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Volga German Heritage
of
Ellis and Rush Counties in Kansas
Schoenchen
Schoenchen’s story is a little
bit different from the other colonies, as it began because
of a conflict among the first settlers of Liebenthal, which
was settled on Section 21 in Rush County. There was a
proposed relocation to Section 16 because it had a better water
supply, among other things. Some of the townspeople began
building their homes in the new section, when Johann Schaefer
donated four acres in Section 21 to be used for building a
church. This angered those who had begun building their
homes in Section 16, so in April and May of 1877, they moved
their residences to the present location of Section 28 in Ellis
County.
More controversy followed with the founding
of
the new community. The original name for the town was San Antonio, but
settlers (originally from Schoenchen and Neu-Obermonjour) wanted the town named
after the villages in Russia from where they had emigrated. The compromise
was the village was named Schoenchen and the church was named for the patron
saint of the church in Neu-Obermonjour, St. Anthony.
One other difference with Schoenchen was
that the village cross was not used for religious services
like it was in the
other Volga colonies. The settlers used homemade wooden crosses on Sundays
and Holy days until the priests came to the area. The other villages had
a cross in each town at which the congregation gathered around for religious
services until the first churches were built.
Schoenchen’s first church was a very small
stone structure that was completed in 1880, but abandoned shortly
thereafter due to the foundation settling badly after a heavy
rain. It was replaced
by a frame structure in 1881. In 1900 they began building the present church,
and it was dedicated on June 13, 1901.
Photographs of Schoenchen
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St. Anthony Church |
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Sanctuary of St. Anthony Church |
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Altar of St. Anthony Church |
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Back of sanctuary of St. Anthony
Church |
Scouts |
Catherine | Liebenthal | Herzog | Munjor | Pfeifer
E-mail
me with questions or comments. Most
of the photographs on this Web site were taken by Patty Nicholas,
and acknowledgement
is given for any other photographs.
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