News for North Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Nearly 125 Years Old, Westphalia’s Church Of The Visitation Lives On After Fire

Catholic Diocese of Austin
The Church of the Visitation before fire destroyed it on Monday.

Earlier this week, one of Central Texas' area's most significant landmarks was destroyed in a fire. No one was injured or killed. But when Westphalia's Church of the Visitation burned down, it left a lot of hurt nonetheless.

In tiny Zabcikville, some 90 minutes north of Austin, you’re bound to run into Green's Sausage House. It's been around since the late 1940s, and it's a popular spot for locals.

When I walked into the restaurant earlier this week, it didn't take long to learn what was on the minds of people eating there, like Daniel Wilde.

"In just a matter of minutes, it was totally engulfed," Wilde says about the recent fire that destroyed a nearly 125-year-old Catholic church on Monday in Westphalia, another tiny town six miles north of Zabcikville.

Credit Jill Ament / Texas Standard
/
Texas Standard
The rubble of the Church of the Visitation, after it was destroyed by fire on Monday. In the background is the church's rectory, still intact.

Wilde has lived in this area his entire life. Four generations of his family went to that church.

"Local people built that church up, so it's very hard to see that go," he says.

Westphalia's Church of the Visitation was a large Catholic church built by German immigrants in the late 1890s. The church was hard to miss: it towered over the vast rows of Central Texas cornfields.

Made with stones hauled by train and buggy from a town near La Grange, and timber from Waco, the church measured 120 feet long and 52 feet wide. Two large, copper-domed bell towers, both adorned with crosses, rose above each side of the sanctuary. Inside the sanctuary were 20 stained-glass windows from Germany through which light filtered and illuminated the hand-carved pews, an altar and a towering pipe organ.

Monday’s fire destroyed all of those features.

"You drive through … the church used to be there, you know? And those of us that’ve been here this long, we’ll always remember it as being there and what it looked like," Wilde says.

When I visited the site of where the Church of the Visitation used to be, on Tuesday, what was left was a pile of charred and smoldering rubble. Fire crews and investigators were sifting through the remains, looking for clues as to what started the fire.

Jerry Loden is the Westphalia Volunteer Fire Department's assistant fire chief.

"My sister-in-law was out at my mother-in-law's farm and actually saw smoke coming out of the south tower at about 7:55 a.m., and that's when she called me. And then, of course, I saw the smoke 'cause you can see it from all the way around," Loden says.

Loden says the first firefighters arrived at the church around 8 a.m.

"Obviously, a lot of lumber, dry wood and the wind was just really blowing hard, and so it became apparent pretty quick we weren’t going to have enough resources quick enough to be able to save the structure. So we had to, more or less, focus on saving the rectory where the priest lives, and we were able to at least save that," Loden says.

Loden is a member of the Church of the Visitation. The congregation is still very active, and comprises about 500 people from the area. They were planning on holding a 125th-anniversary celebration next May.

Credit Jill Ament / Texas Standard
/
Texas Standard
The church's historic schoolhouse, across the street from the sanctuary, was untouched by the fire.

"It’s hard to put into words, but it's a feeling of loss. Living just a stone's throw away, to see the steeple's not there, it's surreal. I was married here to my high school sweetheart 34 years ago," Loden says.

The church's historic schoolhouse across the street was spared from the fire. Today, it's a museum, and Loden says there are likely thousands of photos stored there of people who were married at the church.

He also says every year, Westphalia holds a picnic and homecoming event when thousands of descendants of parishioners show up.

This week, descendants like Rosemary Clark and her daughter came out to see what was left of the church. Clark's parents were baptized and married in the church. Her father is buried at the cemetery across the street.

"It was really pretty 'cause you’d go to the cemetery, you know – I'd go to the cemetery and put flowers out, and they always had the bells. That was really peaceful; so pretty," Clark says.

Clark lives in Waco and her daughter lives in Austin, but she says they come back to the church a couple of times a year. It's a similar story for other visitors, like Debbie McQueen.

"It's like coming home, and now, there's – the home is not there, but the memories are still there. It's just going to be very much missed. And believe me, it will come back again," McQueen says.

McQueen's right: Church leaders are already discussing plans to rebuild the church to look exactly like it used to. And some say it'll be bigger and better than ever.