Westphalia National Historic District

Westphalia National Historic District

  • <p>Church of the Visitation (Larry D. Moore CC BY-SA 3.0)</p> <p>Church painted white with grey decorative accent on top, with two bell towers and domes on either side of building</p>
  • <p>Church construction (Church of the Visitation)</p> <p>Church under construction, framing visible</p>
  • <p>One of the church’s many stained glass windows, installed 1914 (Church of the Visitation)</p> <p>Stained glass window showing two women on a staircase with potted lilies</p>
  • <p>Westphalia Little School, established 1896 (Church of the Visitation)</p> <p>Building with windows across front and a decoratively painted pediment above entrance, swing set in front yard</p>
  • <p>Westphalia School, 1937 (Church of the Visitation)</p> <p>Large group of students posing for a photo in front of two storey Westphalia School in 1937</p>
  • <p>St. Mary’s Cemetery, dedicated 1895 (Church of the Visitation)</p> <p>Large monument of Jesus on the cross in a cemetery</p>

In 1879, a handful of German-Texans moved from Frelsburg to western Falls County in search of land. The settlers, many of whom were Catholic, named their new town Westphalia – after the region in Germany. Their legacy remains in the Church of the Visitation, the Little School, and the cemetery. Visitors can also see several historic frame commercial buildings, a cotton gin complex, and historic farmsteads.

But if you’ve heard of Westphalia, chances are it’s for another reason. Fiddler Cotton Collins first heard the catchy waltz in Germany during World War II, bringing it back to play in the halls across Texas with his band, the Lone Star Playboys. It was after a show at Westphalia Hall in 1946 that hall manager B.J. Lignau suggested calling it the “Westphalia Waltz” – a tune that became a hit on Dallas’s Blue Bonnet Records in 1947.

Westphalia National Historic District

  • 35 miles south of Waco on State Highway 320, Westphalia, TX
  • National Register of Historic Places