Friday, March 6, 2026

The City Hall and Public Market of 1851

 When Brownsville Built Its Market Square

The City Hall and Public Market of 1851

In the earliest years of Brownsville, before paved streets, electric lights, or brick storefronts lined the avenues, the young frontier town needed a place where its civic life could gather. Trade, law, news, and community all required a center. That center would become Market Square.

The story begins with the town’s founder, Charles Stillman, who donated land in Block 87 for a public square. His gift came with an important condition: the land was to remain a public space in perpetuity, used for civic purposes such as a public market or public gatherings. If the city ever abandoned that purpose, the property would revert to the heirs of the grantor. The clause ensured that the square would always remain a place belonging to the people of Brownsville.

In the early 1850s, Brownsville was a growing trading town on the Rio Grande. Wagons arrived daily from nearby ranches. Traders crossed the river from Matamoros. Merchants shipped goods through Brazos Santiago. The town needed a regulated place where food could be bought and sold.

At first the market operated in a temporary building owned by Felix Maxan near the ferry. But the city soon realized that a permanent market house would better serve the community.

Building the Market House

On January 20, 1851, the Brownsville City Council ratified a contract to construct a public market building on the square. The contractors were John F. McDonough and Adolphus Sueseneau, who agreed to erect the structure that would house the new municipal market.

Construction moved quickly, though not without challenges. At one point the contractors reported delays caused by a shortage of lime, a key material needed for mortar and plaster. Despite the obstacles, by the spring of 1851 the lower story of the building was nearly complete.

The city council now faced an important question: how would the new market operate?

Their answer would transform the square into the economic center of Brownsville.

May 1851 — A Market Is Born

On May 3, 1851, the council ordered that the stalls and stands in the new City Market be numbered and sold at public auction to the highest bidder. Any stalls not sold would be rented by the Market Master to applicants.

This decision created a structured municipal marketplace. Instead of scattered vendors selling goods along the streets, Brownsville now had a regulated commercial center where trade took place every morning.

Two weeks later, the council announced that the public market would officially open in the new building.

Rules of the Market

To maintain order and protect buyers, the city adopted ordinances regulating how the market would operate.

Butchers were required to present the hides and ears of all animals they slaughtered so that the Market Master could record the marks and brands. This helped prevent the sale of stolen livestock.

Vendors who violated the rules could be fined between five and twenty dollars—a significant penalty at the time.

The ordinances also listed the fees charged for animals brought to market:

  • Beeves: 37½ cents each

  • Calves under twelve months: $1

  • Sheep: 50 cents

  • Hogs: 12½ cents

  • Deer: 12½ cents

  • Turtles over one hundred pounds: 25 cents

  • Turtles under one hundred pounds: 12½ cents

The list offers a vivid glimpse of frontier life along the Gulf Coast. Large sea turtles brought in from the coast were a common food source and appeared regularly in the Brownsville market.

The market hours were strictly regulated as well.

From June 1 to November 15 the market operated from daylight until 9 a.m.
From November 15 to June 1 it remained open until 10 a.m.

The early closing time ensured that most trading occurred during the cool hours of the morning.

A Morning in Market Square, 1851

Imagine a typical morning in Brownsville during the summer of 1851.

4:30 a.m. — Before Sunrise

The town is quiet except for the creaking of wagon wheels approaching from the countryside. Ranchers drive small herds of cattle or hogs toward the square. Farmers bring carts loaded with vegetables, melons, and baskets of eggs. Fishermen arriving from the coast unload fish and occasionally enormous sea turtles.

Lanterns flicker as vendors prepare their stalls.

5:00 a.m. — Daybreak

As the first light spreads across the Rio Grande valley, the market begins to stir. The Market Master arrives to oversee the opening of the stalls.

Butchers present the hides and ears of slaughtered animals for inspection so the brands can be recorded. This small ritual protects ranchers and reassures buyers that the meat was lawfully obtained.

6:00 a.m. — The Market in Full Swing

Now the square is crowded.

Women bargain for vegetables and fresh meat. Children carry baskets for their families. Traders from across the river mingle with local residents. The air smells of fresh beef, cut vegetables, and damp earth.

Money changes hands quickly as the Market Master collects fees and ensures the rules are followed.

Nearby merchants watch the activity from their shops, knowing that the morning market draws customers into the heart of town.

8:30 a.m. — The Final Rush

Late arrivals hurry through the square before closing time. The best cuts of meat are already gone. Vendors call out the last of their produce.

Carts creak away toward nearby streets and ranch roads.

9:00 a.m. — Market Closed

By ordinance the market closes. Vendors clean their stalls, and the square grows quiet again.

But the day’s business has already set the rhythm of the town.

More Than a Market

Over the years the buildings on Market Square expanded and evolved.

The complex eventually housed:

  • the city’s public market

  • City Hall

  • a police station

  • a fire station equipped with an alarm bell

Later a bell was mounted in the dome of the building to signal emergencies.

The structure endured several reconstructions, including rebuilding after the devastating hurricane of 1866. Each generation reshaped the buildings, but the square remained the center of civic life.

The Heart of Brownsville

Market Square quickly became the busiest place in the young town. Wagons arrived daily from surrounding ranches. Merchants from Mexico crossed the river to trade. Nearby businesses flourished, including hide yards such as the Fernandez yard not far from the square.

Government announcements were made there. Public meetings were held there. In emergencies the bell called the community together.

Trade, politics, and daily life all converged in the same place.

More than 170 years after Charles Stillman donated the land, the square still serves the same purpose: a public space where the life of Brownsville gathers.

The buildings have changed. The wagons are gone.

But the square remains.



A surprisingly good working map of the 1851 market from the ordinances and the typical design of frontier market houses. It won’t be perfect, but it will be historically reasonable and very useful for readers.

The key clues come from the document:

  • the Market House building sat in the center of Block 87

  • stalls and stands were numbered

  • meat sales were regulated separately from other goods

  • the Market Master supervised inspection

  • livestock and wagons clearly arrived into the open square

That tells us the market functioned as a building + surrounding open yard system, not just stalls inside the structure.

Below is the most likely layout.


Probable Layout of Brownsville Market Square (1851)

Center: Market House Building

The two-story building with arches served several functions.

Ground floor likely contained:

  • meat stalls

  • butcher tables

  • weighing space

  • inspection area

Upper floor likely used for:

  • city council

  • public meetings

  • administrative offices

The arches allowed people to walk through the building from multiple directions.


Likely Vendor Zones Around the Building

North Side of Square

Livestock Arrival Area

This is where ranchers probably drove animals before slaughter.

Animals likely included:

  • cattle

  • sheep

  • hogs

  • deer

Reasons:

  • easier to keep livestock away from food stalls

  • wagons could unload here

  • inspectors could examine hides and brands.


East Side of Square

Vegetable and Produce Vendors

Farmers selling:

  • beans

  • squash

  • peppers

  • onions

  • melons

  • eggs

These vendors usually used tables or ground baskets rather than permanent stalls.


South Side of Square

Fish and Coastal Goods

Likely products:

  • fish

  • oysters

  • shrimp

  • sea turtles

These vendors often worked from carts or wooden tables.

Because seafood spoiled quickly, they were often located near wagon access so goods could move quickly.


West Side of Square

General Trade & Small Merchants

Possible goods:

  • bread

  • cheese

  • dried goods

  • spices

  • coffee

  • cloth

This side of the square may have blended into permanent storefronts on nearby streets.


Position of the Market Master

The Market Master likely stood inside or just under the central arches of the Market House.

That position allowed him to:

  • inspect animals

  • collect fees

  • supervise stalls

  • enforce rules.


Wagon Routes Through the Square

The illustration you shared (Frank Leslie’s engraving) shows something important:

wagons passing directly through the square.

So the market likely had two wagon paths crossing the plaza, something like this:

      LIVESTOCK ARRIVAL
           (North)

     cattle & ranch wagons


 PRODUCE       MARKET HOUSE        GENERAL GOODS
 vendors      (meat stalls)         merchants


      FISH / COASTAL TRADE
             (South)

Wagons entered → unloaded → exited without clogging the square.


What a Visitor Would See

Arriving at dawn, a visitor would likely encounter:

  • cattle tied near wagons

  • butchers working under the arches

  • produce baskets on the east side

  • fish vendors near carts

  • townspeople circulating around the building.

The bell in the Market House could even signal opening hours or emergencies later on.

Market Square was:

  • a food distribution center

  • a livestock checkpoint

  • a municipal tax system

  • a social gathering place

all in one location.


1853 1101 Letter to Charles Stllman from George H. Reynolds

A letter written from New York in November of 1853 reminds us that Charles Stillman was not merely a frontier merchant. While managing warehouses and freight along the Rio Grande, he was also receiving reports from financial contacts in New York concerning investment, machinery, and the tightening money markets of the eastern banks.

📜 Letter to Charles Stillman

From: George H. Reynolds
Place: New York
Date: November 1, 1853


Clean Reading (modernized transcription)

New York, Nov 1st 1853

Dear Sir,

I presume there can now be no objection on the part of the Mayor to have your prop to the erection of the Pier present. The $2000 still unpaid of his first calculation I was very much surprised that the Mayor did not at once concede this amount as appropriate.

The addition for two thousand dollars was complete. I have placed my possession accordingly. The two thousand the Mayor got from me to advance to make up the price of Mr. Peck’s acquisition for $8000, since that this $2000 completed the amount he had placed in your hands.

If this is so please perhaps the matter will be present once the Mayor has arrived.

The machinery is getting on finely — a pile of heavy engines still require some further time for completion.

I make a money market report as it has been known since ’37 — the Banks have contracted $3,000,000 in 12 weeks.

Yours truly,
George H. Reynolds


What This Letter Reveals

This letter is fascinating because it touches three different worlds at once.


1️⃣ Stillman had financial ties in New York

This shows that Stillman’s business network extended far beyond Texas and Mexico.

Reynolds discusses:

  • municipal dealings with a mayor

  • financing related to a pier construction

  • a property acquisition worth $8,000

These are not frontier transactions.

They belong to urban infrastructure and investment finance.


2️⃣ Stillman may have invested in industrial infrastructure

The letter references:

  • pier construction

  • machinery

  • heavy engines

This suggests involvement in a shipping or mechanical enterprise, possibly related to port improvements or transport infrastructure.

It implies that Stillman was diversifying his investments beyond frontier trade.


3️⃣ National financial conditions mattered

Reynolds gives a brief report on the New York money market:

Banks have contracted $3,000,000 in 12 weeks

This kind of information would have been valuable to merchants managing large credit operations.

It shows that Stillman followed national financial conditions, not just frontier trade.


Why This Letter Matters for the Series

Most people think of Stillman purely as:

  • a Rio Grande merchant

  • a cotton trader

  • the founder of Brownsville

But this letter reveals something else.

By the early 1850s, he was already connected to:

  • New York finance

  • infrastructure investment

  • national economic trends

He was operating in two worlds at once:

Frontier commerce and eastern capital markets.

The Year the Stillman Papers Explode

1853

Looking at the letters you have been uploading, we already see the pattern forming:

1853 correspondence includes letters from:

  • Monterrey merchants (Marín Pérez y Hermanos)

  • Matamoros ranchers (Felipe Peña)

  • New Orleans correspondents (J. H. Phelps)

  • New York financial contacts (George H. Reynolds)

  • interior Mexican business contacts

  • frontier livestock traders

Suddenly, the network spans multiple regions and industries at once.


What Changed Around 1852–1853

Several developments converged at exactly this moment.

1️⃣ The Rio Grande frontier stabilized

After the upheaval of the Mexican–American War and the border settlement created by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the region slowly became safer for trade.

By the early 1850s:

  • merchants trusted the border again

  • wagon routes reopened

  • river transport became regular


2️⃣ Northern Mexico commerce reconnected to the Gulf

Cities such as Monterrey began sending increasing volumes of:

  • hides

  • livestock products

  • silver currency

  • commercial remittances

Those goods needed a gateway.

That gateway was the border crossing controlled by Charles Stillman.


3️⃣ Brownsville’s position proved ideal

By 1853 the trade triangle was functioning smoothly:

Brazos Santiago → Brownsville / Matamoros → Monterrey.

Merchants discovered that shipping goods through this route was faster and cheaper than alternatives.

As a result, more correspondents began writing to Stillman.


4️⃣ Credit networks matured

The letters show increasing use of:

  • drafts

  • remittances

  • credit arrangements

  • financial intermediaries

Stillman’s firm became a trusted clearinghouse for money and goods moving between two countries.


What the Letter Explosion Means

The surge of correspondence around 1853 suggests something important:

By that year, Brownsville had crossed the line from frontier outpost to regional commercial center.

Merchants across the Gulf world were now communicating with Stillman because they recognized that:

  • cargo passed through his warehouses

  • payments could be settled through his firm

  • frontier trade could be coordinated from Brownsville.


Why This Matters for Stillman letters Series

Most histories focus on the Civil War cotton trade of the 1860s, when Brownsville became famous.

But the Stillman papers show the groundwork being laid a decade earlier.

By 1853, the essential pieces were already in place:

  • ocean shipping via Brazos Santiago

  • river transport on the Rio Grande

  • wagon trade into northern Mexico

  • a financial clearinghouse run by Stillman.

Cotton would later pour through the same system — but the system itself already existed.

George H. Reynolds

New York financial correspondent

A business contact who corresponded with Charles Stillman regarding financial matters and investments in New York. His letter of November 1, 1853 references infrastructure financing, machinery acquisition, and national banking conditions.



1850s The Rio Grande Trade Triangle

The Rio Grande Trade Triangle (1850s)

1. Brazos Santiago — The Ocean Gateway

In the early 1850s the Rio Grande economy revolved around a simple but powerful triangle. Ocean ships entered through Brazos Santiago, merchants handled the cargo at Brownsville and Matamoros, and mule trains carried the goods deep into northern Mexico to cities like Monterrey. At the center of this system stood Charles Stillman, quietly building the network that would later make him one of the most influential merchants on the frontier.

The Stillman letters quietly reveal something historians sometimes miss:

nearly all Rio Grande commerce in the early 1850s revolved around three geographic points.

Once you map them, you understand why Charles Stillman built his operations exactly where he did.

Image

Before deep-water ports existed in South Texas, Brazos Santiago Pass was the main entrance from the Gulf of Mexico.

Ocean-going vessels could not sail directly up the Rio Grande, so they:

  1. Anchored offshore at Brazos Santiago

  2. Offloaded cargo onto lighters or shallow-draft vessels

  3. Sent goods upriver to Brownsville and Matamoros

Image

This is why letters mention:

  • crossing the bar

  • storms near the mouth of the river

  • steamer transfers

Without Brazos Santiago, the entire trade system collapsed.

Image


2. Brownsville / Matamoros — The Commercial Hub

This twin-city zone became the financial and trading center of the region.

Here:

  • American merchants operated on the Brownsville side

  • Mexican merchants operated in Matamoros

Goods moved across the river constantly.

Merchants like Stillman handled:

  • import goods from the United States

  • export goods from Mexico

  • banking and credit

  • customs brokerage

  • freight forwarding

This is why so many letters in your collection are addressed simply to:

“Charles Stillman – Brownsville”

He was the node where everything passed through.


3. Monterrey — The Interior Market

Image

Monterrey was the largest commercial center in northern Mexico.

Merchants there purchased:

  • imported textiles

  • tools

  • manufactured goods

  • luxury items from Europe and the U.S.

But these goods reached Monterrey only through the Rio Grande route:

Ocean ships → Brazos Santiago → Brownsville/Matamoros → wagon trains → Monterrey.

Your Marín Pérez y Hermanos letter is a perfect example of this network in action.

Image


How the Triangle Worked

Think of it like this:

           MONTERREY
           (interior market)
                ▲
                │ mule trains / wagons
                │
BROWNSVILLE / MATAMOROS
 (merchant hub & finance)
                ▲
                │ river steamers / barges
                │
        BRAZOS SANTIAGO
        (ocean shipping)

Every shipment had to pass through all three points.


Why Brownsville Was Founded Exactly There

The location chosen by Stillman had three advantages:

1️⃣ Direct access to the Rio Grande navigation route
2️⃣ Close enough to Brazos Santiago for ocean trade
3️⃣ Positioned opposite Matamoros, Mexico’s existing commercial city

It was the perfect choke point for trade.


What the Stillman Letters Prove

Charles Stillman documents show each side of this triangle operating:

LetterNetwork shown
Phelps lettersGulf shipping and New Orleans trade
Felipe Peñaranch economy around Matamoros
Marín PérezMonterrey merchant remittances

Together they reveal the entire commercial ecosystem of the Rio Grande frontier.


What the letters and early records reveal is that Stillman’s dominance did not come from one shipment or one partnership. It came from one strategic decision he made right after the Mexican–American War.

That decision shaped the entire Rio Grande trade system.

When the Mexican–American War ended in 1848, the Rio Grande became an international border overnight. Many merchants stayed in Matamoros or moved to New Orleans. Charles Stillman chose a different strategy. He placed himself exactly where the two economies met. From that point forward nearly every shipment entering the Rio Grande trade triangle—by sea, river, or wagon—passed within reach of his warehouses in Brownsville.

The Decision That Made the Trade Triangle Work

(1848–1849)

After the war ended with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the Rio Grande suddenly became an international boundary.

Most merchants made one of two choices:

  • operate in Matamoros (Mexico)

  • operate in New Orleans (U.S. shipping center)

But Charles Stillman did something different.

He positioned himself exactly on the new border, at the site that became Brownsville.


Why This Was Brilliant

Stillman’s location allowed him to control all three flows of trade at once.

1️⃣ International trade (United States ↔ Mexico)

American goods:

  • textiles

  • tools

  • manufactured goods

arrived from New Orleans and were sold across the river in Matamoros and northern Mexico.

Mexican goods:

  • hides

  • silver

  • livestock

moved the opposite direction.

Because Stillman operated on the U.S. side, he controlled the American side of customs and finance.


2️⃣ River transport

Stillman placed his operations on the navigable section of the Rio Grande.

This allowed goods to move:

Brazos Santiago → river craft → Brownsville warehouses.

Merchants farther inland could not do this efficiently.


3️⃣ Cross-border finance

The 1850s letters posted tell us

Merchants in Monterrey and Matamoros:

  • remitted funds to Stillman

  • asked him to draw drafts

  • trusted him to negotiate payments

He essentially became a frontier banker.


The Overlooked Advantage

There was another factor that made this work.

Stillman arrived before a banking system existed in South Texas.

So merchants needed someone who could:

  • store specie

  • extend credit

  • handle drafts

  • pay freight

  • negotiate insurance

Stillman’s firm did all of this.


The Result

By the early 1850s Stillman had become the central commercial node in the region.

The triangle now worked like this:

Brazos Santiago → Brownsville → Monterrey

Every shipment passed through his orbit.

That’s why in many letters the address simply reads:

“Charles Stillman – Brownsville.”

No street.
No firm name.

Everyone in the trade network knew where that meant.


Why This Matters for Stillman Letters Series

Most popular history focuses on Stillman during the Civil War cotton trade.

But your letters show that the real story begins earlier.

By 1853, he already controlled:

  • shipping coordination

  • cross-border trade

  • financial remittances

  • ranch supply networks

The Civil War merely supercharged a system he had already built.

Long before cotton made Brownsville famous during the Civil War, three other commodities quietly sustained the Rio Grande trade. Tobacco from Kentucky, mule caravans from Texas ranch country, and hides from northern Mexico moved through Stillman’s warehouses year after year. These humble goods built the commercial network that later carried millions of dollars in cotton through the same frontier gateway.

The Three Commodities That Dominated Rio Grande Trade Before Cotton

1. Tobacco

One of the most surprising commodities in the early Stillman letters is tobacco.

Large quantities of tobacco moved through a chain that looked like this:

Kentucky → Mississippi River → New Orleans → Brazos Santiago → Brownsville / Matamoros → Monterrey and interior Mexico.

Why tobacco?

Northern Mexico had strong demand, and importing it through the Rio Grande was often cheaper than bringing it overland from Mexican ports.

The tobacco trade required:

  • ocean shipping

  • river transport

  • warehousing

  • cross-border credit

All services Stillman provided.

This trade helped establish his commercial network years before cotton profits appeared.

Several letters — particularly those written by J. H. Phelps — hint at the booming mule and horse trade.

2. Mules and Horses

These animals were essential for frontier commerce.

They powered:

  • freight wagons

  • pack trains into the Mexican interior

  • ranch operations

  • military logistics

Prices around $100 per mule were mentioned in the correspondence — a very substantial amount in the 1850s.

In many ways, the animal trade was the transportation infrastructure of the frontier economy.

Without mules, the Rio Grande trade triangle could not function.

3. Hides and Livestock Products

Ranchers on both sides of the Rio Grande produced large numbers of cattle.

Before the famous Texas cattle drives began, the most valuable export was often the hide rather than the meat.

Hides were used in the industrializing world to make:

  • leather goods

  • harness equipment

  • machinery belts

Merchants purchased hides from ranchers like Felipe Peña, consolidated them in border warehouses, and shipped them through Gulf ports.

This trade linked rural ranches to the international economy.


Why Cotton Later Took Over

By the late 1850s and especially during the Civil War, cotton exploded as the dominant commodity because:

  • southern ports were blockaded

  • Texas cotton could move through Mexico

  • European demand was enormous

But cotton did not create the trade network.

It simply flowed through a system that had already been built by earlier commodities.


What the Letters Really Show

The Stillman papers reveal an economy that depended on:

  • tobacco shipments from the United States

  • livestock and mule trade across Texas

  • hides and ranch products from northern Mexico

Together these trades created the financial and transportation networks that allowed Stillman to become the central merchant of the Rio Grande frontier.

1853 1209 Marín Pérez y Hermano to Charles Stillman

A short note from Monterrey dated December 9, 1853 reveals how deeply Charles Stillman’s business network had penetrated northern Mexico. The merchant firm Marín Pérez y Hermanos sent him more than three thousand pesos through a trusted courier, asking him to negotiate the funds through his commercial contacts. On the Rio Grande frontier, merchants like Stillman often served not only as traders—but as bankers for a vast cross-border economy.


📜 Letter / Remittance Note

Marín Pérez y Hermano → Charles Stillman
Monterrey, December 9, 1853

(Filed in the Stillman Papers as Felipe Pérez / Peres)


Clean Reading (normalized transcription)

Sr. Don Carlos Stillman
Monterrey, Dec. 9 de 1853

Muy Sr. nuestro y fino amigo:

Con el Sr. D. Juan Hambure remitimos a V. la cantidad de $3,578.61
(tres mil quinientos setenta y ocho pesos con sesenta y un centavos)

en efectos de seguros, esta cuya cantidad queda para que V. se sirva girar con sus apreciados amigos.

S.S.Q.B.S.M.

Marín Pérez y Hermano


Plain English Meaning

The merchant firm Marín Pérez y Hermanos writes to Stillman from Monterrey informing him that:

  • Through Juan Hambure, they are sending him
    $3,578.61 pesos

  • The funds are transferred in “efectos de seguros” (financial instruments related to insurance or insured drafts)

  • Stillman is asked to draw or negotiate the funds through his commercial contacts

Essentially:

They are remitting money to Stillman so he can handle the financial transaction on their behalf.


Why This Letter Is Important

Even though it is short, it reveals a lot about the Rio Grande trade system in 1853.


1️⃣ Monterrey merchants were using Stillman as a financial intermediary

Monterrey was a major commercial center of northern Mexico.

Instead of sending money directly to the United States or Europe, merchants often used trusted border merchants.

Stillman acted as a banker and financial agent.


2️⃣ Large sums were moving through Brownsville

The amount:

$3,578.61 pesos

That is a significant commercial transfer for the period.

In modern purchasing power it could represent tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars in trade value.


3️⃣ Trade networks reached deep into Mexico

This letter shows the network stretching:

Monterrey → Matamoros → Brownsville → New Orleans

Goods moving along this chain included:

  • textiles

  • manufactured goods

  • tobacco

  • livestock

  • silver currency


4️⃣ The name “Juan Hambure”

This is likely Juan Hamburgo / Hambure, possibly a commercial courier or agent.

Frontier trade often relied on trusted carriers transporting drafts and documents.


Marín Pérez y Hermanos

Merchant firm — Monterrey

Commercial house operating in Monterrey and connected to cross-border trade networks linking northern Mexico to Brownsville. Their correspondence indicates that Charles Stillman sometimes acted as a financial intermediary handling drafts or remittances.


Juan Hambure

Commercial courier or agent

The individual entrusted to carry a financial remittance from Monterrey to Stillman. Merchants often relied on such trusted intermediaries to move funds and documents between cities.

When you step back and look at the letters together instead of one by one, something very interesting appears.
The Stillman papers are not just random correspondence — they reveal four overlapping economic systems operating at the same time along the Rio Grande in the early 1850s.

Once you see them, the entire frontier economy suddenly makes sense.


The Four Hidden Economic Networks in the Stillman Letters (1850–1855)

1. The River–Sea Transport Network

(Brazos Santiago → Rio Grande → New Orleans)

Your letters from J. H. Phelps describe something historians rarely explain clearly:
how freight actually moved.

Typical route:

  1. Ocean ships anchored off Brazos Santiago

  2. Cargo transferred to lighter vessels

  3. Freight taken upriver to Brownsville / Matamoros

  4. Bills and goods sent onward to New Orleans

This explains all the references to:

  • “crossing the bar

  • squalls and weather

  • steamer names like Cincinnati

Without this system, Stillman’s business could not exist.


2. The Mexican Interior Trade Network

(Monterrey → Matamoros → Brownsville)

The Monterrey letter from Marín Pérez y Hermanos shows a second system.

Merchants in northern Mexico relied on border houses like Stillman’s to:

  • receive remittances

  • negotiate drafts

  • import manufactured goods

Network example:

Monterrey merchants → courier → Matamoros → Charles Stillman

Stillman essentially functioned as a private frontier bank.


3. The Ranching Supply Network

(Texas & Tamaulipas ranches)

Letters like the one from Felipe Peña reveal a different economic layer.

Participants:

  • ranchers

  • mule traders

  • cattle suppliers

Typical transactions:

  • livestock

  • hides

  • horses

  • mule freight animals

The Phelps letter even hints at speculation in Texas stock raising:

mule prices around $100 each

That’s early evidence of the Texas cattle economy before the Civil War boom.


4. The Frontier Credit Network

(The most important system)

Almost every letter hints at this.

Stillman was constantly:

  • receiving funds

  • extending credit

  • holding money for others

  • negotiating drafts

Merchants across northern Mexico trusted him with thousands of pesos.

This is why figures like Marín Pérez y Hermanos send him money to “girar” (draw upon).

In modern terms, Stillman was acting as:

merchant + banker + freight forwarder + customs intermediary

all at once.


The Hidden Insight

Most people think Stillman became important during the Civil War cotton trade.

But your letters prove something else:

He had already built a functioning international trade network years earlier.

By 1853 he was already:

  • handling remittances from Monterrey

  • coordinating shipping through Brazos Santiago

  • financing ranch trade

  • acting as a commercial intermediary between two countries.

That infrastructure later allowed him to dominate the cotton trade during the Civil War.


The Real Frontier Economy

These letters show that the Rio Grande region wasn’t isolated at all.

It was part of a trade chain stretching from:

Northern Mexico → Brownsville → New Orleans → Atlantic trade

Few historians explain this system clearly, but the Stillman letters show it in real time.


One More Fascinating Detail

The correspondence also shows how personal these networks were.

People address Stillman as:

  • “muy señor nuestro y fino amigo”

  • “su amigo que lo aprecia”

Trust was everything.

There were no banks in the modern sense.

The entire frontier economy ran on reputation.

1853 Felipe Peña: A Rancher Writes from Matamoros

 This is a very nice piece of correspondence because it shows the Mexican side of the Rio Grande business network that surrounded Charles Stillman. The letter is short but historically valuable because it reveals everyday financial dealings between merchants and ranchers in the Matamoros region.


📜 Letter from Felipe Peña

Matamoros, September 4, 1853

Approximate transcription (modernized for readability)

Sr. Don Carlos Stillman

Muy Señor mío:

Le digo a V. que Ignacio se encuentra muy malo, por lo que respecta a la enfermedad, y por no esperar su dinero lo he estado aquí dentro de Matamoros, y ello lo harán a su hermano en todo el tiempo que se pueda disponer.

De aquí puede V. recibir de ella la cantidad de 362 pesos con 44 centavos, y quedo muy agradecido.

Mañana voy para el rancho y hoy mismo le escribiré si puedo mandar.

Su amigo que lo aprecia,

Felipe Peña


Plain English Summary

Felipe Peña writes to Charles Stillman from Matamoros explaining that:

  • A man named Ignacio is seriously ill.

  • Because of this illness and delays involving money, Peña has remained in Matamoros.

  • Stillman can collect 362 pesos and 44 centavos owed to him.

  • Peña plans to leave for his ranch the following day.

  • He promises to write again if he can arrange the payment.


Historical Value of This Letter

This little note reveals several useful insights about the 1850s Rio Grande economy.

1️⃣ Cross-border business was constant

Stillman in Brownsville was regularly dealing with people in Matamoros ranching networks.

Money, livestock, and credit moved across the river almost daily.


2️⃣ Ranch owners and merchants depended on each other

Peña mentions going “al rancho” (to the ranch), showing he was likely a stockman or rural landholder connected to the trade network supplying Stillman.


3️⃣ Mexican currency was still the working medium

The amount listed:

362 pesos 44 centavos

Mexican silver currency circulated widely on both sides of the Rio Grande.


4️⃣ Business could be delayed by illness or travel

The note shows how fragile frontier business could be.
If one person fell sick or left for the ranch, payments stalled.


Small Detail I Like

The tone is very polite and warm:

“Su amigo que lo aprecia”
Your friend who appreciates you

This shows Stillman had personal relationships with Mexican merchants and ranchers, not just formal business contacts.


Interesting Context

In 1853, the Rio Grande valley economy depended on:

  • cattle

  • hides

  • mule trade

  • tobacco shipments

  • imported manufactured goods

Men like Peña were the local ranching suppliers, while Stillman handled credit, shipping, and export networks.


Cast of Characters

The Stillman Papers (1850–1855)

Merchants, ranchers, lawyers, and frontier associates appearing in the correspondence of Charles Stillman


Charles Stillman

Merchant and founder of Brownsville

A Connecticut-born merchant who established himself on the Rio Grande following the Mexican–American War. Stillman became the central commercial figure of Brownsville, coordinating trade between:

  • New Orleans

  • Matamoros

  • Northern Mexico

  • Interior Texas

His business included freight forwarding, credit extension, cotton export, livestock transactions, and the import of manufactured goods.


Elizabeth Stillman

Wife of Charles Stillman

Elizabeth accompanied her husband during the early years of settlement on the Rio Grande frontier. Though rarely appearing directly in business letters, her presence is occasionally referenced in correspondence concerning travel, health, and domestic life during the early years of Brownsville.


J. H. Phelps

Merchant correspondent — New Orleans

A commercial associate who wrote several letters to Stillman in 1853 describing:

  • maritime travel to New Orleans

  • business conditions in the port

  • speculation about livestock ventures in Texas

Phelps appears to have been exploring the possibility of entering the Texas cattle or mule trade.


Felipe Peña

Rancher or regional associate — Matamoros area

Peña appears in a brief 1853 letter concerning a payment owed to Stillman. His correspondence suggests he operated from or near a ranch outside Matamoros and participated in the livestock or rural supply economy that supported cross-border commerce.


Ignacio (surname uncertain)

Associate mentioned in Peña correspondence

A man described as seriously ill in Peña’s letter of September 4, 1853. His illness delayed financial arrangements involving a payment owed to Stillman.


José Morell

Business associate

Morell appears in several Stillman letters connected to commercial operations and financial arrangements along the Rio Grande. He likely participated in the merchant network linking Brownsville and Matamoros.


Marks

Merchant associate

Referenced in letters dealing with business transactions and accounts. The surname appears in the network of merchants supplying goods and managing credit across the border region.


Avalos

Regional contact or supplier

Appears in correspondence connected with financial accounts and commercial matters in the Matamoros–Brownsville trade network.


Reynolds

Commercial associate

Mentioned in letters discussing trade activity and possibly freight or supply arrangements tied to Rio Grande commerce.


Basse & Hord

Legal or commercial firm

The firm appears in documents connected with litigation related to land claims in the Brownsville area, particularly matters involving the Cavazos family grant.


María Josefa Cavazos

Heir of Spanish land grant claims

A central figure in the complex land disputes surrounding the Cavazos grant, portions of which later overlapped with land occupied by Fort Brown and the emerging town of Brownsville.


Judge John Watrous

United States Federal Judge

Watrous presided over several important land claim cases in Texas during the mid-19th century. His rulings played a role in disputes involving the Cavazos family and other Spanish land grant claims.


The Frontier Network

Together these individuals represent the interlocking systems that created Brownsville’s early economy:

  • American merchants

  • Mexican ranchers

  • Gulf Coast shipping agents

  • Lawyers handling land claims

  • Investors speculating in livestock and trade

Through their letters we see a frontier town slowly transforming into a commercial gateway between the United States and Mexico.



1853 Letter — J. H. Phelps to Charles Stillman

1853 Letter — J. H. Phelps to Charles Stillman

In June of 1853, a New Orleans merchant named J. H. Phelps wrote two long letters to Charles Stillman describing the restless economic energy of the Gulf frontier.

Phelps had just arrived after a difficult voyage across the bar at the mouth of the Mississippi, where squalls and heavy winds shook the steamer carrying families, merchants, and freight into the great port. Once safely ashore, he turned his attention to business matters—and to Texas.

Stillman had apparently suggested that stock raising might prove profitable on the frontier. Phelps agreed that it might suit a man of capital, though he confessed he lacked the funds to attempt such an enterprise himself. Mule prices were already climbing, and he hoped a modest trade in horses and mules might support him. If prospects improved, he wrote, he might soon travel west to Texas, perhaps even toward Corpus Christi, where many believed the next frontier of opportunity was forming.


(New Orleans, June 16 and June 29, 1853)

Quick readable transcription summary

June 16, 1853 — New Orleans

Phelps writes to Stillman describing his recent sea voyage into New Orleans.

He recounts:

  • Leaving on a yacht and transferring to the steamer Cincinnati

  • Crossing the bar at the mouth of the Mississippi

  • Experiencing squalls and heavy blowing winds

  • Traveling with women and children aboard

  • Finally arriving safely in New Orleans

He notes that Mrs. C. and Frank have taken rooms at the City Hotel while family members are busy with household matters and shopping.

Phelps tells Stillman that he will remain in New Orleans for a short time while arranging matters.

He mentions that a certain old servant acquaintance delayed him a few days.


June 29, 1853 — New Orleans

This second letter is more revealing about Texas economic expectations.

Phelps responds to a comment from Stillman suggesting that stock raising in Texas might be profitable.

He explains:

  • A stock farm in Texas might suit a wealthy man like Stillman

  • But it would require more capital than he possesses

  • He has been examining horses and mules

  • Mule prices near the Brazos are around $100 each

  • He hopes to sell some animals profitably

Phelps says he may soon travel to Texas to investigate opportunities.

He writes that he hopes his “little stock business will make me a living through my industrious operations.”

He also comments that:

  • Commercial business in New Orleans is slow

  • Many people are moving into Texas stock raising

  • The region near Corpus Christi may offer opportunities


Historical Insights from the Letters

These two letters reveal several fascinating aspects of border commerce in 1853.

1️⃣ Travel was difficult and uncertain

The Mississippi delta was dangerous.

Phelps describes:

  • crossing the bar

  • violent squalls

  • crowded ships

These journeys were routine for merchants supplying the Rio Grande trade.


2️⃣ Texas ranching was already attracting investors

By 1853 many businessmen were considering cattle and mule enterprises in Texas.

Phelps writes that stock raising might be ideal for Stillman.

This is important because it shows that the Texas livestock boom began earlier than most people realize.


3️⃣ The mule trade was booming

Mules were essential for:

  • freight transport

  • military supply

  • trade caravans into Mexico

Phelps notes prices around $100 per mule, a very substantial sum in 1853.


4️⃣ Many merchants were reconsidering New Orleans

Phelps suggests New Orleans commerce had slowed.

Meanwhile Texas seemed full of opportunity.

This shift reflects the economic gravity gradually moving westward after the Mexican War.


One particularly interesting line

This sentence is wonderful historically:

“A Texas stock raising business with a little residence in New Orleans would seem to me to be the very ideal of human affection.”

It captures the dream of many merchants:

Money made in Texas — life enjoyed in New Orleans.


One more interesting detail

The envelope shows a New Orleans postmark (June 1853) and is addressed to:

Charles Stillman
Brownsville
Texas

Which tells us something important:

By 1853 Stillman was already well known enough to receive letters simply addressed to Brownsville.


A Tight Tobacco Market: The Final Letters from Price, Walsh & Co. from 1853.

The Final 1853 Letter from Price, Walsh & Co.

New Orleans, November 4, 1853

The final surviving letter in this group of correspondence from Price, Walsh & Co. of New Orleans is dated November 4, 1853. Written to Charles Stillman & Brother in Brownsville, it reflects a tobacco market that had grown increasingly tight during the year.

The letter opens by acknowledging Stillman’s recent communication and expressing satisfaction that he had been successfully reducing his tobacco inventory.

This is a revealing detail. Earlier letters from the same firm had warned that tobacco supplies were tightening, and that prices might soon rise. By the autumn of 1853, that prediction had largely come true.


The Price of Tobacco

Price, Walsh report that the market in New Orleans was currently paying about:

$8½ per bale for roughly 150 bales of tobacco

which they describe as the best tobacco then available.

The firm explains that they had 50 bales ready for shipment, but caution that tobacco suitable for the Rio Grande trade remained difficult to obtain.

Their concern is evident in the letter:

the merchants were carefully watching shipments in order to ensure that their customers would not suffer from shortages.

The tone suggests that tobacco was becoming a scarcer and more valuable commodity, confirming the rising market described in earlier correspondence from the same year.


Guarding Stillman’s Reputation

The merchants also stress that they had been extremely selective about the tobacco they purchased.

They explain that they refused to ship inferior tobacco simply to fill orders, writing that they did not wish to send goods that might damage Stillman’s reputation in the Rio Grande market.

This remark reinforces what earlier letters suggested:

Stillman had built a reputation for selling high-quality tobacco, and his New Orleans suppliers were conscious of maintaining that standard.


A Difficult Market

The letter concludes with a cautious note about the coming months. The merchants warn that the tobacco crop had not yet recovered, and they see little prospect for lower prices in the near future.

For merchants operating along the Rio Grande frontier, such fluctuations could have significant consequences. Tobacco was a reliable retail commodity, and shortages could disrupt trade throughout the region.


The End of a Correspondence for 1853

With this letter, the Price, Walsh correspondence in the surviving Stillman papers comes to a close.

Taken together, the letters from 1852–1853 provide an unusually clear picture of how the Rio Grande trade functioned:

  • New Orleans merchants sourced tobacco from the American interior

  • shipments moved south by sea to the Texas coast

  • frontier merchants like Charles Stillman distributed the goods through Brownsville and Matamoros into northern Mexico

Through these letters we can see not just the movement of goods, but the constant negotiation of supply, quality, and price that shaped the commerce of the borderlands.


1853 Two Letters from Price, Walsh & Co.

Tobacco Prices Rising

Two Letters from Price, Walsh & Co., 1853

Among the Price, Walsh correspondence preserved in the Stillman Papers are two additional documents from spring and early summer of 1853. Though brief, they offer a clear view of how rapidly the tobacco market was changing that year.

Together they confirm what the earlier letters suggested: the tobacco trade in 1853 was tightening and prices were rising sharply.


March 1853 — A Short Settlement Note

The smaller document appears to be a brief accounting note, likely written around March 30, 1853.

In it, Price, Walsh report that they have delivered an order of one thousand dollars related to the sale of hides, noting that the transaction had been made for Stillman’s account.

The note states that the sale amounted to about 5,300 pounds of hides, bringing approximately 11¾ to 14 cents per pound.

Although the message is short, it reveals something important:

Stillman’s relationship with Price, Walsh was not limited to tobacco shipments. The New Orleans firm also handled sales of frontier products such as hides, acting as a broker in the larger Gulf trade network.

This confirms that the partnership worked in both directions:

Rio Grande → New Orleans
(hides and frontier goods)

New Orleans → Rio Grande
(tobacco and manufactured goods)


June 30, 1853 — Tobacco Prices Climb

The longer letter, written from New Orleans on June 30, 1853, provides a detailed update on the tobacco market.

Price, Walsh report that they had recently sold $1,000 in drafts on Stillman’s account, crediting the proceeds to him after deducting charges and exchange fees.

The bulk of the letter, however, concerns the state of the tobacco market.

They explain that the crop situation remained difficult and that:

tobacco had already advanced fully one cent per pound in all grades.

Even more significant is their prediction that prices would rise further.

They warn Stillman that tobacco might soon reach:

$10–$12 per hundred pounds

by the coming autumn.

This represents a substantial increase compared with the prices discussed in earlier correspondence.


A Market Moving Against Buyers

The New Orleans merchants explain that the increase was caused by several factors:

• a light tobacco crop the previous year
• strong demand in export markets
• heavy purchases by European traders

The result was a classic nineteenth-century commodity squeeze: supplies were shrinking while demand continued to rise.

For merchants on the Rio Grande, this meant that tobacco would soon become both scarcer and more expensive.


Stillman’s Strategic Advantage

Despite the rising prices, Price, Walsh express confidence that Stillman remained well positioned in the market.

They note that he still held existing stock, which could be sold while prices climbed.

In frontier commerce this was a powerful advantage: merchants who already had goods on hand could often profit from sudden price increases.


The Rio Grande Market in 1853

These letters show how closely the border trade depended on conditions hundreds of miles away.

A poor tobacco crop in the American interior could quickly affect:

Brownsville
Matamoros
Monterrey
Saltillo

Within months.

The merchants along the Rio Grande were therefore constantly watching markets in New Orleans, Kentucky, and the Mississippi Valley, adjusting their purchases as prices rose or fell.

1853 A Short Tobacco Crop: Price, Walsh & Co. and the Rio Grande Trade

Tobacco, Trade, and Short Supply

Price, Walsh & Co. and the Rio Grande Market — 1853

Among the correspondence preserved in the Stillman Papers are several letters from Price, Walsh & Co. of New Orleans, written during 1853. These letters were filed together by Charles Stillman and labeled in his characteristic method — folded, dated, and marked with the day they were received and answered.

Though routine in appearance, this group of letters provides a revealing snapshot of the tobacco supply crisis affecting the Rio Grande trade during the early 1850s.


Letter 1

March 10, 1853 — New Orleans

The earliest letter in the group is clearly dated:

New Orleans, March 10, 1853

In it, Price, Walsh & Co. acknowledge Stillman’s recent correspondence and confirm the shipment of 99 bales of tobacco. They note that they selected the tobacco carefully in order to assist Stillman in reducing his existing stock in Brownsville.

The firm also reports a major difficulty:

They had experienced “great difficulty in obtaining a good article for your trade.”

This statement reveals something important about frontier commerce. Supplying the Rio Grande market was not simply a matter of shipping goods south — merchants had to find tobacco that would satisfy the tastes of Mexican consumers, who were known to be particular about quality.


A Short Crop in the Tobacco Country

The letter explains the reason for the shortage:

The tobacco crop of the previous year had been very light.

As a result:

  • much of the best tobacco had already been purchased

  • large quantities had been diverted to European markets

  • supplies available in New Orleans were limited

The letter specifically mentions tobacco being bought for the Bremen and African trade, which means European merchants were purchasing American tobacco for re-export abroad.

This international demand pushed prices upward and made it harder for Rio Grande merchants to secure supply.


Tobacco Prices on the Rio Grande

Price, Walsh & Co. also comment on the competitive environment in the border market.

They note that Stillman’s tobacco had a strong reputation:

“Your tobacco has always been superior to that of any house on the Rio Grande.”

This is a remarkable statement, suggesting that Stillman’s firm had built a reputation for quality goods among merchants and consumers along the river.

The letter also references another trader:

P. Whitmore, who appears to have been selling tobacco in the region at lower prices, though the quality was inferior.

Such rivalries were common in frontier markets where merchants competed intensely for limited trade.


Shipments to Brownsville

The New Orleans firm reports that they had recently shipped:

90 bales of tobacco

selected from their stock of roughly 1,000 bales.

They emphasize that these bales were chosen carefully and priced at eight dollars per bale, a price they state was essentially their cost.

This suggests Price, Walsh & Co. were attempting to support Stillman’s market position, allowing him to maintain supply without suffering heavy losses.


Another Shipment Expected

The letter also hints that better tobacco might soon appear.

They mention that:

  • new crops were expected from the western tobacco districts

  • shipments might arrive later in the spring or early summer

Until then, merchants like Stillman had to rely on limited stocks already in New Orleans warehouses.

What These Letters Reveal

Taken together, the 1853 Price, Walsh correspondence illustrates several realities of frontier commerce.

1. The Rio Grande depended heavily on New Orleans

New Orleans functioned as the primary supply center for goods destined for the Texas–Mexico border.


2. Tobacco was an important commodity

Despite the frontier setting, demand for tobacco — both leaf and cigars — remained strong throughout northern Mexico.


3. International markets affected local trade

European demand for American tobacco could influence prices and availability thousands of miles away on the Rio Grande.


4. Reputation mattered

Stillman’s success depended partly on maintaining consistent product quality, which helped distinguish his goods from competitors.


A Merchant Network Across a Continent

These letters remind us that the stores and warehouses of Brownsville were not isolated outposts.

They were part of a vast commercial system linking:

Kentucky tobacco farms
Mississippi River steamboats
New Orleans warehouses
Gulf shipping routes
Rio Grande merchants
Mexican interior markets

Through this network, a bale of tobacco harvested in the American interior could travel hundreds of miles and eventually be sold in the towns of Matamoros, Monterrey, or Saltillo.


Why Rio Grande Merchants Preferred Certain Tobacco Grades

The letters between Price, Walsh & Co. of New Orleans and Charles Stillman of Brownsville reveal an important detail about the Rio Grande trade: not all tobacco was considered equal.

In fact, merchants on the border were often very selective about the grade of tobacco they purchased.

Quality Meant Reputation

Frontier merchants relied heavily on reputation. When customers returned to a store and asked for tobacco, they expected the same quality each time. If a merchant sold inferior tobacco, the result could be immediate:

  • complaints from customers

  • slow sales

  • damaged trust in the store

For this reason, suppliers like Price, Walsh frequently reminded Stillman that they tried to ship tobacco “suited for your trade.”


Tobacco Grades in the 1850s

Mid-nineteenth-century tobacco was graded primarily by:

• leaf size
• color
• curing quality
• strength and aroma

Higher grades typically had:

  • large, well-cured leaves

  • uniform color

  • fewer stems or damage

Lower grades often contained rougher leaves, stronger flavors, or irregular curing.

These cheaper grades might sell in bulk markets but were less desirable in retail frontier trade.


Mexican Consumer Preferences

The Rio Grande trade served a large customer base in northern Mexico, and their preferences influenced what merchants purchased.

Consumers in towns such as:

  • Matamoros

  • Monterrey

  • Saltillo

often preferred smooth, well-cured tobacco suitable for cigar making or fine smoking tobacco.

If the tobacco was harsh or poorly cured, buyers simply refused it.


Competition Along the River

The Price & Walsh letters suggest that rival merchants sometimes attempted to undercut competitors by selling lower-grade tobacco at cheaper prices.

But experienced traders knew this strategy rarely worked for long.

As one New Orleans merchant warned:

inferior tobacco might sell cheaply at first, but it often led to complaints and loss of trade.

For merchants like Charles Stillman, maintaining consistent quality was therefore a key part of maintaining dominance in the Rio Grande market.


Tobacco as a Trade Staple

Although cotton, hides, and dry goods dominate most histories of the border trade, tobacco remained one of the most reliable retail commodities moving through Brownsville.

It was:

  • compact

  • durable in transport

  • always in demand

A single shipment of tobacco bales arriving from New Orleans could quickly move through Stillman’s store and be redistributed throughout northern Mexico.

1852 - 1853 Price, Walsh & Co. and the Tobacco Trade

Letters from New Orleans

Price, Walsh & Co. and the Tobacco Trade — 1852–1853

Among the correspondence preserved in the Charles Stillman papers are several letters from Price, Walsh & Co., commission merchants in New Orleans, written between January and December 1852 and filed together by Stillman.

Though brief and routine, these letters illuminate the commercial pipeline connecting the Mississippi Valley with the Rio Grande frontier.

They show how merchants in New Orleans supplied tobacco and other goods to Stillman’s store in Brownsville — which then redistributed them throughout northern Mexico.


The Role of Price, Walsh & Co.

Price, Walsh & Co. acted as commission agents and brokers in New Orleans.

Their job was to:

• purchase tobacco in the Mississippi Valley
• store it in New Orleans warehouses
• ship it to clients like Stillman
• provide market intelligence about price fluctuations

In the mid-19th century New Orleans functioned as the great commercial clearinghouse of the American South, connecting river trade with international shipping.

For merchants on the Rio Grande, it was the nearest major supply center.


What the Letters Discuss

Across the group of letters several themes appear repeatedly.

1. Tobacco shipments

The correspondence frequently references shipments of Kentucky tobacco, packed in bales and shipped south through New Orleans.

Tobacco was a steady commodity for the Rio Grande market.

It could be sold:

• locally in Texas
• in Matamoros
• throughout northern Mexico via mule trains


2. Market prices and competition

Price & Walsh regularly advised Stillman about changing tobacco prices.

One letter warns that:

inferior tobacco had been sold as low as six dollars per bale

But they caution that cheaper tobacco often caused complaints and loss of trade, encouraging Stillman to maintain quality rather than chase the lowest price.

Such advice shows how commission merchants served as market advisors, not just shipping agents.


3. Cigars and luxury goods

The letters also mention:

Havana cigars
• imitation Havana cigars
• cigar dealers in New Orleans

This suggests that the Rio Grande trade did not deal only in frontier necessities.

Even on the distant border, merchants handled luxury consumer goods.


4. Shipping and accounts

Some letters include account statements or references to freight charges.

Typical expenses included:

• ocean or coastal shipping
• handling and storage
• commissions
• insurance
• forwarding charges

Stillman’s firm would settle these balances through drafts or credit arrangements.


The Communication Rhythm of Trade

One striking feature of the correspondence is how methodical Stillman was in organizing his papers.

He folded each letter and labeled it with brief notes such as:

  • sender

  • date received

  • date answered

This filing practice created a paper trail of commercial decision-making, allowing Stillman to track shipments, payments, and negotiations across months or even years.

Interestingly, later Rio Grande merchant Francisco Yturria used the same filing method — very likely learned during his early years working in the Stillman trading network.


The Rio Grande in a Continental Trade System

These letters remind us that the Rio Grande frontier was not isolated.

Instead, it was part of a continental supply chain:

Kentucky tobacco farms

Mississippi River steamboats

New Orleans warehouses

Gulf schooners

Brownsville merchants

mule caravans into Mexico

In this system, a bale of tobacco grown hundreds of miles away could eventually reach a shop in Monterrey, Saltillo, or even Chihuahua.


What Makes These Letters Valuable

Individually, these letters seem routine.

But together they reveal:

• the daily mechanics of frontier commerce
• the network linking Brownsville to New Orleans
• how merchants balanced price, quality, and reputation

They also illustrate how Charles Stillman operated not simply as a local storekeeper, but as a node in a vast trading system spanning the Mississippi Valley and northern Mexico.


1852 04 Price, Walsh & Co. - Reputation and Frontier Commerce

 

These April 1852 letters from Price, Walsh & Co. are excellent because they reveal something historians often miss: quality competition in the Rio Grande tobacco trade. They also show how carefully Stillman monitored accounts and shipments. 


Letter 1

Price, Walsh & Co.

New Orleans — April 7, 1852

Transcription (reconstructed)

Gentlemen,

In the above we send duplicate copy of the 5th and which we trust is the Brownsville.

Since then we have nothing to report but to return thanks for an order received today from one of the commission houses here for 75 bales, and stated to be by your kind recommendation of us.

We are much obliged.

And are gentlemen,

Very truly yours,
Price Walsh & Co.


Letter 2

Price, Walsh & Co.

New Orleans — April 5, 1852

Transcription (reconstructed)

Messrs. Charles Stillman & Co.

To Price Walsh & Co.

Feby 24 — To sales invoice ........ $1136.50

Mar 31 — By cash allowance ........ $47.04

Balance to your favor ........ $9.36

Gentlemen,

Above we furnish statement of account showing $9.36 to your favor in reply to your favor of the 12th ult.

We feel satisfied that no one in your market can undersell you otherwise than by offering an article considerably inferior to the tobacco which you have at present.

We are well aware that many buyers have been here and have supplied themselves with inferior tobacco, some of which we have sold as low as $6 per bale.

But in the long run we consider this a bad policy, and generally attended with complaints and loss of trade to the parties who supply themselves with such tobacco.

Your instructions have always been to send you a good article, and we have endeavored to comply with them.

We remain gentlemen,

Your very truly,
Price Walsh & Co.

What These Letters Reveal

These letters add several important pieces to the story.

1. Stillman's Reputation in the New Orleans Market

The April 7 letter states clearly:

an order received today from a commission house here for 75 bales, by your recommendation

That means Stillman was actively referring business to suppliers in New Orleans.

In other words, he was functioning as a regional trade broker, not just a storekeeper.


2. A Tobacco Quality War

Price & Walsh complain that other buyers are purchasing inferior tobacco at $6 per bale.

That is extremely cheap.

They warn that low-quality tobacco causes:

• complaints
• loss of reputation
• lost customers

This shows that merchants along the Rio Grande competed not only on price but also on product reputation.


3. Stillman's Business Strategy

The most revealing line:

“Your instructions have always been to send you a good article.”

This confirms Stillman’s business model:

He preferred quality goods rather than the cheapest possible imports.

That approach probably helped him dominate the Rio Grande trade.

Price, Walsh & Co., April 1852

Two letters from the New Orleans firm of Price, Walsh & Company in April 1852 reveal an important aspect of frontier commerce: reputation.

By this time large quantities of tobacco were being shipped toward the Rio Grande, and merchants competed aggressively to supply the trade. Some dealers were selling tobacco for as little as six dollars per bale, but Price & Walsh warned that such bargains often meant inferior goods.

Low-quality tobacco, they wrote, usually led to complaints and the eventual loss of customers.

Charles Stillman appears to have taken a different approach. His suppliers noted that his standing instructions were always to send “a good article.” Maintaining that standard, even at higher cost, helped establish the reliability of the goods sold through his Brownsville firm.

The letters also show that Stillman’s influence extended beyond his own business. Price & Walsh thanked him for recommending them to another commission house in New Orleans that had just placed an order for seventy-five bales of tobacco.

Even in routine correspondence, the documents reveal the growing commercial network that linked Brownsville, New Orleans, and markets deep into northern Mexico.


One More Fascinating Detail

Notice the phrase:

“many buyers have been here”

This suggests that Rio Grande merchants were traveling to New Orleans personally to buy tobacco.

That means Brownsville traders were already part of the larger Gulf commercial circuit, moving between:

New Orleans
Matamoros
Brownsville
Monterrey
San Luis Potosí

Exactly the trade system this series is uncovering.