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A Family Divided LbNA #69472

Owner:Baby Bear
Plant date:Dec 4, 2015
Location: Queen of the Holy Rosary Catholic Church Cemetery
City:Hostyn
County:Fayette
State:Texas
Boxes:1
Found by: Silver Eagle
Last found:Jan 27, 2017
Status:FFFF
Last edited:Dec 5, 2015
Difficulty: Easy
Distance to Letterbox: 200 yards

This box is dedicated to the men buried here that fought on opposites sides in the Civil war, but now rest together. The history of the town and the men is below from the Texas Online History:
HOSTYN, TEXAS. Hostyn overlooks the Colorado River near La Grange in central Fayette County. In the 1830s the community, then called Bluff, was settled by German settlers. Father Michael Muldoon celebrated Mass in a dwelling at Bluff in the spring of 1831. In November 1856 a group of Czech families arrived at Bluff. Among them were Joseph Janda, Alois and Benjamin Klimicek, Valentin Kolibal, František Koza, and František Marak. The Czechs that moved to Bluff and those that founded Dubina came over on the same ship. During the Civil War John Lidiak, a Bluff resident, was hauling a wagonload of cotton to Mexico when he met friends in Brownsville who talked him into joining the Union Army; meanwhile his father, Joseph Lidiak, fought with the Confederate Army. Both came home to Bluff after the war and lived together on the farm. The two men are buried side by side in the parish cemetery and were honored by the United States government with two Civil War cannons.

After the war the community prospered, and more Czechs moved to Bluff. A post office established there in 1869 remained open until 1904. From 1884 to 1896 the population grew from 400 to 700, and a number of organizations were formed to meet the needs of the community. Catholics erected the first church, built of logs, in 1856, and in October 1889 the first lodge of the Katolická Jednota Texaská (Czech Catholic Union of Texas) was formed. By 1900 Bluff had a gin, a blacksmith shop, and a general store. In 1925 Bluff was officially renamed Hostyn by Father Paul Kasper, after the town of Hostyn, Moravia (in the Czech Republic). In 1966 the fifth church constructed in Hostyn was erected, and Joseph Cardinal Beran, Archbishop of Prague, officiated at the dedication. In the mid-1980s Hostyn remained a community where social and religious life still revolved around the church.

The men and cannons are near the entry to the church.

Directions:
Hwy 77 southwest form LaGrange. Turn right on FM 2436 and go a few miles to the church on the right. turn in before church, and go around to the back and park by Cemetery main entry.

To the Letterbox:
Walk to entry, then go right along chain fence all the way to corner and stone for R. Martin McCollough. From corner of chain fence, go left to first wood pole of Barbed fence. Box at base, under 8 inch rock.


Hike length: 0.5 miles