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Frank Zastoupils grandfather journeyed from Bohemia in Austria-Hungary
to Russia when the Czarina Catherine the Great offered Russian land and
religious freedom to new settlers. The Zastoupil family dwelled in a village
surrounded by fellow Bohemians. They farmed side by side in their new
country, danced polkas and waltzes, sang with great passion, and shared
joyful social lives.
The community began to grow, and soon the tiny Bohemian village of Chechoshrad
was nearly 700 strong. With boys growing into men, and men starting families,
many young Bohemians were looking for land to farm, and a place to raise
their children. But the tracts of land handed down to sons by fathers
were shrinking as the population grew.
For the second time in less than 50 years, The Zastoupils emigrated in
search of land. Frank Zastoupil arrived at Ellis Island on November 25,
1888. From New York, Frank and his family headed west, following the rumors
of Free Land. They settled in Dickinson, North Dakota, where Franks
father set up the Zastoupil Homestead.
The Zastoupils were no different from any other North Dakota homesteader.
They lived in a sod home, struggled through raging prairie blizzards,
and fought with the land to produce what they needed to survive. They
proved themselves to be true Americans.
When interviewed by a government worker in 1940, 67-year-old Frank spoke
with sentiment of his Bohemian heritage and his memories of the Old Country,
but he also spoke of America. He had struggled with the land for years,
and after 50 years of residency, Frank grew to love it and call it his
own.
When asked his opinion about America entering World War II, the retired
farmer answered, To defend America I would even go myself and help
fight. It is my only country. Although never forgetting his Bohemian
heritage, Frank Zastoupil was proud of his new home.
Albert Oukrok and his Czech family settled in Dickinson around the same
time as the Zastoupils. Albert and his wife Mary labored as homesteaders,
developing their small homestead into a successful 560-acre farm. They
raised five English and Czech-speaking children, were active members of
their local Western Czech Brotherhood United lodge, and sacrificed much
for their new country.
They sacrificed their sweat and blood to the land, and lost their son
Theodore in service to America during World War I.
In 1931, Albert and Mary traveled to Europe with a group called the Gold
Star Mothers. In France they visited World War I battlefields and prayed
at the tomb of the unknown soldier for their son, whose body was never
returned home. They mourned for lost sons with hundreds of other parents,
and celebrated their pride as Americans as they were presented with American
flags and were addressed by General Pershing.
Though faced with many trials and tribulations, the Oukroks and the Zastoupils
never surrendered to the prairie. They worked for a new home, and found
their home in America, and more specifically, in North Dakota. Though
proud of their Bohemian heritage, they were prouder yet to have succeeded
in becoming Americans.
In his 1940 WPA interview, Albert was asked whether he would immigrate
to the US if he could live his life again. Albert replied, We have
an affection for the land of our birth, but our adopted country (is) the
United States. We are...glad that we have not deserted these prairies...that
seemed so desolate.
By Ann Erling
Sources:
North Dakota Ethnic History: Plains Folk. Sherman, Thorson,
Henke, Kloberdanz, Pedeliski, Wilkins.
WPA Ethnic History Files.
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