Saturday, January 29, 2022

My Texas Alphabet: B for Bandera

In the second edition of "My Texas Alphabet", B is for Bandera.

Nowadays, Bandera is mostly known/advertised as "the cowboy capital of the world". Not many people have any idea about its origin and that some of the town's first inhabitants were 16 Polish families who came to Texas from Silesia.

 
Local cattle brands

The intended destination of those Silesians was originally the settlement of Panna Maria, where they arrived in 1855. Since the land in that area had already been taken, the immigrants tried to find land around Castroville. It was Charles de Montel, who persuaded those Silesian families to go to Bandera where they could find employment at de Montel's  (saw and shingle) mill.
 

Charles de Montel was born in Königsberg, Prussia. He was a lawyer, soldier, engineer, and commander of Texas Rangers company. The man supplied the Polish immigrants with ox-driven carts so that they could relocate their belongings to the designated place. 
 
Frontier Times Museum, Bandera, TX

In Bandera, the Polish men worked for Charles de Montel. They also obtained town lots and land that they systematically cleared. The women worked at the local gristmill, which belonged to the Mormons, and helped with the farmland cultivation.
 
St. Stanislaus Church, Bandera, TX

In 1858, the Poles constructed St. Stanislaus Church in Bandera (the second oldest Polish church in America) - I have already written about the church in one of the previous posts. At first, the church building was a log structure. Years later, a rock church replaced the original one. In 1874, the Sisters of the Immaculate Conception opened a Polish school there.
 
The building of the Polish parochial school in Bandera
 
We have visited Bandera a few times - enjoyed watching a parade and ProRodeo there. We also went to the Frontier Times Museum (among others). People seemed nice and friendly there. 
 

It could be also a good place to settle (depending on what you look for).
 


Source: 
"The Texians and the Texans. The Polish Texans" The University of Texas, Institute of Texan Cultures, 1972.

Our Facebook page posts:
St. Stanislaus Church - our photos

History notes:
More about Bandera here
More about Charles de Montel: here
 

In the previous edition of "My Texas Alphabet", B was for Beans

2 comments :

  1. Enjoyed the history of Bandera! I have been there, back in 1998 - we stayed at the Dixie Dude Ranch, where my parents also went with their church youth group when they were dating back in 1954! We also went to the rodeo in 1998 (and there is a film clip I made of it posted at the Texas Archive of the Moving Image). Not my first rodeo, but it was for my two kids, who were neither born nor raised in Texas.

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    1. It must have been a great visit! I need to check out your video from the rodeo :-).

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