations: Król, Krol, Kroll,
Krull
Reference:
Franz Król’s family is listed in the “Ravaged by War” section (p. 241) of
Silesian Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s.
Note: The
in-law families of Franz Król who have been fully profiled in the
Silesian Profiles books are: Bronder, Gabryś and
Kowalik (Vol. I), and Pruski (Vol. II).
|
| Lyssy
Franciszek and Katarzyna Lyssy
by John and Kathy Korus Beard
In the middle of the nineteenth century, Franciszek and
Katarzyna Lyssy and nine children, ranging in age from a toddler of two to
an adult of twenty-one, left the village of Pruskow
in Upper Silesia Poland on a journey to the New World which was measured in
months and thousands of miles. This tremendous undertaking began when an
arrangement was made with travel agent Julius Schüler for passage of the
family to Galveston, Texas. Written in German, the 1856 Schüler Agency
List describes the Lyssy family as Franz, 50, hausler (farm worker who
owned a cottage), Catharina from the family of Krull (Kroll), 42, Johann,
21, Jacob, 18, Catharia, 15, Woitek, 8, Johanna, 7, twins Thomas and Joseph,
4, Franz, 2, and Franciska, 20. Because some of the sacramental records of
their parish of Wniebowzięcia
were destroyed during World War II, the information on this 1856 list
constitutes the only known European documentation linking the Lyssy family
to Silesia Poland.
Within a year of the arrival of the family in Texas, daughter
Franciska Lyssy married Joseph Kolodziej. The marriage was recorded
September 16, 1857, in San Antonio at the San Fernando Cathedral (entry
#87). The couple had three children baptized in Panna Maria, but Franciska
passed away only ten years after her arrival in Texas (Burial Records,
Immaculate Conception of the BVM, Panna Maria, LDS Microfilm #0025335, entry
#1).
The spelling of the family surname in Texas records is both
Lysy and Lyssy, but Frank is almost always the given name used for the
father. On December 27, 1859, Frank purchased ten and one-half acres of
land in Panna Maria from Father Leopold Moczygemba for $45 (Karnes County
Deeds, Vol. C, p. 311). The Karnes County tax rolls for both 1859 and 1860
list the property owned by Frank Lyssy as fifteen head of cattle worth $90
and oxen worth $30, and in both years Frank paid $1.00 poll tax and $1.30
combined state and county tax (p. 11, #13 and p. 13, #49).
The Frank Lyssy family appears in the 1860 U. S. Federal
Population Census as residents of Panna Maria. When the census taker
visited their home on July 28 of that year, Franciska was the only child not
still part of the household. Frank was listed as a laborer with a personal
value of $800, and sons John and Jacob were enumerated as farmhands. Woitek
had become known as Albert.
During the Civil War, sons Jacob and Albert must have caused
their parents great concern. To begin with, the two young men were drafted
into the 24th Texas Cavalry of the Confederacy. Later, Jacob
joined the 31st Texas Cavalry, and Albert, the 6th
Texas Infantry. Jacob remained in the Confederate army, but Albert was
captured at the Battle of Arkansas Post in January, 1863, and was among
those prisoners allowed to join Union regiments. Albert served as a Union
private for a year in the 16th Illinois Cavalry before being
captured by the Confederates and held as a prisoner of war for almost a
year. At the time of his capture, Albert was shot in the hip and arm; his
injuries were not properly cared for while he was a captive, so after the
war he was unable to return to his former occupation as a carpenter (The
First Polish Americans: Silesian Settlements in Texas, T. Lindsay
Baker, pps. 72-74).
 |
The cattle brand of Frank Lyssy (see left) is depicted as a
letter "J" beside an open numeral "6" on page 77 of the 1865 Jackson and
Long publication, The Texas Stock Directory.
By the time the 1870 census was taken, Frank was enumerated
as a farmer. His sons John and Jacob were also farmers, but son Albert was
described as a teamster. The record shows that the family was now living in
Helena, the original county seat of Karnes County. When the census taker
visited the Lyssy household again ten years later, Frank and his wife, now
called Kate, were living with the family of their son Thomas and his wife
Agnes. Frank was still listed as a farmer, whereas Thomas was described as
a blacksmith and his brother Frank, a stock herder.
The Lyssy children are listed below with their birthdates,
the names of their spouses, and the dates of their marriages. The
birthdates are calculated from the ages noted on the Schüler Agency
List. LDS Microfilm #0025335 contains the Panna Maria marriage records
of John (entry #19), Catharina (entry #23), Thomas (first entry), and Frank
(p. 10, first entry), whose record of marriage to the widow of his brother
was accompanied by a dispensation from Rome. Volume B of the Karnes County
Marriage Records contains the dates for the marriages of Jacob (p. 3),
Albert (p. 86), and Anna (p. 51), and Volume 1 contains the date for Joseph
(p. 9). The marriage record of Franciska is listed above.
| Child |
Birth (all circa) |
Spouse |
Marriage Date |
| Johann (John) |
1835 |
Franciska Mzyk |
22 January 1861 |
| Franciska |
1836 |
Joseph Kolodziej |
16 September
1867 |
| Jacob |
1838 |
Eve Stigall (Szczygiol) |
11 January 1866 |
| Catharina |
1841 |
Anton Skloss (Sklorz) |
4 February 1862 |
| Woitek (Albert) |
1848 |
Petronella
Keller |
16 July 1872 |
| Johanna (Anna) |
1849 |
Frank Mzyk |
7 February 1871 |
| Thomas |
1852 |
Agnes Czerner |
17 November 1874 |
| Joseph |
1852 |
Mary Moczygemba |
23 January 1877 |
| Franz (Frank)
|
1854 |
Agnes Czerner
|
2 September 1884 |
After a long life, Frank Lyssy passed away on October 5,
1880. He was buried in the Panna Maria Cemetery (Immaculate Conception of
the BVM Burial Records, p. 12, fourth entry), and his tombstone is inscribed
in Polish. Kate lived seventeen years after the death of her husband Frank;
she passed away on November 6, 1897, at the age of 84, and was buried in the
Panna Maria Cemetery (Immaculate Conception of the BVM Burial Records, p.
28, sixth entry). Her tombstone, like her husband’s, is inscribed in Polish
and bears the name Katazina.
Reference: The family of Frank
Lyssy is listed in the "Ravaged by War" section (p. 240) of Silesian
Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s - 1870s.
Note: The in-law families of Frank Lyssy who have been
profiled in Silesian Profiles (red book) are Czerner, Kolodziej,
Moczygemba, and Sklorz (Skloss) and in Silesian Profiles II (blue
book) are Keller and Mzyk.
Silesian Profiles: Polish Immigration to Texas in the
1850s
Silesian Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s
Order info here.
|
Moy, Lucas
Lucas Moy, a Silesian Immigrant
by Mary Ann Moczygemba Watson
Envisioning a
better life for his family, Lucas Moy contracted with travel agent, Julius
Heinrich Schüler, on February 28, 1856, for passage to America. Lucas was
from the village of Zębowice in Upper Silesia. On the Schüler Agency List,
Lucas declared in 1856 that he was 37 years old, determining his birth year
circa 1819, and that he was a häusler by occupation [farm worker who owned a
cottage]. His wife was documented as Maria Skorupa, and her age was listed
as 34. The sacramental records for their parish were destroyed during World
War II, so their birth dates cannot be confirmed.
Though
documentation is not available, the wedding of Lucas Moy and Maria Skorupa
was probably celebrated around 1850. One known child was born in Silesia to
this union and later cleared for travel to America with his parents: Walek,
age 4 [born circa 1852]. They were listed as passengers numbered 157, 158,
and 159, who departed Bremen, Germany, on April 1, 1856, bound for
Galveston, Texas.
The Moy
family became active in their church community soon after their arrival in
Panna Maria. The name of Lucas Moy appeared in early January of 1857, as a
baptism sponsor for a son born to Adalbert Kniejski and Josefa Jendrzej.
After the Moy
family had been settled in Texas for about a year, Maria gave birth to a
son, Francis, who was baptized on September 13, 1857, the day after he was
born (Immaculate Conception of the BVM Catholic Church, entry #28).
As
early as 1859, Lucas appeared in the tax records of Karnes County. His
miscellaneous property was listed as two head of cattle valued at $12 and a
hog at $6. The 1860 census enumerated the Lucas Moy family in Karnes County
with personal property valued at $400. Their sons Walek, with his
Americanized name Valentin, and Frank were listed with their parents. The
following year their third son was born. Błazej [Blaise] was baptized on
February 10, 1861, in Panna Maria (entry #157).
Establishing
himself as a farmer with livestock, Lucas registered his cattle brand [see
left], boldly depicting his initials (The Texas Stock Directory,
Jackson and Long, 1865, p. 73). In 1867, Lucas Moy and six other men bought
1000 acres of land on the Cibolo Creek. The predominantly Silesian group
paid $1500 for the tract. In addition to Lucas, those listed in the deed
were John Czamber, Anton Korzekwa, John Kotara, John Lyssy, Frank Mzyk, and
Laurence Winn (Karnes County Deeds, Book A, pp. 214-216, dated: 12 April
1867). The group did not formally divide the land for fourteen years, by
which time some of the original purchasers had passed away.
Moving toward
a new decade, Lucas Moy appeared in open court in Karnes County on November
22, 1869, and declared his intention to become a citizen of the United
States. According to the 1870 US Federal Census, Lucas, his wife, and their
three sons were visited by the census enumerator, and their real estate
value was listed as $420 and personal property placed at $125. Lucas
exercised his right as a United States citizen and registered to vote on
September 18, 1871 (entry #366, p. 11, Old Helena Courthouse Records, Karnes
County, Texas).
Though the
Moy family prospered in their Texas life, Lucas endured a great loss when
his wife died at the age of 50. Maria Skorupa Moy was buried in the Panna
Maria cemetery on November 5, 1871 (p. 6, entry #28) having lived only 15
years in their new country.
The year of
1872 marked a happy occasion for this family when Valentin Moy married Maria
Szczygiel on June 4 in their parish church in Panna Maria (entry #68). Their
wedding witnesses were Laurence Wiatrek and Jacob Lyssy. It is possible
that the bride, Maria, was the infant on the Schüler Agency List who
departed for America with her family at the same time as her future husband.
[Joseph Sczygiol, his wife, Marianna Kowolik, and their two children, Eva,
12 years old, and Maria, only 2 months old. The Sczygiol family’s residence
in Poland was Kadłub Wolny in the parish of Zębowice.]
In addition
to the Lucas Moy property, the 1876 Karnes County Tax Rolls reflected that
the family had 14 head of cattle and 8 goats (Przygoda, p. 50). The year of
1878 marked another celebration when Francis Moy married Elisabeth Kotara,
the daughter of John and Agatha Kotara, on November 19. This marriage took
place in the Nativity of the BVM Catholic Church in Cestohowa (p. 257, entry
#2).
Tragedy
struck the Moy family again when the youngest son, Blaise, died on October
4, 1880, at only 19 years of age. The requiem Mass was held at the Catholic
Church in Cestohowa (p. 343, entry #15). The cause of death for this young
person was not listed in the sacramental records.
Lucas was
again documented as a farmer in the 1880 US Federal Census of Karnes County
where he lived until his death. At the approximate age of 72 years, Lucas
Moy passed away on March 27, 1891. His funeral Mass was offered the next day
in the Nativity of the BVM Catholic Church, and he was buried in the
Cestohowa parish cemetery (p. 353, third entry - age 70 in the burial record
does not agree with the Schüler Agency List). Sadly, Lucas was not
laid to rest beside his beloved wife who had been buried in the Panna Maria
cemetery 20 years earlier.
Spelling Variations:
Moy, Mai, Moj
Reference
Notes:
·
Lucas Moy’s family is listed in the
“Ravaged by War” section (p. 241) of Silesian Profiles II: Polish
Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s.
·
The in-law families of Lucas Moy
who have been documented in the Silesian Profiles books are:
Kotara (Vol. II) and Szczygiel/Sczygiol in the “Ravaged by
War” section (p. 239, Vol. II).
|
Piegsa
Thomas Piegsa and Johanna Respondek from Prusków, Silesia
by Janet Dawson Ebrom
In the
late 1840s, after serving in the
first
Danish-Prussian War,
Thomas
Piegsa, the son of John and Josephine Piegsa, was welcomed home to Silesia.
Thomas married Johanna Respondek, and they were blessed with two sons,
Joseph, born circa 1850, and Franz, born circa 1853. The family resided in
the Silesian village of Prusków. Making a courageous decision to leave
their homeland for America, they registered with an immigration travel
agent, Julius Heinrich Schüler, who arranged their transportation. He
recorded the family as: Thomas Piegsa, age 31, Johanna Respondek, age 28,
Joseph, age 6, and Franz, age 3 (passengers 124-127). Johanna may have
been expecting another son at the time because their baby Thomas was
born after they had been listed to travel. Without baptism records, their
exact birth dates cannot be confirmed. The sacramental volumes of their
parish, Wniebowzięcia NMP [Assumption of the BVM], in Zębowice were
destroyed during World War II, but thankfully, the Schüler Agency List
provided their ages. Schüler also noted that Thomas Piegsa was a “häusler”
which meant a farmworker who owned a cottage. Thomas, Johanna, and their
sons set sail to the New World on April 1, 1856, and settled in Victoria,
Texas, where they introduced the Piegsa surname; “piegża” is the Polish word
for a “hedge sparrow,” a small, brownish European songbird (Hoffman, page
386).
Within
two years of the Piegsa family’s arrival, a son named Stanislaus was born on
September 24, 1858, and baptized at St. Mary Catholic Church in Victoria
(page 99, entry #698). Becoming established in Texas, Thomas registered his
cattle brand [see left] depicting his reversed initials on October 14, 1859
(Victoria Marks and Brands, page 184). Then Thomas purchased a town lot in
Victoria (Victoria Deeds, Vol. 8, page 589) and was neighbors with about 25
other newcomers from Silesia. With immigrants from many other foreign
countries, “Victoria County was notably cosmopolitan in the makeup of its
population…” (Grimes, page 244).
The
Piegsa family was comfortably settled by the time the census taker visited
them in the summer of 1860 and recorded them with a misspelled surname “Peisgon.”
He noted their first names and ages as follows: “Thos,” age 35, Anna, age
32, “Vash,” age 10, Frank, age 8, “Thom,” age 5, all born in “Poland Ger.”
since Silesia was under Prussian rule at the time. Having already served in
the Prussian army as a young man, Thomas may have had more experience than
some of the other Silesian immigrants in Victoria when he was inducted into
the Texas Militia. Private Thomas Piegsa appeared in an enrollment of men
subject to military duty with Captain E. Teitz in Victoria Town Precinct on
June 1, 1861 (muster roll 602).
By
1862, Thomas owned three lots in Victoria valued at $150 according to the
tax records. He and Johanna welcomed another baby boy when Charles was born
on October 31, 1864, and baptized the following day at St. Mary’s (page 24,
1st entry). In 1865, a Confirmation list included a child named
George Peter “Pieksa” (#23); in 1867, “Franek Pieksa” was also confirmed at
St. Mary’s. Sadly, two of the Piegsa sons died in infancy, and another died
during the yellow fever epidemic in 1867 (Victoria Advocate, August
30, 1916, page 1).
Based
on Victoria County tax records, Thomas and Johanna continued to prosper. In
1869, Thomas was taxed for two lots in Victoria appraised at $100, 19 acres
of land valued at $300, four horses at $100, four head of cattle at $15, and
miscellaneous property worth $50. He paid a combined state and county tax
of $2.25. The 1870 census listed Thomas, a farmer, his wife Anna, age 42,
and two of their sons: George, age 15, and Frank, age 14. Thomas not only
successfully farmed his own land, but he was also one of the best known well
contractors of Victoria County and “…bored the first wells on the Traylor
and other large ranches in Southern Texas (Victoria Advocate, August
30, 1916, page 1).
The
year of 1878 was especially joyous for Thomas and Johanna. On January 8,
1878, their son, Joseph Piegsa, married Fannie Miosga at St. Mary’s in
Victoria (page 78, 2nd entry). Only five months later, Frank
Piegsa and Anna Kutchka celebrated their wedding on June 11, 1878, also at
St. Mary’s (page 80, 1st entry). So the family welcomed two
Silesian daughters-in-law. The 1880 Victoria census included Thomas and Anna
followed by their sons, Joseph, age 31, and Franklin, age 27. As an active
citizen of his community, Thomas served as a member of the petit juries for
the 1883 summer term in Victoria’s district court (Rose, page 88).
On
August 17, 1898, the entire family mourned the loss of Johanna Respondek
Piegsa whose funeral took place the following day at Our Lady of Lourdes
Catholic Church; she was laid to rest in the Victoria Catholic Cemetery
(Church Burial Records, page 35, entry #144). Two years after the death of
the family matriarch, her son, Joseph Piegsa, passed away on February 1,
1900. Five years later, his brother, Frank P. Piegsa, died on August 20,
1905. Both brothers’ funerals were at St. Mary’s with interment in the
Victoria Catholic Cemetery (Church Burial Records, page 59, entry #286; page
84, entry #447).
With
his wife and sons gone, Thomas Piegsa remained close to his grandchildren.
The 1900 census of Victoria County showed Thomas living with his grandson,
Joseph, age 9; ten years later, two grandsons were living with him, Joseph,
age 21, and Thomas, age 27. The elder Thomas, who was actually about 85, was
listed as a 90-year-old widower who farmed with the help of his older
grandson also named Thomas while Joe worked as a cigar maker at the factory.
At 6
A.M. on August 29, 1916, Thomas Piegsa, died of old age (Texas State Death
Certificate #20039) at the home of his granddaughter, Barbara Piegsa
Jaeschke, in Victoria. His obituary notice worthy of front page news in the
Victoria Advocate proclaimed, “The Oldest Citizen of Victoria County
Died This Morning.” His funeral took place at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic
Church. The family patriarch who had been born near Rosenberg [now Olesno],
Silesia, was buried close to his wife of half a century in the Victoria
Catholic Cemetery (Victoria Advocate, August 30, 1916, page 1).
Reference Notes:
 |
Family of Thomas Piegsa is listed in the “Ravaged by War” section (page
240) of Silesian Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s. |
 |
Grimes, Roy, ed.
300 Years in Victoria County. Victoria, Texas: Victoria Advocate
Publishing Co., 1968. |
 |
Hoffman, William F.
Polish Surnames: Origins and Meanings. Second Edition, Revised.
Chicago, Illinois: Polish Genealogical Society of America, 1998. |
 |
Our Lady of Lourdes
Catholic Church, Victoria, Texas. Burial Records. LDS Microfilm 0025519. |
 |
Rose, Victor M.
Victor Rose’s History of Victoria. Ed. by J.W. Petty, Jr. Victoria,
Texas: Book Mart, 1961. |
 |
St. Mary Catholic
Church, Victoria, Texas. Baptism, Confirmation, Marriage, and Burial
Records. LDS Microfilms 0025514 and 0025515. |
 |
Texas State
Archives. Civil War Muster Roll 602. |
 |
U.S. Population
Census of Victoria County, Texas: 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910. |
 |
Victoria Advocate
[Victoria, Texas]. 30 August 1916. Page 1. |
 |
Victoria County,
Texas. Deed Records, Marks and Brands, and Tax Rolls. |
|
Smialek - Schmialek
Their Brief Life in Texas, 1856-1870
by Cheryl Lynn Highley
In 1856 Julius Heinrich Schuler arranged
travel to Texas for a large group of Silesians. He recorded significant
details about the emigrants, including names, ages, professions for the men,
names of home villages, etc. Among the emigrants were two young adults who
left their families in Silesia and set off for a new life in Texas—Joseph
Schmialek, a 26 year-old zimmerman, or carpenter, from Knieja, and
Christian Cholewa, aged 20, from Radawie. Because Schuler recorded no
profession next to Cholewa’s name, it is likely that the first name was
misspelled and the entry was for a woman named Christina.
Entering Texas through the port of
Galveston, many of the Silesians journeyed to Panna Maria. Hired by Fr.
Anthony Rossadowski, Joseph was put to work on the new church and he built
the pulpit, communion railings, and choir loft and, later, erected a small
bell tower to hold a bell from Silesia (Baker 1975:28). The new church
became the setting for the Joseph’s marriage to 21-year-old Christina on
September 27, 1857. While Silesian baptism records are lacking due to the
destruction of the Knieja and Radawie parish records during World War II,
the parents’ names of the young couple were recorded
in the marriage record at the Immaculate Conception of the BVM Church.
Joseph’s parents were Nicolajs and Marianna
Schmialek and
Christina parents were Stephan and Marianna Hollewa [Cholewa].
A few details of
their brief life in Panna Maria, 1856-ca. 1864, were recorded in church
records as well as in the 1860 census. On
October 27, 1858 Joseph and
Christina welcomed a daughter they named Maria [Mary]. Two years later, the
census taker listed the young family and recorded Joseph’s profession as a
laborer. On November 15, 1860 another daughter, Carolina, was baptized and
on June 27, 1862, a son, Jacob, was born. Joseph and Christina can also be
found in the parish records as sponsors for baptism and wedding ceremonies
of other members of the community. Deed records are lacking for the
Schmialeks, and it is likely they were leasing land or had other living
arrangements with fellow immigrants. Besides working as a carpenter, Joseph
owned a small herd of cattle and one horse (Karnes County Tax Rolls, 1859,
1862).
By the
summer of 1864, the Schmialeks were in Victoria, where a second son, August,
was born on August 14. Sponsors
were Frank Gawel and Joseph and John Kutchka. Joseph paid taxes on 10 head
of cattle in 1866 and died sometime after that. A burial record has not been
located and it’s possible that he died during the yellow fever
epidemic in 1866 and 1867 (Silesian Profiles 1999: 178-179). Around this
time, Sebastian Gawel [Gavel, Garvel], father of Frank (see above), was also
widowed when his third wife, Francisca Obstuj, died. In mid-January, 1868,
Sebastian sold 61 ½ acres of land on the Garcitas Creek to Christina for
$100 (Victoria County Deeds, Vol. 9, p. 439, date of instrument, 13 Jan
1868). Three weeks later, on February 4, Christina became Sebastian’s fourth
wife, with the marriage recorded at St. Mary Catholic Church in Victoria.
Frank Gawel was one of the witnesses.
By 1870 Christina and five-year-old August
were no longer living with Sebastian, but were in a separate residence near
Frank Gawel and his family (Karnes County Census, 1870). Jacob had
apparently died and Carolina, aged 10, was working as a domestic servant in
the household of photographer, Johann Schmidt, and his Silesian-born wife,
Johanna Rzeppa. Mary may also have been living temporarily with another
family. On October 26, 1870 Christina gave birth to Charles Gawel who was
baptized a few weeks later on November 5. Christina and the infant died
shortly after the baptism took place because probate records indicate that
Christina was deceased by the end of the month and little Charles was not
mentioned in records related to the guardianship of her other children.
In just a few years, the Schmialek
children had lost both parents, as well as brothers Jacob and Charles, and
they would have been homeless had it not been for a neighboring family.
Prussian-born Alfred Farrer and his family lived near Sebastian and
Christina (Victoria County Census Records, 1870). On November 23, 1870
Alfred applied “as temporary administrator of the estate of the Mary,
Caroline, and August, orphans under the age of 14 and heirs of Christina
Gavel, deceased” (Victoria County Probate Records, Guardianship, Vol. A-3,
#123, pp. 253, 270-271, 347, 476, and 481, filed November 23, 1870). A few
years later, in mid-1874, Alfred’s widow, Lucinda Farrer became guardian of
August and Mary, while school teacher W. H. Allen was named guardian of
Carolina (Victoria County Probate Records, Guardianship, see above). William
and Sarah Allen probably provided a stable home life for Carolina for a few
years, but by 1880 she was no longer living with them (Victoria County
Census Records, 1880).
In the 1880 census 22-yr-old Mary was listed as “adopted” in the Lucinda
Farrer household; in addition, 21- year-old Anton Garvel, one of Sebastian’s
older sons, was living with the Farrer family. Two years later Carolina sold
her half interest in 61 ½ acres of land to her sister, Mary, for $30.75
(Probate Records, Guardianship, #123, pp 248-350, 358-360, 403-405, April,
1882); this was the original plot of land that Christina bought from
Sebastian Gawel prior to their marriage. August was not mentioned in this
transaction and it is assumed he had died. On January 18, 1887, Mary married
Anton Garvel, son of Sebastian and his third wife, Josefa Samol, at St. Mary
Catholic Church in Victoria and, for many years, they lived in Inez.
Information regarding the fate of Carolina was not located.
Reference Notes:
 |
Joseph Schmialek is listed in the “Ravaged
by War” section (p. 239) of Silesian Profiles II: Polish
Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s. |
 |
Baker, T. Lindsay. The Early History of Panna Maria, Texas.
Texas Tech University Graduate Studies No. 9. Lubbock: Texas Tech Press,
1975. |
|
|
Jacob Joschko / Yosko Family
from Radawie, Silesia
by Janet Dawson Ebrom
Jacob Joschko [Yosko]
was born over 200 years ago in 1808, yet his name lives on in Texas. He was
from the village of Radawie in Upper Silesia. Radawie was then part
of the Zębowice parish where sacramental records of the 1800s including
those of the Yosko family were destroyed during World War II.
|
|
|
Stamp commemorates 500th Anniversary of the church in Radawie.
Courtesy of Michael Kurtin. |
Around 1827,
Jacob was wed to his first wife Mary, but without their marriage record, her
maiden name remains unknown. Mary was the mother of five known Yosko
children born in Silesia: Franz (ca.1828), Joseph (ca.1832), Jozefa
(ca.1838), Marianna (ca.1841), and Agnes (ca.1848). After the loss of his
beloved wife Mary, Jacob married again; his second wife was Marianna Scholz.
Jacob fathered three more Yosko children: Christianna (ca.1851), Matilda
(ca.1854), and Gregor (1855) before leaving his motherland. In 1856, the
German travel agent, Julius Schüler, documented this large family bound for
Galveston, Texas: Jacob Joschko, age 48, a “gärtner” [gardener] from
Radawie followed by his wife who was 18 years younger, Marianna Scholz,
age 30, and Jacob’s eight children: Franz [no age given], Joseph, age 24,
Josepha, age 18, Maria, age 15, Agnes, age 7, Christianna, age 5, Mathilde,
age 2, and Gregor, an infant.
When Jacob’s
family arrived in Texas, they settled in Karnes County where three more
Yosko children were born to him and Marianna: Peter (1858), Franciska
(1860), and Tecla (1863). The two girls were baptized at the Immaculate
Conception Catholic Church in Panna Maria (entries #126 and #234).
Jacob began
paying taxes in 1859, and the family was included in the 1860 census of
Karnes County as: J. “Joskee” age 55, Mary, age 36, “Jos” age 24, Mary, age
20, Agnes, age 13, “M” [Matilda] age 8, “Greger” age 5, and Peter, age 2.
By 1863, Jacob realized his dream of owning land in Texas when he bought
acreage 2 ½ miles east of Helena on the east bank of the Ecleto Creek from
Joseph Kutzka (Karnes County Deeds, Vol. A, pp. 80-81). On March 8, 1866,
Jacob registered his cattle brand at the Karnes County Courthouse (Marks and
Brands, p.11, #91) where he made his Declaration of Intention to become a US
citizen on November 22, 1869 (County Court Minutes, Vol. A, p. 67).
The father of
eleven known children, Jacob Yosko died on September 30, 1876. His second
wife, Mary Scholz Yosko, died on May 6, 1891. Their funeral Masses were
offered in Panna Maria (p. 9, entry #44 and p. 20), and they were buried in
the parish cemetery with tombstones inscribed in Polish—Jakob and Mary Josko.
Reference Notes:
 |
Jacob Joschko [Yosko] family is listed in
the “Ravaged by War” section (p. 241) of Silesian Profiles II:
Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s-1870s. |
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The in-law families of Jacob Joschko who
have been fully profiled in the Silesian Profiles books are:
Keller (Vol. II), Moczygemba (Vol. I), and Richter (Vol. I).
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Carl and
Maria Zigmond: From Silesia to St. Hedwig
by John and Kathy Korus Beard
The twenty-first century Texan name Zigmond was written as
“Siegmund” in 1856 when Carl, a 30- year-old free agricultural laborer,
arranged with the Schüler Agency to immigrate to Texas with Maria Walura,
his 27-year-old wife, and Agnes, their one-year-old daughter. They were one
of seven families bound for Galveston that departed from the village of
Pruskow, Upper Silesia, Poland, near Zębowice, in the parish of
Wniebowzięcia NMP. Some sacramental records were destroyed during World War
II, so the birth dates and marriage date of Carl and Maria have not been
verified with primary sources.
According to family tradition, a child Mary was born as the
ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean. The scheduled sailing date of April 1,
1856, supports that tradition, even though U.S. census records list her
birthplace as Poland. In the 1860 federal census of Panna Maria, Karnes
County, Texas, the family was enumerated as Chas Segeman, a 35-year-old
laborer with a personal estate value of $400; Mary, age 30; a daughter “M,”
age 5; and a son Simon, age 2 (family #1029). No mention was made of
daughter Antonia Agnes and son Peter, but church records show that she was
born January 18, 1858, and he was born January 31, 1859, making it likely
that he is the same child as Simon (Immaculate Conception of the BVM Baptism
Records, entries 46 and 80). The baby Agnes mentioned by Schüler may have
died. The Zigmond family was blessed on Christmas day, 1860, with the birth
of a daughter Eva (entry 151).
Karnes County tax records from 1862 indicate that Carl owned
a horse valued at $25, 10 head of cattle valued at $60, and miscellaneous
property worth $55; Carl owed $3.56 for state, county, and poll taxes. The
last known record of the Zigmond family in Karnes County is the baptism of
son Policarp on February 22, 1863 (entry 221).
Three years later, on June 4, 1866, two-week-old twins John
and Constantina Catarzyna were baptized in St. Hedwig (Annunciation of the
BVM Baptism Records, entries 25 and 26). A son Alexander was baptized in
March of 1868 (entry 47). Now a resident of Bexar County, Carl Zigmond
purchased 166 acres of land 14 miles east of San Antonio for $500 on August
10, 1868 (Bexar County Deed Records, Book U2, p. 444). Additional acreage
was purchased in 1875 (Book 4, p. 101) and 1883 (Book 25, p.
420 and Book 29, p. 372).
Although
a record of the Zigmond family has not been found in the 1870 federal
census, the baptism record of their daughter Martha on April 30, 1870, lists
her birth date as February 17, 1870, and her birthplace
as Martinez (entry 68). Carl had his cattle brand (see left) recorded at
the Bexar County Courthouse on September 2, 1870, in Brand Book D on page
359. An unnamed Zigmond child was baptized on May 9, 1872 in St. Hedwig (3rd
entry).
In San Antonio on September 23, 1871, Carl declared his
intention to become a citizen (Bexar County District 23 Civil Minutes, Book
G, p. 526, Box D, #546). It wasn’t until 23 years later, on October 22,
1894, that Carl Zigmond became a citizen of the United States (37th
District Court Civil Minutes, Volume R, p. 19); he had already lived in
Texas for 38 years.
When the census was taken at the Zigmond household in St.
Hedwig in June of 1880, five children were enumerated with Carl and Maria:
Peter, age 21; John, age 13; Tena, age 13; Alexander, age 12; and Anna, age
5 (family #162). The 1880 census of agriculture documented financial growth
for the Zigmonds. They owned 50 tilled acres, 70 other improved acres, and
360 acres of woodlands, with a value of $3250 for their farm, as well as
$225 worth of farming implements and machinery and $650 worth of livestock.
They spent $100 building and repairing fences and $95 for wages in 1879.
The estimated value of all of their farm production in 1879 was $375. On
hand June 1, 1880, were 15 horses, a mule, 4 working oxen, 15 milch cows, 20
other cattle, 10 swine, and 24 barnyard poultry. There were 15 calves born,
9 head of cattle sold, 5 slaughtered, and 15 died or were lost and not
recovered in 1879. The family made 280 pounds of butter and produced 500
dozen eggs. They harvested 70 bushels of corn from 40 acres, 4 bales of
cotton from 10 acres, 10 bushels of sweet potatoes from an acre, and 40
cords of wood (p. 11).
Bexar County tax records from 1896 reveal that Carl Zigmond
owned a total of 556 acres of land, 4 horses and mules, 15 cattle, and a
horse-drawn vehicle with a total value of $3230. Carl owed $29.07 for
school, county, and state taxes (p. 299).
The mother of seven living children, Maria Zigmond had lived
in Texas for 41 years when cancer ended her life on November 5, 1897, and
she was buried in St. Hedwig two days later (Annunciation of the BVM Burial
Records, p. 27, 4th entry). Carl lived almost ten years longer,
succumbing to pneumonia at the home of his youngest daughter, Annie Schubach,
in San Antonio on January 24, 1907 (Zizik-Kearns Funeral Home, 1906 - 1907,
p. 256). His funeral was held from the family residence in St. Hedwig two
days later (Burial Records, p. 5, 2nd entry and San Antonio
Express, January 25, 1907, p. 7). Their joint tombstone was inscribed
in Polish with Karol’s birth as November 1, 1827, and Marya’s birth as
August 15, 1829, both in Silesia.
Carl and Maria’s names also appear as Cigmond, Sigmond,
Zigmund, Zygmont, Zygmunt, Valura, Carlos, Carol, Charles, Karl, Karol, and
Marya in various references.
This chart lists the Zigmond children and their spouses with
documentation in the following paragraph.
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Child |
Birth |
Spouse |
Marriage Date |
Death Date |
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Agnes |
circa 1855
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Mary |
circa 1856 |
Anton Stanuś |
15 Jul 1873 |
31 Jan 1935
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Antonia Agnes |
18 Jan 1858
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Peter |
31 Jan 1859 |
Mary Rakowicz |
20 Nov 1888 |
12 Jan 1924
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Eva |
25 Dec 1860 |
John Gawlik
Jr. |
21 May 1878 |
15 Aug 1921
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Policarp |
16 Feb 1863
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John |
18 May 1866 |
Christina
Rakowicz |
8 Sep 1891 |
30 Aug 1909
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Constantina |
18 May 1866 |
Anton Krawiec |
25 Jan 1887 |
26 May 1941
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Alexander |
March 1868 |
Paulina
Ciomperlik |
19 Oct 1897 |
13 Oct 1937
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Martha |
17 Feb 1870
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Unnamed child |
16 Apr 1872
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Annie (Anna) |
circa 1875 |
Alex Schubach |
11 Sep 1894 |
7 Sep 1949
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Marriage
documentation was found in the following sources: Annunciation of the BVM
Marriage Records for Mary (13th page, 1st entry),
Peter (p. 21, 1st entry), Eva (p. 5, 1st entry), and
Constantina (p. 19, 4th entry) and Bexar County Marriage Records
for Mary (Book E, p. 525), Peter (Book J, p. 218), Eva (Book F, p. 460),
John (Book K, p. 450), Alex (Book N, p. 611), and Annie (Book M, p. 145).
Documentation of the dates of death was found in the following sources:
Annunciation of the BVM Burial Record for John (p. 12, 1st entry)
and Texas Certificates of Death for Mary Stanush (Bexar County #356), Peter
(Bexar County #190), Eva Gawlik (Karnes County #23033), Constantina Krawietz
(Karnes County #23601), Alex (Bexar County #48622), and Annie Schubach
(Bexar County #41911).
Reference: The family of Carl Zigmond is listed
in the "Ravaged by War" section (p. 241) of Silesian Profiles II:
Polish Immigration to Texas 1850s - 1870s.
Note:
The in-law families of Carl Zigmond who have been profiled in Silesian
Profiles (red book) are Krawiec and Stanuś and in Silesian Profiles
II (blue book) is Gawlik.
Find
ordering information for Silesian Profiles “Publications.”

Family of Peter Zigmond and Mary Rakowicz.
Photo from Patricia S. Sibley (1948 - 2003)
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Zigmond
Carl and Maria Zigmond: From Silesia to St. Hedwig
by John and Kathy Korus Beard
The twenty-first century Texan name Zigmond
was written as “Siegmund” in 1856 when Carl, a 30- year-old free
agricultural laborer, arranged with the Schüler Agency to immigrate to Texas
with Maria Walura, his 27-year-old wife, and Agnes, their one-year-old
daughter. They were one of seven families bound for Galveston that departed
from the village of Pruskow, Upper Silesia, Poland, near Zębowice, in the
parish of Wniebowzięcia NMP. Some sacramental records were destroyed during
World War II, so the birth dates and marriage date of Carl and Maria have
not been verified with primary sources.
According to family tradition, a child Mary
was born as the ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean. The scheduled sailing date
of April 1, 1856, supports that tradition, even though U.S. census records
list her birthplace as Poland. In the 1860 federal census of Panna Maria,
Karnes County, Texas, the family was enumerated as Chas Segeman, a
35-year-old laborer with a personal estate value of $400; Mary, age 30; a
daughter “M,” age 5; and a son Simon, age 2 (family #1029). No mention was
made of daughter Antonia Agnes and son Peter, but church records show that
she was born January 18, 1858, and he was born January 31, 1859, making it
likely that he is the same child as Simon (Immaculate Conception of the BVM
Baptism Records, entries 46 and 80). The baby Agnes mentioned by Schüler
may have died. The Zigmond family was blessed on Christmas day, 1860, with
the birth of a daughter Eva (entry 151).
Karnes County tax records from 1862 indicate
that Carl owned a horse valued at $25, 10 head of cattle valued at $60, and
miscellaneous property worth $55; Carl owed $3.56 for state, county, and
poll taxes. The last known record of the Zigmond family in Karnes County is
the baptism of son Policarp on February 22, 1863 (entry 221).
Three years later, on June 4, 1866,
two-week-old twins John and Constantina Catarzyna were baptized in St.
Hedwig (Annunciation of the BVM Baptism Records, entries 25 and 26). A son
Alexander was baptized in March of 1868 (entry 47). Now a resident of Bexar
County, Carl Zigmond purchased 166 acres of land 14 miles east of San
Antonio for $500 on August 10, 1868 (Bexar County Deed Records, Book U2, p.
444). Additional acreage was purchased in 1875 (Book 4, p. 101)
and 1883 (Book 25, p. 420 and Book 29, p. 372).
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Although a record of the Zigmond family has
not been found in the 1870 federal census, the baptism record of their
daughter Martha on April 30, 1870, lists her birth date as February 17,
1870, and her birthplace as Martinez (entry 68). Carl had his cattle brand
(see left) recorded at the Bexar County Courthouse on September 2, 1870, in
Brand Book D on page 359. An unnamed Zigmond child was baptized on May 9,
1872 in St. Hedwig (3rd entry).
In San Antonio on September 23, 1871, Carl
declared his intention to become a citizen (Bexar County District 23 Civil
Minutes, Book G, p. 526, Box D, #546). It wasn’t until 23 years later, on
October 22, 1894, that Carl Zigmond became a citizen of the United States
(37th District Court Civil Minutes, Volume R, p. 19); he had
already lived in Texas for 38 years.
When the census was taken at the Zigmond
household in St. Hedwig in June of 1880, five children were enumerated with
Carl and Maria: Peter, age 21; John, age 13; Tena, age 13; Alexander, age
12; and Anna, age 5 (family #162). The 1880 census of agriculture
documented financial growth for the Zigmonds. They owned 50 tilled acres,
70 other improved acres, and 360 acres of woodlands, with a value of $3250
for their farm, as well as $225 worth of farming implements and machinery
and $650 worth of livestock. They spent $100 building and repairing fences
and $95 for wages in 1879. The estimated value of all of their farm
production in 1879 was $375. On hand June 1, 1880, were 15 horses, a mule,
4 working oxen, 15 milch cows, 20 other cattle, 10 swine, and 24 barnyard
poultry. There were 15 calves born, 9 head of cattle sold, 5 slaughtered,
and 15 died or were lost and not recovered in 1879. The family made 280
pounds of butter and produced 500 dozen eggs. They harvested 70 bushels of
corn from 40 acres, 4 bales of cotton from 10 acres, 10 bushels of sweet
potatoes from an acre, and 40 cords of wood (p. 11).
Bexar County tax records from 1896 reveal
that Carl Zigmond owned a total of 556 acres of land, 4 horses and mules, 15
cattle, and a horse-drawn vehicle with a total value of $3230. Carl owed
$29.07 for school, county, and state taxes (p. 299).
The mother of seven living children, Maria
Zigmond had lived in Texas for 41 years when cancer ended her life on
November 5, 1897, and she was buried in St. Hedwig two days later
(Annunciation of the BVM Burial Records, p. 27, 4th entry). Carl
lived almost ten years longer, succumbing to pneumonia at the home of his
youngest daughter, Annie Schubach, in San Antonio on January 24, 1907 (Zizik-Kearns
Funeral Home, 1906 - 1907, p. 256). His funeral was held from the family
residence in St. Hedwig two days later (Burial Records, p. 5, 2nd
entry and San Antonio Express, January 25, 1907, p. 7). Their joint
tombstone was inscribed in Polish with Karol’s birth as November 1, 1827,
and Marya’s birth as August 15, 1829, both in Silesia.
Carl and Maria’s names also appear as Cigmond,
Sigmond, Zigmund, Zygmont, Zygmunt, Valura, Carlos, Carol, Charles, Karl,
Karol, and Marya in various references.
This chart lists the Zigmond children and
their spouses with documentation in the following paragraph.
| Child |
Birth |
Spouse |
Marriage Date |
Death Date |
| Agnes |
circa 1855 |
|
|
|
| Mary |
circa 1856 |
Anton Stanuś |
15 Jul 1873 |
31 Jan 1935 |
| Antonia Agnes |
18 Jan 1858 |
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|
| Peter |
31 Jan 1859 |
Mary Rakowicz |
20 Nov 1888 |
12 Jan 1924 |
| Eva |
25 Dec 1860 |
John Gawlik Jr. |
21 May 1878 |
15 Aug 1921 |
| Policarp |
16 Feb 1863 |
|
|
|
| John |
18 May 1866 |
Christina Rakowicz |
8 Sep 1891 |
30 Aug 1909 |
| Constantina |
18 May 1866 |
Anton Krawiec |
25 Jan 1887 |
26 May 1941 |
| Alexander |
March 1868 |
Paulina Ciomperlik |
19 Oct 1897 |
13 Oct 1937 |
| Martha |
17 Feb 1870 |
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|
|
| Unnamed child |
16 Apr 1872 |
|
|
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| Annie (Anna) |
circa 1875 |
Alex Schubach |
11 Sep 1894 |
7 Sep 1949 |
Marriage documentation was found in the
following sources: Annunciation of the BVM Marriage Records for Mary (13th
page, 1st entry), Peter (p. 21, 1st entry), Eva (p. 5,
1st entry), and Constantina (p. 19, 4th entry) and
Bexar County Marriage Records for Mary (Book E, p. 525), Peter (Book J, p.
218), Eva (Book F, p. 460), John (Book K, p. 450), Alex (Book N, p. 611),
and Annie (Book M, p. 145). Documentation of the dates of death was found in
the following sources: Annunciation of the BVM Burial Record for John (p.
12, 1st entry) and Texas Certificates of Death for Mary Stanush
(Bexar County #356), Peter (Bexar County #190), Eva Gawlik (Karnes County
#23033), Constantina Krawietz (Karnes County #23601), Alex (Bexar County
#48622), and Annie Schubach (Bexar County #41911).
Reference:
The family of Carl Zigmond is listed in the "Ravaged by War"
section (p. 241) of Silesian Profiles II: Polish Immigration to Texas
1850s - 1870s.
Note: The in-law families of Carl Zigmond
who have been profiled in Silesian Profiles (red book) are Krawiec
and Stanuś and in Silesian Profiles II (blue book) is Gawlik.
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Family of Peter Zigmond and Mary Rakowicz
Photo from Patricia S. Sibley (1948 - 2003) |
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