Černík Stories
A collection of stories passed down through generations of the Černíky familiy.

Our Family Stories

From farm life in Nebraska to World War II adventures, these stories capture the spirit, humor, and resilience of the Černík family across generations.

1938 Car Accident Article
Cernik Kids Car Accident

Cernik Kids Car Accident

Those were the days. Kids need to get to school after they've done their chores on the farm. But dad and mom are still doing work, as they will do all day. No problem, let your 14 year-old son drive himself and his 10 year-old brother and his 8 year-old sister in the family truck.

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Ray Cernik WW2 Medals
Ray Cernik WW2 medals

Ray's WWII Story

"The Greatest Generation," that's what they are called. And it's well deserved. The sacrifices, both on the front lines and back in the homeland. This story is the story of Ray Cernik —father and uncle— from the day he enlisted to the day he returned to civilian life and got married.

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Marie by the chicken coop in ~1935
Marie by the chicken coop in ~1935

Marie's Chicken Tornado

No, this is NOT an early version of Sharknado. The story plays out sort of like a movie. Only daughter. Farm. Pet chicken. Tornado…

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Frank B Cernik
Frank B. Cernik

Roller Skating Passion

Frank seemed destined to create businesses from scratch. And Roller Skating was a childhood pastime that he could relate to and felt there were others too. This is his story of how he saw the door to being a farmer closed while the door to being an entrepreneur opened.

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Ray and Elaine 65th Anniversary
Ray and Elaine - 65 Years

65 Years of Marriage

65 years. That takes a LOT of love, a LOT of work and a LOT of friendship.

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Ray Cernik in his WWII hat
Ray Cernik in his WWII, 6th Armored Division hat

Advice to Live by AND a Recipe To Boot

One of Ray's granddaughters was having a small set back with a job hunt and such. Grandpa Ray reached out with some advice from a man who's "been around the block".

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The original barn being moved
The original barn is being moved off the property

"Oh The Memories" in That Barn

The pitchfork sticking through Jimmy's foot. Dave climbing the stack of bales to come face to face with a "Bobcat." The alfalfa dust so thick it was hard to see. The pigeon coop attached to its side. And on and on.

But… she was saved and lives on approaching 100 years old.

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The house Frank and Bessie built
The house Frank and Bessie built

The Frank and Bessie Černík Farm

The farm played a huge role in our lives. The things we were able to do that other "city" kids did not get to. But also all the family holiday gatherings, our grandmother's incredible cooking skills and just being kids in a "wide open space". The farm was/is 200 acres.

These are our farm stories.

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Coming Soon
More stories coming soon

More Stories Coming Soon

We're always uncovering new stories and memories from our family history. Check back soon for more tales from the Černík family.

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Comments

2 comment(s) on ""

Cousin Steve October 4, 2019 at 11:25 pm

Here is a small story for you… On our combined farms east of Wahoo (ours, Frank's, Grandpa Frank's, Marie's and Greatgrandma Marie's), we primarily grew corn, wheat, milo, alfalfa and occasionally oats. I'm not sure about the delineation of whose acreage was actually whose, but it was all farmed as one. Of course, we rotated the fields every couple years. What was once corn became wheat and so on. Some acreage always remained as pasture for our cattle though, and not rotated. At that time I had never even heard of soy beans. We had no irrigation then either. I learned to drive when I was about 11 in the old Ford grain truck going alongside either Dad or Grandpa in the combine as they emptied it's bin into the truck during wheat harvest.


I was 13 when we moved off of our farm into Fremont (1962). Ray, Frank and two partners, Ed Lilly and Merlin Flanders started Victory Motors at the west end of Fremont on Military Ave. Originally it was just Merlin's Victory Marine store that sold and serviced boats, motors, ski ropes, etc. Expanded, with four partners they then also sold Ramblers, Jeeps and Yamaha motorcycles as well as a Standard Oil gas station and used car lot. Profits must have been slim, though, as we moved to Merritt Island, Florida when I was 16 (1965). Dad (Ray) went to work for General Electric on the Apollo program, but that's another story.

Steve Cernik


Scott Cernik October 19, 2023 at 10:28 pm

Great story Steve. Brings back alot of great memories.