Gyomaendrőd is located in the Great Hungarian Plain upon the river Körös, 177 km (110 mi) southeast from Budapest.
[4] Medieval towns were ruined due to the Ottoman wars, native Hungarian population fled from the area.
[4] The Roman Catholic Church of Saint Emeric (Szent Imre) in Endrőd was built in 1804 in Late Baroque style.
Its first foundation stones were laid on 6 November 1798 as the old church in the Templom-zug was too close to the Körös River (only 8 paces away) thus it was in constant danger of flooding.
The foundation stones of the current church were laid on 1 May 1877 according to the design of Alajos Hauszmann, professor of the University of Technology.
With the plans there were documents enclosed conveying information on the erstwhile circumstances of the era and disclosing the names and data of religious and secular magistrates.
The church was built in neo-Renaissance style and the high altar picture depicts the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
[6] In 1830 the Town of Gyoma resettled Germans next to the Hungarian population in order to rise to the rank of a market-town and thus have the right to open a market.
The churches and schools received free building sites from the squire and also land to be cultivated to support themselves in the Német-zug.
One plaque is erected for the memory of the slave-laborers deported to the Soviet Union and of those fallen in World War II.
Visitors have a chance to see books, ball invitations, calendars, letterheads, posters, shares, early photographs, and historic documents all originally printed at Kner in the exhibitions.
The imposing street facade of the house represents the classicist architectural style of the urbanizing peasant taste.
[7] The farmhouse belongs to the Great Plain, Central Hungarian house type, including the front and side porch versions.
The entrance to the granary (grain and threshing chamber) also opens from the side porch, from which the home bar was separated.
The outdoor pools, enriched with imposing trees, provide both shaded and sunny areas for pleasant relaxation.
[9] The medicinal waters of the thermal bath are excellent for the treatment of chronic illnesses such as rheumatic and articular diseases, neuralgia or sciatica.