All that remains of the former manor in Hruszowice is a 19th century burial chapel, now used as a Roman Catholic church dedicated to Our Lady of the Rosary, and a dozen or so old trees from the manor’s park. According to the census of September 30, 1921, the village was built up with 168 residential buildings, inhabited by 882 residents, of whom 453 declared Polish nationality and 429 declared Ruthenian nationality. In the Second Polish Republic, the village was in the Yavorivsky district of Lviv province. In March 1945, Ukrainian nationalists of the OUN-UPA murdered 10 Poles here, looting and burning their homesteads. Before World War II, Hruszowice was a large village, inhabited mostly by residents declaring the Greek-Catholic faith, who were displaced in 1945-1947.