Details for Vienna (Cheney Settlement)

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507013594

Data

Marker Number 13594
Atlas Number 5507013594
Marker Title Vienna (Cheney Settlement)
Index Entry Vienna (Cheney Settlement)
Address FM 530, CR 124
City Hallesttsville
County Lavaca
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 714308
UTM Northing 3251916
Subject Codes settlements
Marker Year 2006
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 11 mi. SE of Hallettsville at intersection of FM 530 and CR 124
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The community of Vienna has roots that reach back to the Republic of Texas. Maryland native John Cheney (1796-1868) brought his family to Texas in 1830 when Native Americans, including his wife Lucy, were expelled from their home in Georgia. Cheney served as Constable and Justice of the Peace in what was then Colorado County. His home on the west bank of the Navidad River, once including more than 7,000 acres, became known as Cheney Settlement. The Cheney family sold off portions of the family farm, and an influx of German, Austrian and Czech immigrants arrived. In 1873, Benjamin Milby opened a post office named Vienna in honor of the Austrian capital. In the 1880s, Pat Carvelle gave land for a school, which the community built with lumber hauled from Schulenburg. John Mixon operated a general store and the post office from 1885 to 1906, followed by postmaster Louis Teltschick, who also built and operated a cotton gin, sawmill, grist mill and blacksmith shop. Vienna was also a popular picnic spot in the early 20th century, with picturesque crossings of the Navidad River nearby. A July 1940 flood severely damaged the gin complex, though, and sent the Louis Teltschick family to the upper portion of the gin for shelter. The congregation of Vienna Baptist Church, founded at Seclusion (6 mi. SE) in the 1880s, moved next to the school in about 1915, the same year the post office closed. During the 1940s, the gin, school and several stores closed, and construction of Farm to Market Road 530 from Hallettsville to Edna in the 1950s hastened the dispersal of Vienna. Today, Vienna Baptist Church (1 mi. NE) is the only surviving building of this once viable rural community. (2006)
ATLAS_NUM=5507013594

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