We hope you will take a moment to read this short history of the Machu family's cemetery. While today burials at Machu Cemetery are not restricted to descendants of Pavel and Rozina (Trlica) Machu, we hope that you will join us in honoring their memory by preserving the quiet dignity of this sacred place that remains very special to the Machu family.
It is with this intention that we have written these rules and regulations for governing the cemetery.
Adopted by Board of Directors January 19th, 2024
In accordance with the by-laws of the Machu Cemetery Association (the "Association"), the following Rules and Regulations have been adopted as a guide for the use and management of the Machu Cemetery and surrounding grounds. The rules and regulations will help protect all who have an interest here. All owners of interment plots, visitors, and contractors performing work on the property are subject to these rules and regulations together with all amendments or alterations as shall be adopted by the Board of Directors of the Machu Cemetery Association from time to time.
A plot measures 8 ft. x 3 ft. and 2 ft. space on either side.
The Machu Cemetery grid is designed with rows of 10 sites consisting of 2 plots each. Requests for "squeezing in between" - even if it is "just an urn" - will not be granted.The Board of Directors strongly recommends using one of the following funeral homes as they are familiar with the Cemetery and its requirements:
Plot owners and their heirs are responsible for not only arranging the professional installation of identifying markers erected on their plot - including headstones, monuments, plaques - but, as well, bear full responsibility for the long-term condition and care of such structures.
The Machu Cemetery Association, its Board of Directors, and its groundskeepers bear no responsibility for repair, leveling, or other maintenance of such structures nor any responsibility for bodily injury caused to any persons resulting from such disrepair or unlevel conditions.
The Board of Directors reserve the right to:
The Machu Family Cemetery is a Texas Historic Cemetery (2011) dating back to 1883.
In that year the family's Czech patriarch Pavel Machu who had arrived in the United States in 1871 provided a burial location on his property to a stranger whose widow could find no other cemetery willing to accept his remains. A decade later the first family relation was buried in the two-acre parcel Machu had set aside.
It is believed that Pavel Machu purchased his original 60 acres in rural Williamson County five miles southeast of Granger in 1880 for 50 cents an acre. Over time their burgeoning "Machu" homestead was commonly recognized as its own community east of Granger and is reflected as such on early Williamson County maps .Pavel and Rozina were pillars in the Czech institutions of the area and contributed both land and financial aid toward the building of those institutions in Granger -- including the Czech-Moravian Brethren Church, the Moravia schoolhouse, and a local lodge of the Czech benevolent insurance agency known as SPJST. Their children and grandchildren would carry on this active participation in the community.
The construction of the Laneport Dam on the north end of the San Gabriel River in Williamson County that would, de facto, create the new Lake Granger meant a host of small farms that had been handed down in local Czech families for years would soon be underwater - including the Machu homestead, site of the old Moravia School, and several old cemeteries. The Machu, Beard, and Allison family cemeteries and that of the old Friendship community would all have to be relocated.
In 1976 the United States Corps of Engineers gave the Cemetery association a 3-acre tract east of Granger and paid for the removal and reburial of the inhabitants of these four cemeteries and oversaw the difficult task of carefully transferring the monument stones. G. Truett Beard and Albin E. Machu (Pavel's grandson) were instrumental in assisting with the work of relocating this group of cemeteries to their new location and would be honored in 1981 by the U.S. Corps of Engineers for their dedicated service to historical preservation.
In 2011 the Texas Historical Commission designated the Machu Cemetery an Historic Texas Cemetery. This designation is an official state recognition of family and community graveyards that encourages preservation of historic cemeteries.
In 2021 the Texas descendants of Pavel and Rozina (Trlica) Machu proudly celebrated their sesquicentennial and continue to take great pride in the burial site of their ancestors. Although today burials at Machu Cemetery are not restricted to descendants of Pavel and Rozina (Trlica) Machu, we hope that you will join us in honoring their memory and preserving the quiet dignity of this sacred place that remains very special to the Machu family.
It is with this intention that we have written these rules and regulations for governing the cemetery.