Monday, March 2, 2026

Corner at East Elizabeth and 13th

The Evolution of the Corner at East Elizabeth and 13th

A Structural and Architectural Case Study

Abstract

1959

This study traces the architectural evolution of the northeast corner of East Elizabeth Street and 13th Street in Brownsville, Texas, from its documented 1860s wood-frame commercial presence through its late nineteenth-century masonry reconstruction and eventual mid-twentieth-century modernization under Edelstein’s.

Through sequential photographic analysis, the study demonstrates that the mid-century Edelstein building was not a new structure, but rather a modern cladding applied over an intact nineteenth-century load-bearing masonry commission house.


I. Pre-Masonry Phase (1860s)

Frontier Commercial Vernacular

Image Placement:

Figure 1 — 1860s East Elizabeth Street (Yturria Bank alignment confirmed)

The 1860s street view establishes the earliest confirmed condition of the block.

Architectural characteristics include:

  • Predominantly wood-frame construction

  • Flat or minimally articulated parapets

  • Post-supported wooden sidewalks

  • Shallow commercial façades

  • Absence of masonry arcades

  • No iron balcony systems

The corner lot later occupied by the commission house appears to contain a modest commercial structure consistent with frontier vernacular typology.

No evidence of brick construction, structural arch systems, or classical detailing is visible.

Conclusion:
The masonry building documented in later images did not yet exist in the 1860s.


II. Masonry Commission House Phase (Late 19th Century)

Image Placement:

Figure 2 — “Variety Store” Postcard (Primary Anchor Image)

The postcard image documents the first confirmed masonry phase of the structure.

Architectural features include:

  • Two-story load-bearing brick construction

  • Ground-floor round-arch arcade

  • Continuous cast-iron balcony wrapping the corner

  • Tall rectangular second-floor windows

  • Molded classical window crowns

  • Defined entablature and projecting cornice

  • Corner pilaster articulation

The building exhibits characteristics typical of post–Civil War commercial investment architecture in border trade cities.

The ground-floor arcade suggests shaded pedestrian circulation and commission-based mercantile operations.

The iron gallery signals permanence and economic confidence.

Conclusion:
This represents a substantial capital investment replacing the earlier wood-frame structure.


III. Mercantile Maturity (c. 1908 — McDavitt Commission House)

Image Placement:



Figure 3 — 1908 McDavitt Commission House Views

The 1908 image confirms structural continuity with the postcard phase.

Unchanged elements:

  • Ground-floor arcade remains open

  • Cast-iron balcony intact

  • Cornice line consistent

  • Upper-floor window spacing identical

  • Corner massing unchanged

The building remains a fully expressed nineteenth-century mercantile structure.

Urban context intensifies — wagons, produce handling — but architectural integrity is preserved.

Conclusion:
No structural rebuilding occurred between the postcard phase and 1908.


IV. Early 20th Century Retail Adaptation

Fernandez / Henrietta King Phase

Image Placement:

Figure 4 — Geronimo Fernandez Building View

This period marks functional adaptation rather than reconstruction.

Architectural shifts include:

  • Gradual enclosure of ground-floor arches

  • Installation of larger glazing panels

  • Conversion from shaded arcade to enclosed storefront

  • Addition of awnings

Unchanged elements:

  • Balcony remains

  • Cornice remains

  • Window rhythm remains

  • Wall mass remains

The fenestration pattern confirms load-bearing walls were not altered.

Conclusion:
The building evolves in response to retail modernization but retains its structural framework.


V. Mid-Century Modern Overlay

Edelstein’s (1956–1959)

Image Placement:


Figure 5 — 1956/1959 Edelstein’s Exterior

The most visually dramatic alteration occurs during the Edelstein phase.

Modifications include:

  • Application of vertical metal cladding

  • Concealment of original brick surface

  • Modern signage installation

  • Simplified retail frontage

However:

  • Building height remains constant

  • Cornice elevation unchanged

  • Structural mass identical

  • Footprint unaltered

No evidence suggests demolition and reconstruction.

The modern façade functions as an applied skin.

Conclusion:
Edelstein’s did not replace the nineteenth-century structure.
It masked it.


Structural Continuity Analysis

Across documented phases, four consistent architectural markers confirm single-structure continuity:

  1. Fenestration Rhythm:
    Upper-floor window spacing remains constant across decades.

  2. Cornice Line Elevation:
    The roofline termination remains at identical height.

  3. Corner Geometry:
    The angled perspective and pilaster positioning remain consistent.

  4. Massing Proportions:
    Height-to-width ratio does not shift between phases.

These indicators collectively demonstrate that the nineteenth-century load-bearing masonry walls persisted beneath later alterations.


Architectural Typology

The building conforms to the late nineteenth-century Gulf-border commission house model:

  • Masonry ground-floor arcades

  • Iron galleries

  • Two-story commercial-residential hybrid layout

  • Classical revival detailing adapted for regional materials

Its later modernization reflects national retail trends rather than local structural replacement.


Chronological Summary

  • 1860s: Wood-frame commercial structure occupies corner

  • Late 1800s: Masonry commission house constructed

  • 1908: Mercantile operation under McDavitt; arcade intact

  • Early 20th Century: Retail glazing introduced

  • 1950s: Metal modernist cladding applied under Edelstein’s

One structural core spans these phases.


Conclusion

The building most commonly remembered as Edelstein’s is, in structural reality, a nineteenth-century commission house adapted over time.

What changed were surfaces.

What remained were load-bearing walls, proportional systems, and spatial rhythm.

The corner at Elizabeth and 13th is not a series of buildings.

It is a single building that survived by accepting new identities.


The Corner at Elizabeth and 13th

From Frontier Wood Frame to Edelstein’s Modern Skin

When we look at the mid-century photograph of Edelstein’s at East Elizabeth and 13th, it appears to be a product of the 1950s — vertical metal fins, bold signage, confident modern retail identity.

But that façade is only the final layer.

The story of this corner begins much earlier.


I. Before the Masonry: The 1860s Street

An 1860s view of East Elizabeth Street — the confirmed alignment anchored by the Yturria Bank building — shows a very different town.

The street is unpaved.
The sidewalks are wooden.
Buildings are modest, rectilinear, and largely wood-frame.

On the corner lot that would later hold the commission house, a simpler structure stands — likely timber construction, shallow-fronted, aligned to the wooden sidewalk arcade.

There are no masonry arches.
No iron balcony.
No classical cornice.

This is frontier commercial vernacular — practical, fast, and temporary.

That building would not survive the economic stabilization that followed.


II. The Masonry Commission House Era

Late 19th Century Investment

By the late 1800s, the corner transforms.

The real photo postcard labeled “Variety Store” documents the first fully developed masonry phase of the structure.

What replaces the wooden predecessor is deliberate and confident:

  • Two-story brick construction

  • A continuous ground-floor round-arch arcade

  • A cast-iron balcony wrapping the corner

  • Tall second-floor windows with molded crowns

  • A projecting entablature defining the roofline

  • Strong corner pilasters anchoring the mass

This is no longer frontier architecture.

It is post–Civil War commercial permanence — the architecture of cross-border trade and commission houses.

The open arches allowed shaded circulation and mercantile display.
The balcony provided both access and status.
The cornice completed the composition.

This is the structural skeleton that survives every later alteration.


III. The McDavitt Phase (c. 1908)

The 1908 image of McDavitt’s commission house confirms continuity.

The arcade remains open.
The balcony remains intact.
The cornice line remains unaltered.
The window rhythm above is unchanged.

Urban activity intensifies — wagons, produce, commerce — but the architecture is stable.

At this stage, the building still presents itself as a 19th-century mercantile structure.


IV. Early 20th Century Commercial Adaptation

Geronimo Fernandez / Henrietta King Era

As retail culture evolves, the building begins adapting.

The open arches begin to be enclosed.

Large display windows replace shaded passageways.
Glass becomes more prominent.
The ground floor transitions from porous arcade to enclosed storefront.

Yet the transformation is surgical.

The iron balcony remains untouched.
The cornice remains intact.
The upper window spacing remains identical.

This is alteration — not reconstruction.

The building is modernizing, not being replaced.


V. Mid-Century Modern Overlay

Edelstein’s (1950s)

By 1956–1959, the final transformation occurs.

A metal screen façade is applied over the historic brick.

Vertical fins conceal the masonry.
The historic surface disappears behind modern cladding.
Retail branding dominates the corner.

But even here — look carefully.

The building mass does not change.

The height remains identical.
The roofline is fixed.
The corner geometry is fixed.

The skeleton endures beneath the skin.

Edelstein’s did not build a new structure.
It dressed an old one in mid-century clothing.


Structural Continuity Across a Century

From the postcard phase through McDavitt, Fernandez, and Edelstein’s, four elements confirm the building’s continuous identity:

  • The footprint does not shift.

  • The upper-floor window rhythm never changes.

  • The cornice line remains constant.

  • The balcony survives until intentionally removed or concealed.

When fenestration spacing remains consistent, load-bearing walls remain in place.

When cornice height remains fixed, structural massing remains unchanged.

What changes are surfaces.
What remains are bones.


The Arc of the Corner

1860s — timber commercial frontier
1880s/1890s — brick commission house permanence
1908 — mercantile maturity
Early 20th century — retail enclosure
1950s — modernist cladding

One corner.
Five architectural identities.
One structural core.

The building most people remember as Edelstein’s is not a 1950s building.

It is a 19th-century commission house that survived by adapting.


The corner at East Elizabeth and 13th has been changing clothes for over a century.

But its structural bones never moved.

A new architectural case study traces the building from an 1860s streetscape to the 1959 Edelstein façade — using period photographs as evidence.

Documentation included.

Read more on Bronsbil Estacion:

👉 [insert link]

Sunday, March 1, 2026

A. “Pat” Rogers — Brownsville’s Modern Eye (1931–1963)

A. “Pat” Rogers — Brownsville’s Modern Eye (1931–1963)

When people think of early photography in Brownsville, the name that rises first is Robert Runyon. His images helped define how we see the city’s boom years in the early twentieth century. But by the 1930s, a new generation of photographers arrived — men who embraced newer technologies and built studios designed for permanence rather than improvisation.

Among them was a man known simply in newspaper print as “A. Rogers.”

For decades, he was little more than a studio stamp on the back of fading family portraits. Today, through scattered newspaper clippings, surviving negatives, and recollections, we can begin restoring his place in Brownsville’s visual history.

1933 E Elizabeth St from 11th St

As noted in an earlier summary of his career , Rogers represents a transitional generation — bridging the era between Runyon’s glass plates and the post-war explosion of commercial photography.

This is the story of A. “Pat” Rogers.


The Arrival — 1931

In April 1931, Brownsville gained a new photographer.

A. “Pat” Rogers, born in Waldron, Arkansas (1902 or 1904), arrived after spending a month scouting the Lower Rio Grande Valley. He had already accumulated ten years of commercial experience in Greenville and Dallas before deciding Brownsville offered the best opportunity.

He opened his studio on the second floor of the Putegnat Building at 1149½ East Elizabeth Street.

A June 8, 1931 Brownsville Herald article proudly announced:

“Photographs live forever.”

It was more than advertising language. It was a philosophy.

Rogers introduced modern panchromatic color-corrected materials, promising truer tonal rendering. He offered Kodak finishing, enlargements, and individual attention to every roll of film. From the start, he positioned himself not as a transient portrait man, but as a permanent professional presence.


Portrait Work Is Real Study — 1935

By 1935, Rogers had established himself firmly.

A February 25, 1935 Herald feature titled “Portrait Work Is Real Study” described a studio offering:

  • Fine portrait photography

  • Commercial photography

  • Motion pictures

  • Photostatic work

  • Restoration of faded photographs

  • Kodak finishing

The article emphasized that portraiture was not mechanical — it was learned craft. Retouching negatives, mastering light angles, understanding expression — this was disciplined work.


1938

He was also one of the few moving picture cameramen south of San Antonio. His films included:

  • The Tarpon Rodeo

  • Brownsville segments of “Flying the Lindbergh Trail” for Pan-American

In other words, Rogers was not only recording families — he was recording the Valley itself.


Civic Man, Arkansas Roots

Rogers quickly embedded himself in the community.

He was:

  • A Methodist

  • A Lions Club member

  • An outdoorsman who hunted and fished in Mexico

  • A friend of Bob Burns (also from Arkansas)

He and his wife had one daughter.

He joined the boards of the Southwestern and Texas Professional Photographers Associations and was elected vice-president of the state organization. By 1942, he had become president of the Texas Professional Photographers Association.

He was not merely running a studio — he was helping shape the profession in Texas.


Expansion and Airplanes — 1940–1942

By 1940, Rogers relocated to East Levee Street and expanded.

Services now included:

  • Blueprinting

  • Commercial copy work

  • Photo supplies for amateurs

  • Enlargements

  • Aerial photography

He also learned to fly under instruction from Les Mauldin, becoming a member of the Civil Air Patrol.

Photography from the air was not common in Brownsville. Rogers embraced it early.

The 1940s would mark his most ambitious years.


Ten Years Strong — 1940 Anniversary

In 1940, Rogers celebrated his tenth anniversary with a large Herald advertisement showing:

  • Blueprint department

  • Retail department

  • Camera room

  • Complete photographic services

He advertised “A Complete Photographic Service” — portrait, commercial, aerial, copy work, enlarging, Kodak finishing.

This was no small-town storefront. It was a full-service photographic enterprise.


The Music Store — 1945

In 1945, Rogers purchased a building at 1336 East Elizabeth Street and opened a music store.

Why would a photographer open a music store?

Because technology was converging.

By late 1946 and into 1947, Rogers offered:

  • Professional sound recordings

  • Phonograph record production

  • Recording studio services in the rear of his Levee Street studio

A 1947 Herald article titled “Group Cuts Recording” showed local musicians recording in his facility.

This was forward-thinking. Rogers saw the shift: photography, sound, retail electronics — all related.

He was building a multimedia enterprise before that word existed.


Post-War Growth — 1948

In 1948, Rogers erected a new two-story building next door to his music store.

Post-war building restrictions had lifted. Downtown Brownsville saw new construction. Rogers was part of that wave.

The building housed:

  • Office space upstairs

  • A men’s clothing store below

His studio was modernized with air conditioning provided by John H. and Earl Hunter — names synonymous with mechanical innovation in Brownsville.

He was investing heavily — and visibly — in downtown’s future.


A Changing Industry — 1950

1957 Palmetto ad

By 1950, Brownsville’s established studios publicly warned against “itinerant photographers” — fly-by-night operators offering cut-rate work and disappearing.

The notice listed six established studios:

  • Rogers Studio

  • Burgess Studio

  • Holm Studio

  • K. Welch Studio

  • Alex Studio

  • Morales Studio

Rogers was firmly among the city’s trusted professionals.

Yet change was coming.

Amateur photography exploded after World War II. Cameras became affordable. Families began taking their own snapshots.

By 1957, Rogers discontinued his portrait department.

Instead, he pivoted to:

  • Camera sales

  • Film supplies

  • Greeting cards

  • Small electronics

He adapted rather than resisted.


The Sudden End — 1963

In October 1963, A. “Pat” Rogers died suddenly.

His professional staff kept the business operating for several years after his death — a testament to how structured and well-managed the operation had become.

But over time, negatives were dispersed. Collections fragmented. Storage lockers emptied.


The Brownsville Treasure Collection

A collection of 4” x 5” film negatives discovered in Austin after a storage forfeiture is now referredto  as:

The Brownsville Treasure Collection of Photographs from the A. Rogers Studio (late 1940s–early 1950s).

These negatives may represent one of the last substantial surviving bodies of Rogers’ work.

And they matter.

Because, as Rogers himself once said:

“Photographs live forever.”

They do — if someone saves them.


Why A. Rogers Matters

1962

Robert Runyon gave us early Brownsville.

A. “Pat” Rogers documented:

  • Depression-era survival

  • Wartime transition

  • Post-war optimism

  • Downtown modernization

  • The rise of amateur photography

  • The blending of photography, sound, and retail technology

He stands as the bridge between eras.

His name deserves to be remembered alongside Runyon, Morales, and the others who fixed Brownsville’s image in silver.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Charles Stillman on the Rio Grande — 1853 January -- Markets Tight, News Uncertain, Credit in Motion

Where the River Meets the Ledger

January 1853 — Markets Tight, News Uncertain, Credit in Motion

January opens not with triumph, but with strain.

The river is quiet in one sense — no guns, no proclamations — but the letters are restless. They move between Brownsville, New Orleans, and Monterrey, and they carry three recurring concerns:

  1. Markets are tight.

  2. Freight is political.

  3. Information travels badly.

Charles Stillman stands at the mouth of a network that stretches from the Rio Grande to the docks of New Orleans and the counting rooms of New York. In January 1853, every strand of that network feels pulled.


I. The New Orleans Axis — Southmayd & Harrison

Southmayd & Harrison remain Stillman’s most important commercial correspondents. Their letters from January 7, 15, and 25 form a continuous narrative of pressure.

The Market Problem

  • Cotton goods are advancing rapidly in New York.

  • Brooklyn and Lowell goods are selling at higher cash prices.

  • Mexican trade is consuming American prints and domestics faster than supply can meet demand.

  • New Orleans markets are “bare of goods.”

They report:

  • 10,000 to 12,000 bales moved in recent weeks.

  • Buyers arriving from Vera Cruz seeking large quantities.

  • Stocks in store are large — but not at prices shippers want.

And then the hides.

The hide market is described as “very dull.”
Matamoros prices hover around 12½¢.
New York appears weak.
Liverpool offers only a small margin.

The implication:
Brownsville is long on hides at a moment when the Atlantic market is uncertain.


II. Freight — The Quiet Battleground

Freight emerges as a point of friction.

A man named Wickham is repeatedly mentioned. He:

  • Undercuts rates.

  • Divides freight margins with shippers.

  • Pressures established commission houses.

Southmayd & Harrison refuse to divide the “primage.”
They see this as corrosive to established commercial order.

This is more than a pricing dispute — it’s about control.

Freight determines who profits:

  • The shipper,

  • The factor,

  • Or the intermediary.

In January 1853, competition along the Gulf coast is sharpening.


III. Monterrey — Morell and the Interior Trade

While New Orleans struggles with markets, J. Morell writes from Monterrey (Jan 14, Jan 27).

His letters pivot the story inland.

He discusses:

  • Duties and import calculations.

  • The advisability of sending goods via Vallecillo.

  • Risk of robbery.

  • Concerns about smuggling.

  • Saltillo goods and future movements.

And crucially:

He encloses:

  • Statements of the Bank.

  • Certificates of stock.

  • A note for $3,000.

  • Requests regarding division of shares.

This is frontier corporate formation in motion.

The Rio Grande trade is not merely hides and prints — it is:

  • Notes,

  • Certificates,

  • Joint obligations,

  • Capital subscription.

The inland mining and commercial apparatus requires structured financing. Morell appears increasingly embedded in that system.


IV. E.C. Smith — Border Reality

Smith’s January 13 letter (Edinburg) shifts tone dramatically.

He writes of:

  • Smuggling in the vicinity.

  • Illness in the area.

  • Deaths.

  • The shooting and reported killing of Richardson near Linares.

  • Conflicting reports — prisoner? dead? uncertain?

Information is unreliable.
Violence is ambient.
Trade continues anyway.

He also sends:

  • A list of small charges (flour, trimming, bedding, porter, etc.)

  • A modest total (14.90).

Even amid larger commercial calculations, these small expenses matter. The ledger never sleeps.


V. Gregory and Richardson — The Fragile Periphery

From Smith’s correspondence and scattered notes:

  • Gregory reportedly sold goods and began return travel.

  • Richardson allegedly shot near Linares.

  • Later reports say Gregory is a prisoner.

  • Mexican sources say Richardson is dead.

Nothing is confirmed.

In a modern system, this would be a telegram moment.
In 1853, it is rumor carried on horseback.

Stillman must account for goods, debts, and lives based on incomplete intelligence.


VI. Duties and the State

One enclosure outlines the “Manner of Calculating Duties on Calicoes.”

It lists:

  • Import duties.

  • Additional charges.

  • Municipal percentages.

  • Lay days.

  • Totals.

The arithmetic is meticulous.

Why include this?

Because the border is not merely a commercial line — it is a fiscal instrument.

Duty structures determine:

  • Whether goods move through Monterrey or Matamoros.

  • Whether shipment via Vallecillo is profitable.

  • Whether risk outweighs margin.

The state is present in percentages.


VII. The January Pattern

If we step back, January 1853 shows three simultaneous movements:

  1. Atlantic Market Volatility

    • Cotton goods rising.

    • Hides uncertain.

    • Wool slightly softened.

  2. Interior Expansion

    • Monterrey trade active.

    • Banking instruments circulating.

    • Corporate organization forming around mines and supply chains.

  3. Border Instability

    • Smuggling.

    • Robbery.

    • Illness.

    • Conflicting reports of death.

Stillman operates at the intersection of all three.

He must:

  • Finance inland ventures,

  • Time shipments to New Orleans,

  • Negotiate freight politics,

  • Evaluate rumors of violence,

  • And maintain credit reputation across three cities.

January is not dramatic in headline terms.

But it is structurally revealing.

The network is tightening.


🧠 Character Tracking — January 1853

Below is a structured guide for readers following recurring figures.


🧾 Charles Stillman

Position: Merchant at Brownsville; nodal operator of the network.
Role this month:

  • Balances hide shipments against dull Atlantic demand.

  • Coordinates freight with Southmayd & Harrison.

  • Engages in inland financing with Morell.

  • Monitors risk reports from Smith.

  • Manages credit instruments and stock certificates.

Stillman is less a trader than a systems manager.


🚢 Southmayd & Harrison (New Orleans)

Function: Commission merchants / factors.

Themes in January:

  • Market analysis (cotton goods rising, hides dull).

  • Freight disputes with Wickham.

  • Refusal to split primage.

  • Advisories on New York and Liverpool conditions.

  • Shipment of mining supplies (assay scales, sulphate of copper, etc.).

They are the Atlantic-facing intelligence arm of Stillman’s operation.


🏦 J. Morell (Monterrey)

Function: Interior commercial partner.

January profile:

  • Encloses bank statements and stock certificates.

  • Discusses duties and import structure.

  • Mentions Vallecillo route.

  • Concerned with security and risk.

  • Possibly tied to mining enterprise capital.

Morell represents the emerging corporate-commercial layer inland.


📝 E.C. Smith (Edinburg / Border vicinity)

Function: Frontier correspondent; likely trade intermediary.

January themes:

  • Smuggling prevalent.

  • Illness widespread.

  • Reports of violence (Richardson).

  • Small expense accounts.

  • Personal tone (sickness in his household).

Smith gives texture to the ground reality.


🧍 Gregory

  • Reported sold goods.

  • Began return journey.

  • Later rumored prisoner.

  • Status uncertain.

He represents the vulnerability of itinerant traders.


🔫 Richardson

  • Allegedly shot near Linares.

  • Goods stolen.

  • Supposed fatal wound.

  • Information contradictory.

Richardson embodies the risk premium built into frontier commerce.


⚓ Wickham

  • Competes aggressively on freight.

  • Divides primage with shippers.

  • Disrupts established commission structures.

He is the destabilizing competitive force in Gulf shipping.


🏭 The Mine (implied entity)

Appears in references to:

  • Assay scales.

  • Sulphate of copper.

  • Capital subscriptions.

  • Interior banking instruments.

This is likely the same evolving mining interest we saw in late 1852 — now requiring supply chains, accounting, and structured capital.

Corporate formation is no longer abstract — it is operational.


The January Mood

If December 1852 suggested expansion, January 1853 suggests tension.

  • Markets tightening.

  • Freight competition intensifying.

  • Violence intruding.

  • Corporate instruments multiplying.

  • Atlantic prices drifting.

  • Credit stretching.

Stillman is no longer simply moving goods.

He is managing volatility.


If you would like, next we can:

  • 🔎 Extract a clean ledger summary (all monetary references, drafts, balances).

  • 📊 Build a January 1853 network map (who connects to whom, and through what commodity).

  • 📖 Or prepare a more literary, atmospheric version for the blog — candlelight, river air, rumor and calculation side by side.

Your move.

1852 December 31st: John W. Black’s Petition

 

December 31st, 1852

John Black to Charles

Guadaloupe Victoria

Columbia

 

Mr. Stillman,

            My very dear friend, there seems to be a very serious difficulty rising between us which I would like for us to settle without delay and any further expense to you or myself – Mr. Clark and myself were talking over this affair last week and he told me that Mr. Stone had never informed you that he had promised Me  any thing to induce me to take up my locations out of your way but had merely written to you that he had given me a Short Lease and allowed me to occupy for this short time as a consideration for__________ - how _______ I do hope that when I prove to you this was not the case I will find you are to be the Gentleman of honor wealth’s natural Sense that you have been represented to me to be – frequently and at different times by Mr. Stone and other of the most respectable Citizens of this place and that you will feel and Act toward me differently from what to my great astonishment and great injury you have or seem to have done and with this view of the matter I will first say that Mr. Stone came to me with the Papers written all on principally in Spanish and declared to me that you had a genuine old Mexican title to this land which you had purchased and paid the original Grantee for and that you had sent him your legal agent to prevent the Limitation Law from having effect by making arrangements in your favor that he was instructed and would Sue every man who refused to raise his Locations that had been made – I told him from all the information I could get I was induced to believe all those Locations would fail – So I located nine hundred and sixty Acres in good faith Surveyed and paid for it  - but I would prefer purchasing land to going to Law for it – but I was well pleased with my place and did not wish to leave it he said he had no doubt but that you would sell me enough for a good home where I was living and possibly the whole League and that for the present he would give me A lease and told me to just name my own time – I replied I do not wish a lease – I do not intend living on any man’s land but came here with no other purpose but that of occupying my own premises – He said you were in A difficulty then with Mexicans and that although you had bought the land and paid them for it yet there was only one or two of the Heirs that had signed the deed of transfer – consequently, it would be impossible at that time to make the purchase until the whole matter could be better arranged and by these persuasions I took a short Lease.

            After this a considerable time elapsed before I took my locations, but after diligent enquiring after your character being fully persuaded by the good reports I heard of you I felt safe in raising (?) them – After this I saw Mr. Stone at Port Lavaca and said to him Major I have fulfilled my part of the contract – I have raised my Locations and now I expect you to fulfill your part without any further delay.

            We were in Ewing’s warehouse and he observed to me Mr. Black I have not the time now to do the writing and said, “You see that Schooner hoisting her sails I have to go home on her and She cannot wait” but I will acknowledge in presence of these Gentlemen the fact necessary to secure you until a more convenient time” –there were some _____ _____ _____ Men present and he (Mr. Stone) addressing himself to them Said, “Gentlemen I call you to witness a fact which is that Mr. Black is to hold possession of the place he now lives on and is at liberty to go on and make just such improvements as best suits himself and I will give him writing to this amount that if the land is ever sold he shall have the preference – if not he shall hold exclusive possession and improve as though it was his own as long as he pleases – and he shall never be interrupted or moved – but at any time he chooses to leave the place he shall be fully paid for all the improvements he leaves behind considerable time often to write a letter which I have and you can read for yourself in which he says “I was perfectly right in believing my Home Improvements &  Rights would be by him accorded & Secunded to me so that he would do it – that he should always have a pleasure not only in rendering bare justice but in bestowing any favor in his power upon a person he esteemed so worthy, so honorable, and so guileless as he esteemed me to be.” Much time elapsed and nothing more was done for me but much against me, Mr. Newcomb had persuaded me to let him locate my Certificates for me in Castro’s Colony saying I could board & school his son and he would pay for Surveying and getting out the Patents (so I boarded and schooled his son and paid him for the same – but I have never seen nor heard of my certificates since and after making all necessary inquiry for the Same I find he never Located them and they are lost) Some time after Newcomb took my Certificates and attended court as witness for you in the case between you & Dolen (sp?) & White At dinner table at a hotel (in Victoria) I asked him (Mr. Newcomb) in presence of all and so All in the house could hear me to send me back my land Certificates – saying I wished to lay them down again where I had taken them up in order that I might not be baffled out of My Home and that I would have an understanding with Mr. Stone that I done (sic) this merely to secure myself from so serious a loss as I might otherwise sustain Mr. Newcomb replied I could not have the Certificates for they were Located, Surveyed and patented and he had paid for it all (this as before named proved impiously false) (he had done no such thing) Soon as Court was over Newcomb told me he was going to Matamoros to see you I requested him to give you my respects and to say to you that I thought it little as you could do for me now after I had done so much for you & so materially injured myself by so doing to secure to one my home he said he would and tell you All about it – when he returned I asked what was your reply  - he said you told him to tell me to stay here and still take care of the Timber and as soon as the War ended you were coming out here to Merchandize and then whatever I said was Right  you would do for me  After this Mr. Snively came to me with your respect and said you wished to know whether I would acknowledge myself your Tenant I told him I had even intended to do this as soon as you had done for me What Mr. Stone had promised and not till then That I had ever considered myself living on my own Soil – that I was entitled to it & would have it then be Said to me he would guarantee to me that I should have a home here And asked me how much I wanted I told him six hundred and forty acres to be run out in such a way as to give me a fair front he said he would write you before he could set upon it he afterwards told me that the whole of the rest of the League was for Sale and told me when I went to Mississippi to reserve for myself 640 acres where I lived and sell the other part of the league for 3 dollars an acre if I could I tried every possible inducement to men there to get them to but it but no man there would give that price for it ______Next Mr Johnson told me you sent me word to move out of your way – A little after Mr Clark came here one of your Mexicans told my little boy you were going to drive me off and & you would send Mexicans enough and they would do it – after this at different times this same Mexican pointed out to aforesaid Boy several men amongst them that he said were mucha diabla y algunas mata  un hombre muy pronto [very evil and eager to kill anyone at once] - & last winter in my absence of about 2 or 3 months they killed near all of my hogs, shoats, pigs and even after my return continued to kill my hogs Till they were overtaken I went kindly to them telling them the consequences  also requesting Mr Clark to put a stop to it at the same time giving him friendly advice respecting the same they offered to pay for the one they acknowledged killing but I gave them to understand I would not receive pay for the one unless they paid for all  - Sometime after this they killed my hogs continually and with impunity and I gathered the Neighbours & went to the Mexicans and gave them their orders respecting the same – Now _____ this puzzles me and on this one Subject I will be silent – and Mr. Clark has the appearance of a gentleman who has been well raised of something more than ordinary intellect and seems to be a pattern for the world in some respects.  I have on your account treated him more like a brother when I could have put 2 of his Mexicans in the penitentiary for stealing my hogs I forbore lest he should lose his crop of corn he was trying to make he proposes friendship to me & we have even met & parted in a friendly manner yet there appears to be something wrong & very unreasonable or at least unnecessary that I should suffer so serious a loss & losses & injuries from the hand or operations of a friend – much more often my being a long particularly well known & tried friend – now if you could know the insults, loss of time, hard trials & serious losses I have had on your account & under the peculiar circumstances from the beginning to the present time even this very moment of my precious time in writing I believe you would even repose confidence in me as a well tried & well known friend & that you would be first to punish or being to justice anyone you knew to lay violent hands on my property – Mr. Clark told me you told him you had no doubt that I had done all I could to protect & secure your timber yet the timber was all gone Now this is hard on me and probably altogether on account of you not being rightly informed and more probable by you being wrongly informed & I do wish from my heart you were here & you yourself might see and know all the intrigues & low cunning that have been practiced against both myself & you even by those one would think confidence might be placed in – I would in general rather deal with a man of good Character due sense of honor & ______ than his Agent you interest – your Agent’s and mine – may be different and all work harmoniously together for the good of all – yet it is not uncommon for those interests to clash in such case the Agent is very apt to take care of himself in the first place & in the next for the one who will do the most for him – but a hint to the wise is sufficient – I will now tell you a little of the great deal I have done for you as Mr Stone’s agent for you even down to the time you sent Mr. Clark and by the request of Mr Snively, your 2nd Agent & yourself through Mr Newcomb your Council – in the first place I will say to you that my 960 acres embraced nearly all the choice front of the League had more timber on it & nearly all the good bottom land comparatively – the Surveyor told me I had about 4 miles front on the river – White & Dolen’s purchase came a little into my Survey on the upper side  the next year White Dolen Traylon (sp?) Norris purchased nearly all the rest of the League I was from home five months & when I returned White had cut down the timber on about  4 acres in what was called Black’s Rincon and had also cut some rail timber nearly between me and the river Mrs. Black had taken a witness & forbade him to cut more in my absence He gave Mrs Black some strong hints about my safety if I said anything about his cutting timber there on my return I gave him his orders respecting this Timber & he being a much stronger man than I attempted to give me the ax-whip – however, he found it to be a troublesome business & gave it out in a few minutes – he gave up my Rincon & made no more inroads upon me Also Mr Traylon & Mr. Norris one on my back  (as it were) the other alongside made a considerable advance on the lower side of my Survey until it was redeemed however Traylon proved to be on Palmers’ location which is said he held then as Palmer’s tenant I had advised Mr. Stone and Newcomb of this location and urged the necessity of something being done in due time – it was however entirely neglected until the limitation law would have given it to him – had Traylon acknowledged himself his Tenant – but Mr Stone gave Traylon all the rails houses etc that were on this improvement (which Traylon took from this league) and something like one hundred Dollars besides – then the lower side of the _______was nearly clear_Mr. Green (?) however claimed a portion of it and took away a great deal of timber of that and considerable more from the lower part of the league. Notwithstanding I was warning forbidding & reporting him continually to your Agent – this enraged these men against me they waged war – operating against me every way in Their power – In the beginning of this I was informed the whole neighbourhood had agreed to unite their efforts and break me up I saw them together soon after & they were in battle array (as it were, against me) & showed nearly as much hostility as so many Savages I told them that I was informed they had said here I should not stay & that their conduct towards me proved to me that I stood alone – but I was stronger than they ALL & that they never could accomplish what they had undertaken – that they might injure me very much (which they have done) but in the end they would injure themselves a great deal more but they persisted in their venomous & unparalleled persecutions in every way & manner they could devise – and Major Roman a Citizen of Victoria told me that they certainly would accomplish their end – I told him I was an innocent suffering victim of their malice & that the Providence of God would operate in my favor – his reply to me was “don’t you trust to Providence Mr. Black for it is impossible for you to stand They are Too Strong for you” I observed time will show and now The Struggle with them I hope is over they profess friendship & some of them seem to like me better than any of their old party & I have a spotless reputation left me which I feel I shall ever hold more sacred than every thing else that pertains to this life yet my constitution is badly shattered I am old & have but 3 teeth in my mouth my hands are weak through much sickness & weariness in labours & fatigues in trying to secure to myself  an honorable & honest competency to render myself & family comfortable in Old Age and greater infirmities & here I now stand upon the same battleground with no sword in my hand but the Word of God – and I sincerely hope it will never be wielded but by the Spirit of Truth whilst a live a spared Monument of God’s Mercy –

Respecting the timber I have saved comparatively ALL on my Survey & there is enough timber on it to fence in more than the whole league of land – and if I had not been persuaded by you through your Agents to take up my Locations I could have saved all without the least difficulty, loss of time or property- but Mr. Dolen Traylon have taken I believe every stick of good timber for building & fencing both above & below but as far as I know have cut me more of the firewood than what they burned – but the Germans through their influence were emboldened to rush into the Timber cutting & hauling it off with great impunity - & by Calling in the assistance of Newcomb Immeasurably Stopped them & with a great deal of difficulty & careful management I got Harris the Dutchman off who was left there first by White & lastly by Stone – since he left I do not know that there has been one stick taken by the Germans for making wagogns building firewood or any other purpose only to burn when camped at my watering place now it is true c___________ that there is no timber on the upper or lower part of the League when we speak of making houses, rails etc. but it is widely different when we speak of firewood  & I fully believe after giving me as much as I ask you have enough to keep up two Sugar to work 200 hands each to the end of time with the right kind of management & I do assure yout hat if I had not prevented it there would not have been one tree left, wither oak, ash, percan or any other kind suitable for rails house building or making wagons & there would have been thousands of dollars worth of firewood hauled off by the multitudes of waggoners & others to Indianola & Port Lavaca & sold there & it is a positive fact that I have saved all the timber comparatively that and nearly all the firewood & this was under the most trying circumstances in the first as Pioneers and Frontier Settlers in a land of Savages and howling wilderness suffering all the privations exposed to all the dangers of extreme distresses which are consequent to a long and tedious War – the danger & dread of our Native Arabs & half-tamed C_________ etc. I have now told you a little of the great deal I wish you could know relative to the Matter – and I would ask you in the name of common Sense what Claims you have on me – and how you could expect me to Stay here by your request through your agents thirteen years under the most unfavorable circumstances taking care of your timber and while being swindled & cheated out of one of the best tracts of land in Texas which tract is my just right without some compensation from you for the time of services rendered you and if you would give me half this league of land you would be the gainer you would still have more than enough Timber & choice land left with Prairie land for Stock raising – and my half would have cost me more than the other would you Speaking of nothing but time & money – but I do not ask this I only ask you to Settle this Matter with me at once by giving a deed to six hundred & forty acres where I now live with a guarantee of a mile front including all my improvements or otherwise to give me or otherwise to give me a deed to twice the amount front on the river running back for quantity the same width containing 1280 acres together with my Rincon which is the only nursery ground which I have for my tropical Fruits all my improvements and sufficient building timber to make me a few houses also that you do not allow me to be interrupted in any way in regard to moving etc until I shall have Sufficient time to move my nursery trees etc. with the least possible damage as it will cost me a great deal to move them. I consider this is asking much less of you than you in reason can expect & if you please you can add to this request as much as honor & justice demand.

And I ask o_____ to never lose Sight of my unparalleled Standing alone – Surrounded by your enemies – unnecessarily protecting your rights and property with my own – in the next place you would be generally benefitted if you could have the privilege of my fence – the whole length of my tract which I intend closing with Bowse de arc [Bois D’Arc, or Osage Orange] I have the materials growing in my Nursery enough to fence a long part of it & in 3 years can have it completed ____ providential hindrance.

A gentleman in Victoria offers me one Dollar a “rod” for as much as will make a mile of fence & I have only to plant & trim the hedge for 3 years. He proffers to prepare the grove and cultivate it well & I am to have the cuttings for my trouble of trimming the hedge this length of time. But if you make this arrangement with me quickly they will probably be worth as much as this to me & at some time a great deal more to you as it will inclose one side of the whole as far back as my land goes & if you wish it I will inclose the rest ______butting against my tract for the land it contains – now this is doing more for you than for myself.

I can get large tracts to inclose – good Prairie land in a Square from 9 to ten (?) miles lying where it needs no protection from cattle & some nearer Port Lavaca & have half this land for fencing the other half (?) but I would like first to accommodate myself at home. Mr Clark tells me a fence on the lower side would be a great advantage to him in keeping his animals from straying off below – and he also [is] beging [beginning] to see the necessity of having the whole league inclosed as soon as practicable – if this arrangement can be made quickly ______ you & I in settling the difficulty that seems to exist between us The place where I now am would suit me best – but if my Cattle are in your way it would suit you the best for me to take the lower or upper side & Mr. Clark & I have concluded the difficulty would be at an end –

There would be another advantage to both parties. We would be enabled to plant large fields of corn by joining our fence and in this way enclose altogether the “Bowie de Arc” makes a fence of itself which we can plant immediately on the “line” with this understanding that I am to have the whole control in farming the Hedge & all the benefits arising from the cuttings or seed (?) it may afford forever (you will notice this Bowie de arc is my own property purchased & raised by myself) & you are never to be deprived any benefit it may be to you as an inclosure & neither party shall have the power without the mutual consent of the other to move or interfere with the fence so as to injure it.

All these arrangements can be immediately made with ___ much to your advantage every way – but you will first consider upon what ground we both stand, I upon my own rightful Soil and you contending for my premises especially as I am an orchardist & have spent much time labor & money in preparing my ground for the reception of a large amount of the finest & most costly fruits & shrubberies that are grown & no one but a regular orchardist could begin to make an estimate of the large amount of hard labor alone & apart from the high prices I have paid & serious losses I have sustained in the exportation of my fruits & shrubberies & to say nothing about additional expenses in preparing a new place and the inconveniences of moving etc.

I would like for you to consider The Back get (?) it would give me in the enjoyment of the fruits of my labor & and the speedy Sales of a large amount of my fine fruit trees & Shrubberies & beside this a considerable number of my trees are well established & susceptible of bearing large crops& could I remain where I have the right & ought to remain uninterrupted – I could no doubt in 2 years from now begin to realize a handsome income of probably not less than 1500 or 2000 Dollars annually, but move me under existing circumstances and where do you place me & as to the justice of the Act you might as well cut my throat(for my money if I am immediately & unavoidably deprived of a large amount of my hard earned fruits  for my own table and nursery – trees to operate on (?) driven out at this late an hour from my timber & almost every other convenience – to a place that never had nor never can have those conveniences and has been stripped or nearly so of all that ever made it even a tolerable place – and I really have not the available means  to buy all the timber etc to defray the expenses of moving to such a place.

Now I would not give 640 acres where I am for one thousand on either side of the league, but as you seem determined to move me if possible I wish not to contend – yet I must have my Rincon & some of my hard earned timber land (or I am in this particular too seriously impaired) and this Rincon has a little timber on it and the Surveyor told me contained about 30 acres & is of no consequence to you as it lies remote from the two large bodies of land, both above it & below it (it is nearly an island) and lies just above the land Mr. Clark proposes giving me and it is only joined to the main land by a narrow neck & I have done a great deal of work in it – (first & last) and it is the best nursery ground I would have, especially for my Tropical Fruits. Now __ if you wish to settle The Thing quickly & without further delay, you can do it by acceding to the proposals I have made & with the Rincon allow me the timber on a narrow strip of Land of about 50 acres running (as you will see by the Map I send you) & parallel with the river from the Rincon to the Prairie. All this little might enable me to Struggle through the privations and expenses of moving – Now ___ if all this Sacrifice on my part will not Suffice please just say to me what you intend doing, but in your deliberations upon this momentous question be careful to do by others as under the same circumstances you would wish them to do by you, remembering that persons who work for others have a righteous claim to a full compensation & permit me to say that it needs no prophet to say that the withholding of it from them is Fraud which will be visited with divine indignation & if an earthly tribunal cannot give me justice I take an appeal to the High Court of Heaven & call upon God to plead my righteous Cause & again will say in conclusion that I attended Court as a witness for you about six years ago, & part o the time & weeks at a time twice a year. I paid my own money for boarding horse food etc, which was not less than 25 cents a meal (other things according) in short I worked for nothing & found myself as the Records of Victoria Court will show on at least (?) for which I have never received one dime; no, not even thanks from you or your agents.

All this with a great deal more which can be said upon this Subject proves to __ demonstration that I am your wonderfully & well-tried friend, or I must say I do not know where you can expect to find one.

Now ___ to the above stated facts, or most of them, there are good & living witnesses & it is obvious & plain to all who have known me here for the last nineteen years that I have been swindled, by this too Seriously injured, even if without delay you give me a Deed to the Land I ask. And were it necessary believe I could obtain Certificates to this accounts from all the old citizens of high standing who know me here, & if you say so & cannot be Satisfied without it I will endeavor to give you all the testimony necessary to Satisfy you.

It would be better for you to come here & settle this business with me yourself if convenient, but if you cannot come immediately you can instruct or empower Mr. Clark to do this business & make the legal transfer.  Please answer this immediately, directing your letter to Victoria & I still remain your friend and well-wisher – John W. Black-

PS – I wish you also to take into consideration the expense & trouble you gave me last year in bringing Suit against me. In this instance I was necessarily compelled to employ 3 lawyers to defend myself, which took from me considerable of my hard earnings, which money I really need to make me comfortable were I not to have the additional expense of moving it is possible from what Mr. Clark tells me that you are not apprized (sic) as he says you had written that it was not a mistake made & you had order the “suit taken out of court” that he gave orders to that effect to your Council (sic) here but he told my Lawyers he had no authority to throw it out but that it should be laid over to next court.  My council objected to this measure, Stating to the Court we are ready for “Trial” & demand it immediately. Your council said he was not ready and therefore would submit to a “____ Suit”  in this matter. There appears to be a Contradiction  in terms. My money is gone & probably both parties materially injured. Please answer this as soon as it comes to hand. Most ___ & truly yours, John W. Black.


December 31, 1852: John W. Black’s Petition

On the last day of 1852, a letter left Guadalupe Victoria bound for Charles Stillman. It was not a business memo. It was not an invoice. It was something closer to a reckoning.

John W. Black wrote as a man who believed himself wronged.

He begins politely — almost ceremonially — addressing Stillman as “my very dear friend,” and speaking of “a very serious difficulty rising between us”

Stillman - J.W. Black to Chas. …

. But the courtesy quickly gives way to detail. Black claims that Stillman’s agent, Mr. Stone, had persuaded him years earlier to adjust his land location in exchange for security: he would be allowed to occupy the tract he lived on, improve it, and receive preference if the land were ever sold.

Black says he trusted this promise.

According to his account, he gave up legal leverage, moved claims, and acted in good faith — believing that Stillman held a valid Mexican title and that resistance would only bring lawsuits

Stillman - J.W. Black to Chas. …

. He describes witnesses present when Stone allegedly affirmed that Black would never be disturbed and would be compensated for improvements.

But in the years that followed, Black insists, protection never materialized.

Instead, he recounts missing land certificates, hostile neighbors, timber disputes, livestock killed, lawsuits filed against him, and the slow erosion of what he believed to be his rightful home. He describes himself as a steward of Stillman’s timber — preventing speculators and settlers from stripping the league of its most valuable resources. He claims he attended court on Stillman’s behalf at his own expense. He frames thirteen years of hardship as service rendered without compensation.

By the close of the letter, the tone shifts from grievance to ultimatum.

Black asks for resolution: either a deed to 640 acres where he currently lives, with river frontage, or 1,280 acres elsewhere along the river — plus his “Rincon,” the small nursery tract where he had cultivated tropical fruits. He argues that forcing him to move would destroy years of labor and investment. He invokes both earthly justice and divine judgment. If courts fail him, he writes, he will “appeal to the High Court of Heaven.”

It is a frontier document in every sense — part legal brief, part moral appeal, part personal testimony.

Whether Stillman accepted this version of events is not known from the surviving correspondence. But Black’s letter reveals the tension beneath South Texas landholding in the 1850s: promises made through agents, titles rooted in older Mexican grants, settlers staking claims in uncertainty, timber worth as much as soil, and honor invoked where paperwork faltered.

The Rio Grande frontier was not quiet. It was negotiated — sometimes bitterly — one letter at a time.


🔎 What Became of John W. Black?

The surviving correspondence from 1853 does not clearly reveal whether Charles Stillman granted John W. Black the land he requested. No immediate resolution appears in the next sequence of letters.

That silence leaves us with questions.

Black describes himself in 1852 as physically worn, financially strained, and standing alone after years of defending timber and improvements on disputed land. He asks either for a deed to 640 acres where he resides, or 1,280 acres elsewhere along the river, along with his prized “Rincon” nursery tract. Whether that appeal moved Stillman is not yet documented in the available files.

To determine Black’s fate, several records may hold answers:

  • Victoria County deed books (1853–1865) — to see whether land was ever conveyed to him.

  • Texas General Land Office records — to determine whether he received patents or filed additional certificates.

  • District court minutes — which may reveal the outcome of the suit he references.

  • Federal census records (1860 onward) — to confirm whether he remained in Victoria County, and whether he owned land.

  • Probate records — if he died in the region, estate papers may reference the disputed property.

It is possible that Black secured a settlement and lived out his years as a modest river farmer or orchardist. It is equally possible that he lost the struggle and moved on — another early settler displaced in the complicated evolution of title and timber rights along the Texas frontier.

For now, he remains what the letter makes him: a voice from the battleground between promise and paperwork.

If further records surface, the story may yet continue.


Charles Stillman on the Rio Grande — July –December 1852

Where the River Meets the Ledger

July–December 1852: Silver, Shares, and the Architecture of Risk

By the summer of 1852, Charles Stillman is no longer simply trading hides and wool along the Rio Grande. He is building something larger — something structured.

The Mine of Jesús María Vallacillo, located in the mining district north of Monterrey and connected commercially through Saltillo and Monterrey, has become more than an investment. It is becoming a corporation in embryo.

But before we follow the silver, we must understand the cast.


The Men Around the Mine

Joseph Morell

Joseph Morell, based in Monterrey, is Stillman’s trusted financial intermediary inside Mexico. He is:

  • Banker

  • Agent

  • Silver purchaser

  • Holder of mining funds

Morell receives silver at agreed prices (often $8–$8½ per marco), sells or remits it, advances credit to the Mine, and holds pooled capital for administration. By late 1852, he is more than a correspondent — he becomes a shareholder, purchasing one vara (share) for $5,000.

Morell is the hinge between the frontier and interior finance.


Marks

“Marks” is a competing hide buyer operating along the Rio Grande frontier, backed by outside capital — possibly New Orleans interests. He purchases aggressively, often at inflated prices, disrupting Stillman’s margins.

Stillman does not merely compete with Marks.

He strategizes against him.

He would rather crowd him at narrow profit than surrender pricing control.


General Francisco Avalos

General Avalos commands military authority in Matamoros and the surrounding region. By late 1852, political instability in Tamaulipas intensifies. Avalos arrests municipal officials, pursues rebel citizen soldiers, and regards Stillman with suspicion.

Stillman writes that he must travel into Mexico secretly — Avalos might arrest him.

Political risk is now part of the ledger.


Colonel Reynolds

Colonel Reynolds holds two-thirds interest in the Mine. He is enthusiastic, persuasive, and chronically delayed. He makes optimistic assays, negotiates in New York, promises funds — and often arrives late.

Stillman respects him but no longer indulges him.

The tone shifts from partnership to supervision.


How the Mine Actually Worked

The Mine of Jesús María Vallacillo was not a simple shaft with nuggets waiting inside. It was a complex operation involving:

  • Extraction underground

  • Transport of ore (measured in “cargos”)

  • Surface processing at a hacienda de beneficio

Two principal processes appear in the letters:

The Cazo Process

The cazo (literally “kettle”) method involved heating crushed ore with quicksilver (mercury) in large copper vessels. Silver would amalgamate with mercury, then be separated.

It was quicker but sometimes inefficient.

When Stillman refers to “cazo results,” he is referring to the measured yield of silver per cargo of ore processed through this heated amalgamation method.

Early results looked promising.

Later yields appeared less consistent.


The Patio Process

The patio process — Mexico’s great colonial innovation — involved spreading crushed ore in open yards, mixing it with salt, copper sulfate, and mercury, and allowing animals to tread it for weeks.

Slower.
Labor-intensive.
But often more thorough.

Stillman repeatedly urges experiments by the patio method. He worries that reliance on the cazo alone may misrepresent the true value of the ore.


Location: Where Is This Mine?

The Mine of Jesús María Vallacillo lay in northern Mexico, connected commercially to:

  • Monterrey

  • Saltillo

  • Fresnillo (mining expertise region)

Silver extracted there traveled by mule and wagon southward and northward — eventually reaching Monterrey, Roma, or Brownsville, then onward to New Orleans or New York.

The Rio Grande was not the mining site.

It was the financial conduit.


The Corporate Formation Moment

Here is where July–December 1852 becomes extraordinary.

Stillman begins formalizing capital.

He writes of:

  • Total capitalization: $480,000

  • Twenty-four varas (shares)

  • $20,000 per vara nominal value

  • Initial contribution: $1,000 per vara to fund new administration

  • A prior $15,000 claim to be satisfied from profits

  • 15% of earnings allocated after reimbursement of capital

This is not speculative gambling.

This is structured frontier finance.

He proposes:

Sell one vara at $5,000
Note payable over five years
7% interest
Contributions due per administration call

He sells one vara to Morell.
Chapman sells one.
He considers selling additional shares to reimburse prior advances.

He is converting a mining gamble into a capitalized enterprise.


The Strain Beneath Structure

And yet —

The letters show tightening margins.

  • Silver yields fluctuate.

  • Expenses mount.

  • Copper ordered on credit.

  • Pumping required to keep shafts workable.

  • Reynolds slow with funds.

  • Stillman refuses to advance beyond proportion.

He writes:

“The Mine is our only salvation.”

That sentence reveals both hope and risk.

Trade in Brownsville is dull.
Political disorder disrupts Matamoros.
Hides are volatile.
Wool markets uncertain.

The Mine must work.

But he will not let it ruin him.


Frontier Finance at Its Sharpest Edge

What makes this installment powerful is not success or failure.

It is discipline.

Stillman:

  • Limits his exposure.

  • Sells equity to reimburse capital.

  • Establishes contribution calls.

  • Centralizes funds with Morell.

  • Separates personal advances from corporate expense.

  • Insists copper be charged properly.

  • Pushes for professional management under Provost.

He is building governance.

On the Rio Grande.

In 1852.


Political Instability as Financial Variabl

While this corporate architecture rises, the Republic trembles.

  • Citizen soldiers march on Victoria.

  • Avalos arrests local officials.

  • Comanches raid deep into the interior.

  • Trade crossings fluctuate unpredictably.

Stillman calculates not only silver yield —
but arrest risk.

He writes of traveling secretly.
He writes of smuggling accusations.
He urges passes for silver transport.

The ledger now contains political volatility.


Conclusion: From Venture to Corporation

July–December 1852 is not collapse.

It is transformation.

The Mine moves from hopeful speculation
to structured capitalization.

Shares are sold.
Contribution calls issued.
Credit lines formalized.
Management reorganized.

The River still flows.
Ships still cross the bar.
Hides still stack on the levee.

But the true story now lies inland —
in silver,
in capital structure,
in risk allocation.

Stillman is no longer chasing opportunity.

He is engineering survival.

And he is doing it in quotes —
measured, deliberate, disciplined.