2017-5 Remembrances Special Edition1
City of Schertz
REMEMBRANCES Special Edition 2017-5
Prepared by: Schertz Historical Preservation Committee
Source: Manuscript, Patricia Ezell, “Bracht-Stapper Farmstead, Cemetery and Jacal”
“Jacal” Along The Cibolo – Schertz/Cibolo Settler Connections
In the early months of 2017, Patricia Ezell, member of the San Antonio Conservation Society’s
Historic Farm and Ranch Complexes Committee, and a few of her colleagues visited the
homestead property of what is commonly known as the Bracht-Stapper homestead. The site is
currently situated on property owned by the Cibolo Creek Municipal Authority (CCMA) at the
Authority’s Odo J. Riedel Regional Sewerage Treatment Plant off Schaefer Road. The property
sits along the south banks of Cibolo Creek at a spot almost one-quarter mile due south of the
old Starlight Drive-Inn Theater along FM 78. The visit prompted Ms. Ezell to begin a research
effort to learn more about the site’s history and to document the existing landmarks situated
on the property. One such landmark is a very old (origin date unknown) home referred to,
because of its construction methods, as a “Jacal” home. Another landmark is a cemetery that
sits close by the Jacal home that contains grave markers identifiable with four early Schertz-
Cibolo settler families.
The term “Jacal” is a Spanish term that refers to a house built as were huts in Mexico and the
southwestern United States. A Jacal home is usually a rectangular structure with structural
components that include a thatched roof and walls made of upright poles or sticks covered and
chinked with mud or clay. The below photographs shows the Jacal home being discussed.
Photos by Dean Weirtz
Dr. Felix Bracht is thought to have been the owner of this Jacal home. The interior of the home
is divided into three sections with open doorway passage between each section. There are two
windows on each side of the house. The roof is constructed of hand-hewn wooden shingles,
partially covered with galvanized tin. The house is badly deteriorated and often exposed to
flood waters from Cibolo Creek during flooding events.
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Situated close to the Jacal is a family cemetery most often referred to as the Bracht-Stapper-
Rhodius Cemetery based on the different family gravestones that are found on the cemetery
grounds. At the time of the first internment (Josephine Bracht - wife of Dr. Felix Bracht- death
February 6, 1876), the land was owned by Dr. Bracht. Dr. Bracht had purchased the land in
1853 from Joseph Schertz, first settler and patriarch of the Schertz family. In 1901, Julian
Stapper, son of Felicitas and Edward Stapper, (Felicitas being the daughter of Dr. Bracht and his
wife Josephine), inherited the property. Julian Stapper quitclaimed the property to the John
Handcock Mutual Life Insurance Company on October 30, 1935. After several ownership
transfers, the Malcolm N. McEachern family sold the property to CCMA, that now owns it. The
gravesites are marked by tombstones that reflect the following internments:
Felix Bracht, b: February 14, 1808, d: December 17, 1882
Josephine Bracht, b: March 26, 1809, d: February 6, 1876
Edward Stapper, b: November 30, 1830, d: November 19, 1899
Felicitas Stapper, b: May 3, 1836, d: February 8, 1916
Edward C. Rhodius, b: July 30, 1849, d. March 17, 1917
Bertha Rhodius, b: June 26, 1856, d: May 21, 1933
Valeska Rhodius, b: January 18, 1884, d: February 16, 1900
Felicitas Rhodius, :b: November 6, 1881, d: November 8, 1885
Felix Brotze, b :October 3, 1879, d: April 9, 1916
“Hugo-Felix” –Small tombstone gravesite with only the name and no dates; setting beside the
other two Rhodius children’s tombstones.
Photographs of the Bracht-Stapper-Rhodius Cemetery site appear below:
Photos by Dean Weirtz The Jacal and its nearby cemetery are today situated within the city boundaries of Schertz,
Texas. Both are historic landmark properties that serve as markers of the earliest days of
Schertz-Cibolo settlement. The families identified with early ownership of the property were
first generation settler-pioneers whose labors converted harsh and desolate landscapes into
productive farms.
The research product of Patricia Ezell has been published in a thirty-eight page manuscript that
has been included in the historical archives of the Schertz Public Library. That manuscript offers
important background on the families resting in the Bracht-Stapper-Rhodius Cemetery. The
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Schertz community is greatly indebted to Ms. Ezell for her contribution to the advancement of
the story of our city’s historical development.