About Van Massirer and the Prairie Chapel School
Crawford, Texas
Van's great-grandparents, Franz and Margaretha Loess
Massirer, were born in 1842 and 1844, respectively, in Polowce, a small colony
near Chortkov, Galicia, in the far eastern part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Franz was a descendant of Johann Nikolaus Massierer who immigrated to Galicia
from the Rhineland-Pfalz region in Germany in 1785. Franz and Margaretha
immigrated to Texas in 1892 with six of their seven children. A daughter was
already married and did not immigrate until two years later. Franz became a
tenant farmer in Texas, but saved enough money in four years to make a down
payment on 481 acres of land in 1896. A portion of that land has been passed
down through four generations and, along with more recently acquired property,
is now owned by a great-grandson, Van Massirer and his wife, Mary. The
Massirer Ranch was recognized in 1997 by the Texas Land Heritage Program for 100
years of continuous ownership.
While still in Austria, Franz was converted to the Baptist
faith by his cousin, Ferdinand Massier, a roving missionary in Bukovina and
Galicia. After Franz arrived in Texas, he and Margaretha became members of the
Canaan Baptist Church, a German Baptist congregation in the Prairie Chapel
Community west of Crawford. This community is now the home of President George
and Laura Bush.
Many of the charter and early members of the Canaan Church
were immigrants from Bukovina and Galicia. Their names, in addition to Massirer,
were Althof, Freyer, Gauer, Hoehn, Hodel, Jaeckle, Lander, Landfried, Mack,
Mueller, Selzer, Weber, and others. Descendants of many of these early
members are still active in the church.
The Prairie Chapel School
Prairie Chapel School, built in 1908 and named for the rural German-Texan
community that it served, sits on a prominent rise in central Texas. Although
that rise has been known for years as the highest elevation in McLennan County,
the old school has recently been on a different kind of "rise."
Although the Prairie Chapel School consolidated with the Crawford School in
1939, the building was retained by the community and used sporadically for a
variety of activities. Then in the mid-1990s, a group of community leaders
interested in preserving the school for posterity, applied for and erected a
state historical marker. Ever-increasing numbers of activities have been held in
the building and on the school grounds since that time. At first, there was only
a Christmas party in December, but several more activities have been added
during the last couple of years. A heritage day is held each year in late May,
and this year a Christmas Tour of Homes is scheduled for December 14. The school
and the nearby Canaan Baptist Church, a German Baptist congregation, will be two
of the six stops on the tour. Proceeds from all of these activities go into a
restoration fund for the building. Estimated cost of the restoration is $60,000.
The school and especially the community surrounding it recently gained
world-wide attention when President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush
bought a nearby ranch and decided to make their home here. Not only has their
presence in the community given new meaning to the word "rise", it has also
provided an added impetus to the restoration project and the desire to preserve
the German-Texan heritage of the area.
Although the first school in the community was built by Irish settlers in
about 1879, German and Austrian immigrants began moving in and purchasing large
tracts of land during the mid-1880s. Many of these immigrants came from the
Austrian provinces of Bukovina and Galicia, and by 1900, the community was
heavily populated with German speaking people. Some were Baptists while others
were Lutherans.
The school built in 1908 was a three-room building that served some 70
students in nine grades. German surnames on the teachers' rolls included
Bartels, Bohne, Engelbrecht, Freyer, Gauer, Gohlke, Gossen, Hoehn, Hoppe,
Landfried, Massirer, Mattlage, Mueller, Rabbe, Rohloff, Spross, Weber, Wehmeyer,
Weiss, Westerfeld, Willmann, and others.
Ex-students and descendants of ex-students and former teachers are now banded
together to preserve the historic school building. To this end, the Prairie
School Association was recently organized with the following officers:
President--Van D. Massirer; Vice-President--Jerry J. Gauer; Secretary--Glenda
Smith; Treasurer--Rheadene Weber; and Historian--Clora Kellum. For further
information or to donate to the restoration fund, Massirer may be contacted at
(254) 486-2366 or <vmassirer@yahoo.com>.
The above is a companion add-on article to
The West begins near the beautiful Bush
ranch, too - Bud Kennedy commentary in DFW, Texas Telegram - August 13, 2002
reposted on the Bukovina Society Website.
Visitors
since August 26, 2002 Last Revised:
09/25/13 09:14:44 PM
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