Sunday, May 19th, 2013
This article will be published in the March 26, 2013, edition of the New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung.
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
Like so many young men, Ernst Gruene had heard the exciting stories of Texas, a Republic in its own right. He was ready to leave Germany and take his mother with him. Freedom was the driving force in his decision; freedom from demands of the aristocracy, freedom from conscription, and freedom from excessive taxation. Little did he know that in 100 years, he would have a settlement here in Comal County with his family name.
Gruene was engaged to a young woman, but she broke off the engagement when she heard of his Texas plans. He consulted a “marriage broker” who made an appointment with Antoinette Kloepper. They married and soon after in 1845, the couple, his mother, and two servants left for Texas. After his stepbrothers bought out his family interests, he had ample funds. He carried about $5,000 in gold coins sewed in his vest. When he was almost washed overboard (gold can be quite heavy) he gave half of the coins to Antoinette who sewed them in the hem of her skirt.
They arrived on the coast and migrated to New Braunfels on May 15, 1846. So begins the amazing story of Gruene, Texas.
Ernst and Antoinette Gruene settled in Comaltown on Rock St. (building still standing) where three children were born. He continued to buy land. In 1872 he bought the land east of the Guadalupe River called Goodwin. This is where his second son, Henry D. would build a home and start a business and this would become Gruene.
Cotton was the #1 cash crop at that time and H.D. advertised for sharecroppers interested in growing cotton. Twenty to 30 families moved onto his land and each was assigned from 100 to 200 acres. Small three or four room farm houses were built for tenants and a school provided.
The first mercantile store in the area was built where tenants could buy groceries, implements, and hardware supplies and could buy them less expensively and on credit until the harvest came in. With the mercantile store, a lumberyard was set up. Because of the success of the store, Gruene constructed a large two story building (now an antique store). It held a working bank, holding mortgages and farm financing.
Soon a cotton gin was constructed powered by water pressure from the Guadalupe River. (This first gin burned down in 1922. It is the site of the present Grist Mill Restaurant.)
The IGN Railroad built a freight and passenger depot about a mile west of the community
in the 1880s and MKT built another in 1901, allowing Gruene to export cotton and grain and import goods for his mercantile store. What is now known as the Gruene Mansion became the home of Mr. and Mrs. H.D. Gruene in 1872. It started as a one story residence and a second story was added in 1886.
A dance hall with saloon was built in 1878. That was Gruene Hall, the communities social center. H.D. Gruene became Goodwin’s first postmaster in 1890 operating out of the mercantile store. This store was on the original north & southbound stagecoach route. Gruene became a stopping point for the Tarbox Stagecoach Line.
The settlement changed its name from Goodwin to Gruene as the whole town rotated around the Gruene family. When H.D. retired in 1910 he turned over the management to his two sons, retaining that Gruene tradition. His daughter resided in Gruene and eventually his parents did also. At one time Gruene had visions of subdividing but the project never got off the ground and when he died in 1920, thoughts of the development came to a halt.
By 1924 a Chrysler agency opened its doors across the street from the big mercantile store, the site of the first store.
The boll weevil stripped the cotton crop and the tenants were hit hard and many moved away. After recovery of the cotton crop, the Great Depression hit. This brought on a decline in cotton production and an end to the tenant system. A result was the closing of the mercantile store. The two railroad stations closed and the depots were destroyed. Various businesses inhabited the buildings, but the one business that never closed during these tumultuous times was the dance hall and saloon.
Gruene has a very prestigious historic designation; it has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Gruene Historic District, the only National Register Historic District in Comal County. In addition there are several buildings with Texas Historical Commission designations: Gruene’s Hall, Gruene Mansion, Erhardt Neuse House (now Gruene Haus Country Store), Original Gruene Mercantile (now Gruene General Store) and the H.D. Gruene Mercantile (now Gruene Antique Company). There are also two THC subject markers titled Gruene Cotton Gin (outside of the Grist Mill Restaurant) and Gruene. Additionally, there are City of New Braunfels historic designations on several properties. Gruene is a prime example of “Historic Tourism”.

H.D. Gruene Mercantile built in 1904. Patricia S. Arnold, artist.
Tags: 1845, 1872, 1878, 1880s, 1886, 1890, 1901, 1910, 1920, 1922, 1924, antique store, aristocracy, artist, bank, boll weevil, cash crop, Chrysler agency, City of New Braunfels, coast, Comal County, Comaltown, conscription, cotton, cotton gin, credit, dance hall, depot, Erhardt Neuse House, Ernst Gruene, farm financing, farm houses, Germany, gold coins, Goodwin, grain, Great Depression, Grist Mill Restaurant, groceries, Gruene, Gruene Antique Company, Gruene Cotton Gin, Gruene General Store, Gruene Hall, Gruene Haus Country Store, Gruene Historic District, Gruene Mansion, Gruene's Hall, Guadalupe River, H.D. Gruene Mercantile, hardware, harvest, Henry D. Gruene, historic designations, historic tourism, IGN Railroad, implements, Kloepper, lumberyard, marriage broker, May 15 1846, mercantile, MKT, mortgages, mother, National Register of Historic Places, New Braunfels, Original Gruene Mercantile, Patricia S. Arnold, postmaster, Rock Street, saloon, school, servants, sharecroppers, social center, stagecoach route, stepbrothers, Tarbox Stagecoach Line, taxation, Texas, Texas Historical Commission
Posted in Around the Sophienburg | Comments Off
Tuesday, November 29th, 2011
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
Don’t we all love the feeling of an old-fashioned Christmas? Once again, the Sophienburg has decorated for the Christmas season, but this year wins the prize.
The collection and exhibit ladies have put together a dollhouse display of 14 different dollhouses plus small doll collections.
Entering the foyer is a large dollhouse at one time belonging to the late Bill and Nan Dillon. The house is decorated with furniture representing the 1870s to present day. Furniture includes Bentwood chairs from the 1900s and handmade furniture. Immediately across from this house is a unique “garden home” from the 1800s. The table and chairs are set with a tiny tea set.
Also in the foyer, a nine-foot tree holds a collection of 90 plus small dolls from around the world. This collection was given to the Sophienburg years ago by the late Thekla Wright. She and her husband, Dr. Rennie Wright, collected these dolls in their vast travels.
Next is a three-storied Victorian style house built by Richard and Merlene Hitz for Allison Humphries, daughter of Mike and Linda Dietert. This house with its furnishings dating from 1990 to 2000 can be viewed from the front and the back.
Enter the Museum where there is a replica of an early cabin showing an old fashioned pioneer home. Christmas at the Waisenhaus (orphanage) of Rev. Louis and Luise Ervendberg has been recreated. For many years, the Timmermann sisters of Geronimo, who were descendants of the Ervendbergs, created this scene at Christmastime for many to see. Underneath the cedar tree decorated with candy and cookies is an elaborate Nativity at Bethlehem. The tree is surrounded by honeycomb rocks, which was a common practice in New Braunfels.
Inside the “Newspaper” display area is a folding paper dollhouse, a 1990 reproduction of an 1890 Victorian house belonging to archivist Keva Boardman. This dollhouse is easily moved from one place to another.
Perhaps the most unusual of all the displayed houses is in the museum’s “Pharmacy” section. It is a house made of a packing crate containing packages of coconut. After the packages were sold, the remaining crate revealed lithographs of the inside of a house. The crate, when stood on end, represented four rooms. Shelley Weidner owns the Coconut House, at one time belonging to twins Carmen (Lee) and Cosima (Langwell) Schnable.
In the “Saloon” is a model of the old Sophienburg Museum made by a student and in the “Barbershop” is a boy’s version of a dollhouse – a metal 1960s barn and silo from the Jerome Bodeman collection. Moving on to the “Doctor’s Office” you see a Dura-craft 1970s dollhouse made from a kit furnished with items from 1980s and ’90s.
In the 1960s, the trend in dollhouses was to make them of metal. One displayed belongs to Yvonne Rahe and one belongs to Meredeth Neiman. Plastic and metal furniture became popular at this time. In the “General Store” there is a plywood house made from a kit.
My dollhouse given to me in 1934 by my grandfather, builder A.C. Moeller, actually has electric lights (Christmas tree lights from the ’30s). The dollhouse was constructed by Richard Ikels, who was the cabinetmaker for him. Patterned in the bungalow style of the time, it contains arches separating the six rooms plus stucco walls and hardwood floors. The original wooden furniture remains in my memory only. Present furnishings were collected by Goff daughters and granddaughters.
Upon exiting the Museum, one sees a two-room 1920s house owned by Betty Stobaugh. The house was constructed by Betty’s father and all the furnishings were ordered from Germany.
Finally a wardrobe from the museum collection is filled with small dolls and next to it a feather tree holding a tiny baby doll collection.
The exhibit will be open all of December. The price is $5 per person; or you could come to The St. Nick celebration on Dec. 5 for $5 a family.

Sophie Paige Kelly, daughter of Cate Kelly and Ryan Kelly, admires the doll houses in the Sophienburg's exhibit. Michael and Bette Spain, as well as her great-grandmother, Marie Offerman, are active volunteers and supporters of the Sophienburg Museum and Archives.
Tags: 1800s, 1870s, 1890, 1900s, 1920s, 1934, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990, 1990s, 2000, A.C. Moeller, Allison Humphries, barn, Bentwood chairs, Betty Stobaugh, Bill Dillon, bungalow, cabin, cabinetmaker, Carmen (Lee) Schnabel, chairs, Christmas, Christmas tree lights, coconut, Cosima (Langwell) Schnable, dollhouses, dolls, Dr. Rennie Wright, Dura-craft, electric lights, folding paper dollhouse, furniture, garden home, Germany, Geronimo, handmade furniture, hardwood floors, honeycomb rocks, Jerome Bodeman, Keva Boardman, Linda Dietert, lithographs, Luise Ervendberg, Meredeth Neiman, Merlene Hitz, Mike Dietert, Nan Dillon, Nativity at Bethlehem, orphanage, packing crate, pioneer home, present day, Rev. Louis Ervendberg, Richard Hitz, Richard Ikels, Shelley Weidner, silo, Sophienburg Museum, stucco, table, tea set, Thekla Wright, Timmermann sisters, Victorian house, Victorian-style, Waisenhaus, Yvonne Rahe
Posted in Around the Sophienburg | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
By Myra Lee Goff
What is under about 100 feet of water in Canyon Lake? Or better still, what would still be there if the lake had not been constructed?
I started looking and found out: ranch land, farm land, trees, cemeteries, Guadalupe River and the site of two very small communities, Hancock and Cranes Mill.
Plans for the improvement of the Guadalupe River Water Shed by building a dam go as far back as 1929. A survey was made in 1935 and was authorized 10 years later. Four sites were considered, with the one chosen 21 miles from New Braunfels. Construction began in 1960, and by 1964 when the gates were finally closed, the lake began to fill.
With a shoreline of 80 miles, reservoir storage was estimated at 740,900 acre feet. Total cost of the project was around $20.2 million, with about $3 million more than projected due to road work and north and south access roads (source: Alton Rahe’s “History of Sattler and Mountain Valley School”).
Some 500,000 cubic yards of material were hauled to the dam site out of a rock quarry owned by Roland and Gladys Erben. In a Reflections tape made for the Sophienburg, they said holes were drilled with air hammers. The holes were filled with ammonium nitrate and set off with a dynamite charge, causing 5,000 pounds of rock blasting each time.
Now under water, the small settlement of Hancock would be there. It was named after the land’s original owner, John Hancock, who in 1851 was granted the land on the north bank of the Guadalupe River.
Eventually, Frank Guenther acquired the land and established a store and opened a Post Office in 1916. This Post Office was closed in 1934 and, according to Oscar Haas, the population of Hancock in 1940 was 10.
Frank Guenther was one of the children of Christian Guenther, one of the orphans raised by the Ervendbergs at the Weisenhaus (orphanage). Christian Guenther came from Germany with his parents and his three siblings in 1845. His mother and two siblings died aboard ship and his father died in Texas in 1847, leaving 8-year-old Christian as an orphan. As an adult, Christian settled in Sattler, raised a family of six children, one of which was Frank Guenther (source: Brenda Anderson Lindeman’s “Spring Branch”).
The other community under Canyon Lake would be Cranes Mill. James Crain established a cypress shingle mill in the 1850s along the Guadalupe. Notice the spelling which changed from “Crain” to “Crane” after the Civil War.
My neighbor Olive Marcelle Hofheinz, is the g-granddaughter of a very well-known man in the Cranes Mill area, the Rev. August Engel. Engel arrived in Texas in 1846 and came to New Braunfels where he married his wife and then moved to the area known as Luckenbach.
They began that General Merchandising Store that we know. It was his home and they named Luckenbach after their son-in-law.
The Engels moved to Cranes Mill in 1870, there opening a store and establishing a Post Office he ran for 31 years. But Engel had another calling: He was a circuit-riding preacher in the river valley, Rebecca Creek, Cranes Mill, Twin Sisters and sometimes in New Braunfels. His wife was a midwife. The two of them performed many services for all the people in the area.
In 1890 August Engel’s son, August W. Engel, took over the store and the Post Office and remained there until 1935. Marcelle Hofheinz remembers Cranes Mill Post Office.
The Post Office was in the center of the store and it was enclosed in fine mesh wire, protecting cornmeal and flour from mice.
When Canyon Dam was being constructed over a six-year period, my husband Glyn drove our family of three children to the North Park overlook and took slides at least three times a month. After that, we would go to the Roland Erben ranch to look for rocks. Rock hunting became a lifelong hobby for all of us.
As for Glyn’s slides, you can view them detailing the construction of Canyon Dam by visiting http://www.co.comal.tx. us/CCHC.htm.

What's under Canyon Lake? The remains of the Hancock store disappeared below the waters of Canyon Lake.
Tags: 1845, 1846, 1847, 1850s, 1851, 1870, 1890, 1916, 1929, 1934, 1935, 1940, 1960, 1964, Alton Rahe “History of Sattler and Mountain Valley School”, August W. Engel, Brenda Anderson Lindeman “Spring Branch”, Canyon Lake, cemeteries, Christian Guenther, circuit-riding preacher, Civil War, construction, Crain's Mill, Cranes Mill, cypress shingle mill, Ervendbergs, farm land, Frank Guenther, General Merchandising Store, Germany, Gladys Erben, Glyn Goff, Guadalupe River, Guadalupe River Watershed, Hancock, Hancock Store, James Crain, John Hancock, Luckenbach, Marcelle Hofheinz, New Braunfels. midwife, North Park, Olive Marcelle Hofheinz, oral history, orphanage, orphans, Oscar Haas, population, Post Office, ranch land, Rebecca Creek, Reflections, Rev. August Engel, rock blasting, rock hunting, Roland Erben ranch, Roland Erben, Sattler, slides, trees, Twin Sisters, Weisenhaus
Posted in Around the Sophienburg | Comments Off