Rek Hill, Texas, Fayette County. (original) (raw)

Rek Hill TX highway sign

The Rek Family were early settlers and the town was named for them. Hearing the name before seeing a sign leads one to believe it is "Wreck Hill" and that some monstrous accident crashed its way into the local history. There's a hill though and it's possible and even likely that Rek Hill has had their share of wrecks.

In 2000 the only businesses in Rek Hill were an antique shop and a feed store. The school has been part of the Fayetteville school system since the 1950s.

Rek Hill TX

History in a Pecan Shell

By Carolyn Heinsohn

Located three miles east of Fayetteville, the community was founded in 1883 by Ignac Rek and Jerry Roland, who purchased 50 acres of land.

Rek's children helped him clear the land, which had plentiful amounts of wild game plus abundant fish in Cummins Creek.

Other settlers moved in on the higher ridge, while the fertile creek bottom was used for farming. Some of the Czech families were the Knebliks, Orsaks, Kovars, Bacas, Zapalacs and Konvickas. Two German families were the Kurtzes and Muellers.

A school called Slovan-Bordovice was built in 1895 on Kovar and Kneblik land. Bordovice, Moravia was the village of origin of some of the settlers, so the community was also called Bordovice by some.

Paul Kneblik built a store in 1892; a cotton gin was built in 1895 by Louis Mueller, and in 1908, John Rek, the son of Ignac Rek, built a blacksmith shop and helped build a store for his brother, Ignac, Jr., whose daughter, Betty, and husband, Ernest Watson, purchased the store in the mid-1940s and operated it for a number of years.

A few other businesses have been operated there throughout the years, with the last being an antique store.

Rek Hill Texas store As an antique store in 2001 TE photo, 2001

Rek Hill TX Store 1936

Rek Hill Store in 1936
Photo courtesy Annie Mae Janisch, submitted by Carolyn Heinsohn

Rek Hill TX Store 1944

Rek Hill TX Store 2011

Rek, Texas

by David Knape

There was a town
that was called Rek,
it's a ghost town now
in sad neglect,
its name a joke
I would suspect,
there weren't no wrecks
at all in Rek.

*The town was actually Rek Hill, but I used my poetic license.

©

d.knape

Rek Hill TX  - Kovar and Rek Hill Road signgs

Rek Hill TX - Mars Hill Deliverance Tabernacle Church

Rek Hill TX  gate with cattle guard

Rek Hill TX - Zapalac Feed Mill

Rek Hill TX - Zapalac Feed Mill

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