In 1931, Rača survived a catastrophic flood, which is why the state moved it outside the embankment in 1934 to the particularly flat terrain on which it remains today.
[1] At the site of Bela Crkva, about 1 kilometre south of the center of today's village, there is a famous Roman military settlement from the first century.
Many items such as metal bowls, armour and swords are stored in the Museum of Srem in Sremska Mitrovica.
This property was first owned by Hungarian nobles from the Einard family, then by Somakoš Kukojevacki, Ivan Morović and finally by Stephen Báthory.
In the first half of the 14th century, Elizabeth, the wife of the Hungarian King Charles I, rebuilt the abbey of St. Nicholas and handed it to the Franciscans for the monastery.
In the second half of the 14th century, after the death of King Lajos I or Louis I (son of Charles I), records were kept of the "Royal Town of Rača at the mouth of the Drina River in the Sava".
When Bosnia fell under the Turkish yoke, Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus went on a campaign against the Turks and stayed in Rača for two days.
Evliya Çelebi wrote about Rača: “It was a beautiful city on the banks of the Sava River, laid on high, flat terrain covered with greenery.
The unhealthy facility and the poor food made everyone feel sick Not long after, the object was bought by a merchant from Osijek who turned it into a brewery.
Between the two world wars, there was a municipality in Rača with a post office, telegraph and telephone, as well as a gendarmerie station and financial administrative control bureau.
The head of the English military mission also visited Sremska Rača and described in the book "Partisan Pictures" the suffering of the population there.