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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Czech_TexansCzech Texans - Wikipedia

    History. Dancers at the National Polka Festival in Ennis, TX. Czech Stop and Little Czech Bakery. Czech Museum in Caldwell. Historically, Czech Moravian settlements were founded in Central Texas. "Czechs first settled in Texas in the 1840s, traveling from Bohemia, Moravia, and Austrian Silesia ...

  2. The Czech heritage in Texas has roots dating to the early 1850s when they first Czech citizen arrived to minister to German Protestants in Austin County.

  3. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesCzechs - TSHA

    Feb 16, 2018 · Czechs are a Slavic people from Bohemia, Moravia, and parts of Silesia. Among the first Czechs to arrive in Texas were the writer Carl Postl (Charles Sealsfield), who may have visited the Texas-Louisiana borderland as early as 1823; Frederick Lemský, who arrived in 1836 and played the fife in the Texas band at the battle of San Jacinto ...

  4. Texas Czech Heritage and Cultural Center preserves and promotes the history, language, culture, and heritage of Czech Texans who trace their ancestry to the present-day Czech Republic or the former Austro-Hungarian Empire (including Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, and Slovakia).

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  5. The Czechs who settled in Texas in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were a Slavic people originating from the provinces of Moravia and Bohemia in what is now Czechoslovakia. They began immigrating to Texas in the early 1850s, attracted by the promise of land.

  6. Czech Settlers in Texas In 1852, sixteen Czech families landed at Galveston. They were the first group of Czechs to arrive in Texas, although there were already a few Czech people in the state. Most of the early Czech settlers were farmers and settled in central Texas. Many believed that having a farm was the best and most creative way of life.

  7. More immigrants from the Czech lands of the Austro-Hungarian Empire settled there in the second half of the 19th century than any other county in Texas. Many Czech-related historical sites and events, as well as prominent Texas Czechs, can be linked to Fayette County.

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