Friday, March 13, 2026

1856 0228 and 29 The Schooner Florence — Outfitting in New York

The Schooner Florence — Outfitting in New York

The busy East River waterfront of New York in the mid-nineteenth century. Along streets such as South Street and Jackson Street, ship chandlers, grocers, and dock laborers provisioned vessels bound for ports across the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. It was in this maritime district that Captain James Woodhouse prepared the schooner Florence for her voyage to the Rio Grande in February 1856.


February 28–29, 1856

In February 1856 Captain James Woodhouse and his agents walked the crowded streets behind these wharves—South Street, Front Street, and the narrow lanes running toward Pearl Street—purchasing provisions, settling dock charges, and preparing the schooner Florence for her voyage to the Rio Grande.

Preparing the Florence for the Rio Grande Voyage

New York, February 1856

In the closing days of February 1856 the schooner Florence, commanded by Captain James Woodhouse, was preparing to leave the busy wharves of South Street in New York for the long voyage to the mouth of the Rio Grande.

The surviving receipts from the Stillman papers allow us to watch the vessel’s final preparations almost step by step. Though small and routine in appearance, these slips of paper record the essential work that turned an empty hull into a working ship ready for the Gulf trade.

South Street in the 1850s was one of the busiest maritime districts in the world. Nearly every building along the waterfront catered to ships: chandlers, grocers, sailmakers, ropewalks, and provisioning houses. Captains and agents moved from shop to shop gathering the supplies needed for voyages that might last weeks or months.

On February 28, 1856, one of the principal provisioning stops was the store of Bayles & Titus, grocers and suppliers of “ship and cabin stores” at 197 South Street. Their invoice shows a typical assortment of food and provisions purchased for the voyage:

  • a barrel of mackerel

  • dried codfish

  • smoked ham

  • Irish potatoes and beans

  • brown sugar and coffee

  • raisins and apples

  • mustard, catsup, pepper, and ginger

  • lamp and sperm oil for lighting

The bill totaled $110.91, a substantial sum for provisions in the mid-nineteenth century.

Other receipts show the bustle surrounding the vessel at the dock. Wharf laborers were paid $70 for loading cargo aboard the schooner. Another bill of $16.20 covered cartage and dock work—likely the movement of supplies and freight from warehouses to the pier.

On February 29, 1856, the final day of preparation—remarkably a leap-year day—additional supplies were purchased from Harry R. Miller, a wholesale grocer also located on South Street. The purchases included extra buckwheat and other provisions for the voyage.

Taken together, these receipts show the Florence in the final stage before departure: food stowed below deck, lamps filled with oil, cargo loaded by stevedores, and accounts settled with the merchants of South Street.

Within days the schooner would clear New York Harbor, pass Sandy Hook, and begin the long run southward toward the Gulf of Mexico and Brazos Santiago, the gateway to the Rio Grande frontier and the trading empire of Charles Stillman.

What appears at first glance to be a handful of grocery bills is in fact a rare snapshot of the practical machinery that kept the Rio Grande trade moving—ships being stocked, crews preparing for sea, and the maritime economy of New York feeding the commerce of the Texas frontier.


Estimating the Crew Size of the Florence

The provisioning list also offers clues about the size of the ship’s crew.

Typical Crew of a Rio Grande Trading Schooner

A schooner of the type used in the Stillman trade generally carried:

  • 1 Captain

  • 1 Mate

  • 4–6 Seamen

  • sometimes 1 cook or cabin boy

Typical crew size:
6–8 men

This matches well with the type of provisions purchased.


Food Quantity Clues

From the Bayles & Titus invoice we see staples typical for crew rations:

  • barrel of fish

  • dried codfish

  • beans

  • potatoes

  • sugar

  • coffee

  • preserved foods

These foods were standard maritime provisions because they stored well and could feed a crew for weeks.

Example: Coffee

The invoice appears to include about 10 pounds of coffee.

A sailor typically consumed:

~1 ounce per day

10 pounds = 160 ounces

160 crew-days of coffee supply.

If the voyage lasted about 20–25 days, that amount supports roughly:

6–8 men


Example: Beans and Potatoes

Shipboard diets relied heavily on:

  • beans

  • salt fish

  • potatoes

  • preserved meats

The quantities listed also align with provisions sufficient for a small crew rather than a large cargo vessel.


Voyage Length

Typical sailing time:

New York → Brazos Santiago

Approximately:

20–35 days, depending on winds and weather.

Provisions would usually cover at least 30–40 days to allow for delays.


What This Means Historically

These receipts reveal something important:

The Rio Grande trade was not carried by large oceanic ships but by small, efficient schooners with compact crews.

These vessels could:

  • navigate shallow Gulf waters

  • enter the Brazos Santiago Pass

  • handle coastal trade efficiently

Ships like the Florence were the logistical backbone of the commercial system that connected:

New York financiers → Gulf shipping → the Rio Grande frontier.


The following receipts capture a small but vivid moment in the Stillman shipping system: the Florence being provisioned and loaded in New York’s South Street maritime district, the heart of the American coastal trade.

The documents show multiple vendors supplying the ship within a 24–48 hour period, suggesting the vessel was about to sail.


1. Bayles & Titus — Ship Stores and Groceries

28 February 1856 — New York

Vendor:
Bayles & Titus
Grocers, Ship and Cabin Stores
197 South Street

This is the largest invoice in the set.

Selected items purchased for the voyage

Food staples typical for ship crews and long voyages:

Fish and preserved foods

  • 1 barrel No.1 mackerel

  • 25 lbs dried codfish

Oils and lighting

  • sperm oil

  • lamp oil

Meat

  • smoked ham

Beans and vegetables

  • Irish potatoes

  • beans

Sugar

  • brown sugar

Coffee

  • ground coffee

Fruit

  • apples

Baking supplies

  • raisins

Condiments

  • mustard

  • catsup

  • pepper

  • ginger

Canned or preserved items

  • canned preserves

  • preserved meats

Total bill

$110.91

Less payment:

$1.50

Balance recorded:
$109.41

This matches the notation on the reverse sheet:

“N Taylor Due — $109.41 — Feb 28 ’56”

Likely N. Taylor, probably a bookkeeper or agent.


2. Loading Charges — Pier Labor

28 February 1856


Receipt reads:

Sch Florence — Captain Jas Woodhouse
For loading the vessel fragment
$70

Signed:

R. D. Raymond

This is a wharf labor / stevedore charge for loading cargo onto the ship.


3. Wharf Labor / Cargo Handling

Another receipt:

Sch Florence & owners
4 load back wood — $10.00
30 boarders — $4.70
Total: $16.20

Signed:

E. A. Smith

Likely payment for:

  • cartage of cargo

  • dockside labor

The reverse shows:

“Bill paid — $16.20”


4. Additional Small Receipt

Back notation:

H. Dusle — $1.88 — Feb 29 ’56

This matches the small purchase recorded on the Miller invoice.


5. Harry R. Miller — Ship Provisions

29 February 1856    (Leap year day — nice historical detail)

Vendor:

Harry R. Miller
Wholesale Grocer & Ship Stores
179 South Street

Items:

  • 2 bags extra buckwheat

  • 10 apples

  • 1 cake fresh milk

Total:

$8.00

Another sheet shows:

2 bags extra buckwheat @ 4½
Total $1.88

These appear to be two related small purchases, possibly one for the ship and one for immediate crew use.


What This Set Reveals

These receipts together illustrate the final logistical phase of a voyage.

In just two days we see:

1. Ship provisioning

Food for crew and voyage:

  • fish

  • potatoes

  • beans

  • coffee

  • sugar

  • preserved meats

  • spices

2. Lighting supplies

  • sperm oil

  • lamp oil

3. Cargo handling

  • stevedores

  • cartage

  • wharf labor

4. New York maritime geography

Every vendor is located on:

South Street — Manhattan’s historic waterfront

In the 1850s this was the largest concentration of ship suppliers in the United States.


Historical Significance for the Stillman Papers

This is not just a grocery bill.

It documents the physical preparation of a vessel in the Stillman trade network.

Sequence likely looked like this:

  1. Ship arrives in New York

  2. Cargo assembled

  3. Ship outfitted with provisions

  4. Dock labor loads vessel

  5. Vessel departs for Brazos Santiago / Rio Grande trade

These receipts are a rare surviving operational snapshot of that system.


Small but Fascinating Details

Leap year document

February 29, 1856

That date appears on one receipt — a nice archival curiosity.


Captain identified

The vessel master appears as:

Captain James Woodhouse

One of the regular captains tied to Stillman shipping.


Total known expenses in this batch

Approximate combined cost:

  • Bayles & Titus: $110.91

  • Wharf labor: $70.00

  • Smith labor: $16.20

  • Miller provisions: $8.00

  • Misc: $1.88

Total documented: ~ $206

For context:

That is roughly $7,500–$8,500 in modern value.


Thursday, March 12, 2026

1855 Ships, Hardware, and the Cost of Moving Cotton ~ Where the River Meets the Ledger

Ships, Hardware, and the Cost of Moving Cotton

The schooner Florence, used in Charles Stillman’s Rio Grande trade, relied on an entire maritime ecosystem in New York Harbor—shipwrights, chandlers, towing steamers, pilots, and commission merchants. These advertisements and letterheads from the mid-1850s illustrate the services required to outfit and dispatch a coastal trading vessel.

Archival Document Review

These 1855 documents differ from earlier years. Instead of long business letters, the file contains:

  • freight settlements

  • ship repair invoices

  • marine hardware bills

  • port charges

  • small supply accounts

  • voyage settlements

This reflects a key shift: Stillman’s enterprise had matured into a shipping-based export system.


I. Passenger Passage Inquiry (Jan 4, 1855)

Archival transcription

Wampsville, New York — Jan 4, 1855

Messrs Post & Ryerson
Gentlemen

I am desirous of procuring a passage to Havre about the first of February.
If you have a ship bound to the above port about that time please drop me a line by mail stating what time she will be ready for sea and what will be the price of first class cabin passage exclusive of wines & liquors.

And much oblige
Your obedient servant
C. M. DeFerriero
Wampsville P.O.
Madison County NY

Interpretation

This document shows Stillman’s New York agents Post & Ryerson acting as shipping brokers not only for cargo but also passenger passages to Europe.

This reflects the broader Atlantic merchant shipping network that Stillman relied upon.


II. Antwerp Financial Settlement (Jan 6, 1855)

Archival transcription (summary)

Account statement:

  • Remittance on Strecker & Co. Antwerp

  • Gross amount: ƒ3583.84

  • Bank charges deducted

  • Remaining balance credited

Signed:

Aug. Nottebohm
Antwerp — Jan 6, 1855

Interpretation

This is evidence of European financial settlement of cotton shipments.

Cotton exported from the Gulf frequently ended in:

  • Liverpool

  • Antwerp

  • Le Havre

Stillman’s accounts were therefore reconciled through European banking houses.


III. Apalachicola Cotton Market Letter (Jan 8, 1855)

Archival transcription (key passages)

Apalachicola, Florida — Jan 8, 1855

We only received your favor of the 30th ultimo.
Had hoped for all — but wish for ships.
Cotton freights are easier when the river runs down.
Still an unmanageable river and much of the shipping idle.

Interpretation

This is a cotton market intelligence letter.

Important observations:

  • shipping demand fluctuated with river conditions

  • cotton freight rates were unstable

  • many ships sat idle waiting for cargo

Apalachicola was a major competing cotton port to New Orleans.


IV. New Orleans Commission Merchant Letter

Firm:

C.C. Bogert, Williams & Co.
Shipping and Commission Merchants
New Orleans — Jan 18, 1855

Archival transcription (summary)

We are in receipt of your favors and one to Mr. John Gale.

We noticed the announcement of the firm of Post & Ryerson.

The world is large enough and there is no other than friendly feeling between the two firms.

There never was a fairer opening in New York than now for establishing the shipping business on a permanent basis.

Interpretation

This letter is very revealing.

It confirms that:

  • Stillman’s New York partners were expanding shipping operations

  • the firm Post & Ryerson had recently reorganized

  • New York was becoming the central logistics hub for Gulf trade


V. Mobile Freight Correspondence (Jan 15–27, 1855)

Several letters from:

W. S. Charlock & Co.
Mobile, Alabama

Key statements

Freight settlements and balances due:

  • cargo charges

  • freight adjustments

  • captain’s settlements

  • freight markets weak

One letter notes:

Freight continues the same with little offering to any port.
The large receipts of produce in Louisiana have caused more firmness.

Interpretation

Mobile served as a transshipment port for Texas trade.

Stillman’s cargo often moved:

Rio Grande → Mobile → New York / Europe


VI. Merchant Supply Ledger

One sheet titled:

“To Chamberlain”

Items include:

  • rice

  • potatoes

  • onions

  • flour

  • oil

  • paint

  • candles

  • vinegar

  • coffee

  • sugar

  • cheese

  • butter

Interpretation

This represents general merchandise supplied to frontier markets.

Stillman was not only exporting cotton; he was also importing goods for:

  • Brownsville

  • Matamoros

  • ranch settlements

This was the classic frontier merchant exchange system:

manufactured goods in → cotton / hides out


VII. Schooner Florence — Ship Repair Accounts

These are the most important documents in the batch.

Multiple invoices refer to:

Schooner FLORENCE
Captain J. H. Woodhouse

Locations mentioned:

  • New York

  • Fairhaven

  • Brazos Santiago

Marine hardware invoices include:

Rigging items:

  • shackles

  • hooks

  • thimbles

  • top sail tack

  • stay straps

  • boom bands

  • mast bands

  • sail hooks

  • chain hooks

Heavy hardware:

  • crow bars

  • ice bars

  • anchor fittings

  • iron plates

Example invoice entry

Shackles
Hooks & Thimbles
Top Sail Tack
Pump Standard
Anchor Plates
Repairs on Crow Bar

Interpretation

This is a ship refitting bill.

Before sailing to the Gulf, a schooner required:

  • full rigging inspection

  • ironwork replacement

  • sail hardware replacement

  • deck fittings

Such repairs were usually done in northern shipyards.


VIII. Florence Port Charges — Brazos Santiago


Receipts from:

Brazos Santiago — Dec 22, 1855

Example:

To P. Moses
For stevedore services
$17.50

Another receipt:

schooner Florence & cargo
to Benjamin Moses
for storage charges

Interpretation

These show port handling costs at the mouth of the Rio Grande.

Key activities:

  • unloading cargo

  • warehouse storage

  • local handling


IX. Ship Hardware Purchase (Nov 12, 1855)

Receipt:

Schooner Florence
To Geo. W. Baldwin

278 feet of wood
slabs
$17.00

Interpretation

Repairs likely performed at Fairhaven, Massachusetts, a major shipbuilding port.


X. New York Port Charge

Receipt:

Schooner Florence
Captain J. H. Woodhouse

To landing cargo at Brazos
$60

J. G. Fox

Interpretation

This is a freight handling charge paid after arrival.


XI. Cargo Receipt (Brownsville)

One slip states:

Brownsville — Dec 1, 1855

Items:

  • 1 keg butter

  • 1 box potatoes

  • 2 lbs tea

Signed:

C. Stillman

Interpretation

This is a small cargo or provisioning receipt.

Even trivial goods were recorded.


XII. Small Account (Dec 22, 1855)

Slip labeled:

Edmond Bill

Amount:

$14.50

Interpretation

Likely a local labor or supply account.


XIII. Brazos Santiago Supply Account

Items include:

  • bacon

  • soap

  • tar

  • salt

  • box axes

Total:

$14.50


XIV. Wood Purchase (Dec 11, 1855)

Entry:

Schooner Florence
To 278 feet wood
slabs
$17.00

Fuel or ship repair material.


Major Historical Interpretation

The 1855 documents reveal something extremely important:

Stillman had built a functioning shipping system.

By this year we see:

Ships

  • Schooner Florence

Captain

  • J. H. Woodhouse

Ports involved

  • New York

  • Fairhaven

  • Mobile

  • New Orleans

  • Brazos Santiago

  • Brownsville

  • Antwerp

Business components

  • cargo freight

  • cotton shipments

  • ship chartering

  • marine repair

  • port storage

  • merchant imports


What 1855 Shows About Stillman

Compared with 1850–1853:

Earlier Years1855
letters about tradeoperational shipping records
frontier supply businessinternational export system
merchant correspondenceship logistics & freight accounts

By 1855 Stillman had evolved into something larger than a frontier merchant.

He was operating what we would now call:

A logistics network

linking

Rio Grande frontier → Gulf ports → Atlantic trade

Humphrey Eugene Woodhouse in the Early Days of Brownsville

A Merchant of the River Frontier

Just a simple route map - schooner would have likely stopped at other ports 

Humphrey Eugene Woodhouse in the Early Days of Brownsville

Before the schooner Florence began carrying cargo between the Rio Grande and New York, before the warehouses along the river filled with cotton, hides, and imported goods, one of Charles Stillman’s most important partners had already helped lay the foundations of the frontier trade.

His name was Humphrey Eugene Woodhouse.

Woodhouse came to the lower Rio Grande from Wethersfield, Connecticut, arriving in 1848 at Point Isabel, then known as Fort Polk. The Mexican-American War had just ended, and the region was still more military outpost than town. Lieutenant Colonel William Goldsmith Belknap, commanding the post, ordered Woodhouse to anchor his vessel at a site where he soon built his own wharf and warehouse.

The arrival of men like Woodhouse marked the beginning of a new commercial era on the Rio Grande.

Partner of Charles Stillman

Shortly after reaching the frontier, Woodhouse was invited by Charles Stillman to enter business with him in nearby Matamoros, then the dominant commercial center of the region.

Following the war in 1848, Stillman and his associates planned the layout of a new American town across the river—Brownsville. Surveying of the new city was carried out by Samuel Gelstrom, who later became connected with Woodhouse’s business operations in Matamoros.

In those early years, the Rio Grande functioned as a true commercial highway. Seagoing vessels could navigate the river as far upriver as Laredo, and it was not unusual to see as many as eight freighters unloading cargo for Woodhouse and other merchants along the banks.

While Brownsville was still being surveyed, Woodhouse crossed the river with his merchandise, laying planks between crates to create makeshift walkways and turning the landing into a bustling place of trade. The business grew rapidly, and Woodhouse continued in partnership with Stillman for many years.

The Florence and the Rio Grande Trade

Woodhouse soon conceived an ambitious idea:
to establish a regular vessel connecting New York and the Rio Grande frontier.

His brother, James H. Woodhouse, an experienced navigator and whaler, oversaw construction of the ship—probably in New Haven.

The result was the three-masted schooner Florence.

Built in 1855 at a cost of $12,000, she measured:

  • 102 feet long

  • 26-foot beam

  • 8-foot draft

The vessel was named for Woodhouse’s daughter, Florence.

Ownership of the ship was divided among four partners:

  • Charles Stillman

  • John Young

  • H. E. Woodhouse

  • James Harris Woodhouse, who served as master

The Florence made her first voyage in August, with Stillman himself aboard as a passenger. The trip took about three weeks, and the vessel proved immediately profitable, paying for her construction within the first year.

On May 4, 1858, the schooner was formally registered at Point Isabel, Texas.

The ship symbolized the growing integration of the remote Rio Grande frontier into the Atlantic commercial world.

Merchant, Ship Owner, and Builder

Woodhouse’s business interests continued to expand.

By 1856 he had built his home on Washington Street in Brownsville, becoming one of the town’s leading merchants. He later established a line of sailing vessels between Brazos Santiago and New York, advertising passenger passage for $65 cabin fare.

Newspapers of the era show Woodhouse’s ships regularly carrying cargo between the Gulf coast and the eastern seaboard.

Storms and the unpredictable coast could be brutal. During the hurricane of 1867, the Woodhouse schooner Joseph Rudd was blown six miles inland, still carrying a full cargo. Engineers eventually dug a turning basin and channel to return the stranded vessel to the sea.

A Global Merchant

Like many Rio Grande traders, Woodhouse’s ambitions reached far beyond Texas.

Leaving his local operations in the hands of associates, he sailed to Havana, then to England, opening business with Joseph Railton & Sons of Manchester. From there he expanded trade to Paris and Bordeaux, importing wines and brandy for northern Mexico.

Few merchants from the remote frontier had connections that stretched so far across the Atlantic world.

Builder of Community

When Woodhouse returned to Brownsville in 1874, his influence extended beyond commerce.

The Episcopal Church of the Advent, badly damaged by the hurricane of 1867, was restored largely through his efforts. Woodhouse donated lumber for the roof and floors, ironwork for the altar rails and lectern, and had pews constructed in his own yard.

His wife and local parishioners continued church work even during years when the congregation had no rector, ensuring that the Episcopal presence in Brownsville survived.

Rancher and Valley Pioneer

By 1879, Woodhouse had entered the cattle business as well, owning ranches in Cameron and Starr Counties.

The family remained prominent in regional life for generations. His son, Captain Edgar Woodhouse, later became a well-known mariner in the Gulf trade and died in Port Arthur in the early twentieth century after a long career in shipping.

A Forgotten Founder

Today the name Charles Stillman is well remembered in the history of Brownsville.
Yet men like H. E. Woodhouse stood beside him in building the commercial world of the lower Rio Grande.

Woodhouse was a ship owner, merchant, importer, rancher, and civic builder. His vessels linked the Rio Grande frontier to New York and Europe. His warehouses handled the cargo that fueled the region’s early prosperity.

And in 1855, the schooner Florence—named for his daughter—began sailing between the Gulf and the Atlantic, carrying with her the ambitions of a new borderland economy.

Main Route of the Schooner Florence

New York City

Atlantic Coastal Route

Gulf of Mexico Crossing

Brazos Santiago Pass (Point Isabel)

Brownsville Wharf – Rio Grande

Matamoros Trade District

Key Ports in the Network

New York City
Financial center and shipping hub. Manufactured goods, textiles, tools, and credit originated here.

Brazos Santiago (Point Isabel)
Deep-water Gulf port where ocean vessels anchored. Cargo transferred to river shipping or wagons.

Brownsville
American commercial center founded by Charles Stillman. Warehouses lined the Rio Grande.

Matamoros
The dominant Mexican customs and trading city of the region. Much of the cross-border commerce was negotiated here.

What the Ships Carried

Northbound (Rio Grande → New York)

  • Cotton from Texas and northern Mexico

  • Hides and livestock products

  • Silver from interior Mexico

  • Dye materials and agricultural goods

Southbound (New York → Rio Grande)

  • Textiles and clothing

  • Hardware and tools

  • Household goods

  • Machinery and luxury imports


Why This Network Mattered

In the 1850s the lower Rio Grande was not an isolated frontier.

Through ships like the Florence, Brownsville and Matamoros were directly connected to the global Atlantic economy.

Cotton, silver, and frontier goods moved outward to world markets, while manufactured products flowed inward to supply the growing settlements of South Texas and northern Mexico.

At the center of that system stood merchants such as Charles Stillman and H. E. Woodhouse—men who transformed a remote river landing into one of the busiest trade corridors on the Gulf of Mexico.


Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Beneath the Arches of Mercado Juárez

 Beneath the Arches of Mercado Juárez


A Glimpse of the Border’s Living Market Around 1900

One of the most revealing photographs of life along the Rio Grande is a simple interior view of Mercado Juárez in Matamoros, Tamaulipas. At first glance it appears to be an ordinary market scene—vendors seated at tables, customers moving through the aisles, bread stacked in neat pyramids. Yet the longer one studies the photograph, the more it reveals.

Hidden in the image are clues about the architecture, the economy, and the daily life of the borderlands at the turn of the twentieth century. These clues also help historians estimate when the photograph was likely taken and how markets on both sides of the Rio Grande functioned as part of a single commercial world.


Dating the Photograph

Several details in the image suggest the photograph was likely taken between 1895 and 1905, with a broader possible range of 1890–1910.

Clothing is one of the first clues. The men wear wide-brim felt hats, suspenders, and high-waisted trousers typical of working men in northern Mexico around the turn of the century. Absent are the narrow-brim fedora hats that became common after about 1920.

Another clue appears in the photographic technique itself. Several figures in the central aisle appear slightly blurred, a sign of the slower exposure times typical of dry-plate photography widely used between the 1880s and early 1900s.

The market stalls also appear temporary—simple wooden counters rather than permanent metal or masonry vendor spaces that became common after many municipal markets were modernized in the early twentieth century.

Together, these details strongly point to a late nineteenth- or very early twentieth-century photograph.


The Social Life of the Market

The photograph also captures the human structure of the marketplace.

Two vendors sit calmly behind their tables—one displaying loaves of bread, another watching over produce. Nearby stands a young boy, likely a family helper learning the trade.

This arrangement was typical of Mexican municipal markets.

The people seated at stalls were usually the concession holders or proprietors. These stalls were often family operations passed down across generations. Children frequently assisted with selling goods, carrying baskets, or watching the stall while the adults handled customers.

Meanwhile, the men moving through the aisles were likely a mix of farmers, suppliers, porters, and customers. Markets were dynamic places where goods constantly arrived and disappeared throughout the day.

An empty table in the center of the aisle may represent a temporary stall or a vendor who had not yet arrived—or perhaps one who had already sold out.

Scenes like this remind us that markets were more than buildings. They were living systems of people, families, and trade networks.


The Crates and the Trade of the Border

A small but telling detail lies in the wooden crates visible in the central aisle.

These crates were the standard shipping containers of the Rio Grande frontier economy. Produce and goods arrived in markets packed in wooden boxes, barrels, and burlap sacks, carried by wagon, river craft, or rail.

During this period, Matamoros and Brownsville functioned as one economic region.

Goods crossed the river constantly.

From Mexico came produce, cattle, hides, and fruit. From the United States came flour, cloth, tools, and manufactured goods.

Markets such as Mercado Juárez in Matamoros and Market Square in Brownsville served as the distribution centers where this cross-border economy came to life.


The Architecture Beneath the Arches

Perhaps the most revealing feature of the photograph is architectural.

The interior of Mercado Juárez is formed by massive square masonry columns supporting brick arches. These arcades create the long aisles of the market and provide shade and ventilation—essential features in the hot climate of the lower Rio Grande.

The arches appear to be simple round masonry arches built of brick, resting on thick plastered piers.

This type of construction reflects a tradition deeply rooted in northern Mexican building practices of the nineteenth century. Markets, plazas, and public buildings frequently used arcaded walkways because they created cool shaded corridors while allowing air to circulate freely.

The structure visible in the photograph likely represents the market in its original nineteenth-century configuration, before later modernization added more standardized vendor stalls and concrete flooring.


Border-Brick Architecture

The brick arches of Mercado Juárez belong to a regional building tradition sometimes described as border-brick architecture.

In the Rio Grande region during the nineteenth century, brick became one of the most practical building materials available. Local clay deposits and the growth of small brick kilns made it possible to produce durable masonry suitable for the climate.

Architectural elements commonly found in this style include:

  • thick brick walls

  • plastered masonry piers

  • round brick arches

  • arcaded walkways

  • shaded interior courtyards

These elements appear repeatedly in buildings across the borderlands.


Echoes at Fort Brown

Interestingly, similar architectural features can be seen across the river at Fort Brown in Brownsville.

When the U.S. Army expanded the fort after the Civil War, the 1867 post hospital incorporated arcaded masonry construction with brick arches remarkably similar to those seen in markets and civic buildings of the region.

This was not accidental.

Military engineers working along the frontier often adapted local construction methods that were well suited to the environment. Brick arches provided structural strength, shade, and airflow—essential in the subtropical climate of the Rio Grande Valley.

Thus the arches visible in Mercado Juárez are part of a broader architectural language shared by Mexican civic buildings, American frontier military posts, and public markets throughout the region.


A Shared Borderland Economy

The photograph ultimately reminds us of something historians increasingly emphasize.

In the late nineteenth century, Brownsville and Matamoros were not separate economies. They were two halves of a single borderland marketplace.

Ranchers, farmers, merchants, and laborers crossed the Rio Grande daily. Markets on both sides sold the same goods and served the same communities.

Under the arches of Mercado Juárez, we see a world that would have been instantly familiar to visitors from Brownsville’s Market Square just across the river.

Bread stacked on tables.
Produce arriving in crates.
Families running stalls.
Customers drifting through the shaded arcades.

The architecture provided the stage, but the people created the market.

And in that shared marketplace, the border was less a dividing line than a meeting place of cultures, commerce, and everyday life.



Tuesday, March 10, 2026

1854 — Ships, Cotton, and Congestion on the Rio Grande Frontier

 Where the River Meets the Ledger

Ships, Cotton, and Congestion on the Rio Grande Frontier — 1854

By the middle of the 1850s the Rio Grande frontier had become part of a vast commercial web stretching across the Atlantic world. Cotton grown in the ranchlands of South Texas and northern Mexico moved down dusty wagon roads to the river, across the shallow passes of the coast, and onward to the markets of Europe.

The surviving correspondence of Charles Stillman & Brother for the year 1854 offers a rare glimpse into how that fragile system actually worked—and how easily it could stall.


A Frontier Connected to the World

From their offices at Santa María in Matamoros and their warehouses near the Rio Grande, the Stillman firm managed a trading network linking the frontier with ports across the Gulf and beyond.

Cotton shipped through the mouth of the Rio Grande might pass through several hands before reaching Europe.

Typical routes included:

Rio Grande → Brazos Santiago → Mobile or Apalachicola → New York → Liverpool or Antwerp.

Each link in this chain depended on the next.

If river levels fell, cotton could not reach the coast.
If freight markets slowed, ships waited idle in port.
If storms struck the Atlantic, vessels were delayed for weeks.

The letters of 1854 reveal that all three problems occurred at once.


Too Many Ships, Too Little Cotton

In December 1854, merchant James Rogers wrote from Apalachicola with a revealing report.

Sixteen ships had arrived in port, yet only one was loading cargo.

The reason was simple: cotton shipments from the interior had slowed. Merchants like Stillman could not move their bales to the coast quickly enough to meet demand.

Ships waited. Crews waited. And freight rates sagged as captains competed for whatever cargo appeared.

Another correspondent noted bluntly that freight was “as dull as cotton,” a sign that the global shipping market itself had cooled.


The Problem of the River

The Rio Grande was the lifeline of the trade, but it was also unpredictable.

Letters repeatedly mention low water and difficult navigation. Wagons could bring cotton to the riverbanks, but shallow channels often prevented boats from carrying it downstream in large quantities.

When this happened, the entire export pipeline slowed.

Cotton stacked up in warehouses along the frontier while ships waited impatiently hundreds of miles away.


The Men Behind the Trade

The correspondence also introduces the individuals who kept the system moving.

Captains such as J. W. Latimer and J. M. Magna reported from European ports about freight conditions and passenger traffic. Merchants in Apalachicola and Mobile relayed news of shipping congestion and market prices.

These men formed a network of information that merchants depended on to make decisions.

Before telegraphs linked distant ports, letters like these were the only way to track the movement of goods across oceans.


The Ledger of a Frontier Economy

The balance sheet prepared by Charles Stillman & Brother on December 31, 1854 reveals the scale of this business.

Hundreds of accounts appear in the ledger—ranchers, merchants, river agents, and traders scattered across the Rio Grande borderlands.

Some names belonged to established merchants. Others were small ranch operators delivering cotton or hides.

Together they formed a commercial community stretching across South Texas and northern Mexico.

The totals show the magnitude of the enterprise:

Assets and liabilities exceeding $2.8 million passed through the books of the firm.

For a frontier town only a few years old, the scale is remarkable.


A River Frontier in Motion

The documents of 1854 capture a moment when the Rio Grande frontier stood firmly within the currents of global commerce.

Cotton from remote ranches traveled thousands of miles to European mills. Ships from distant ports waited on the Gulf Coast for cargo grown in the borderlands.

And in a ledger kept by candlelight, merchants tried to keep track of it all.

The river, the ships, and the markets were tied together in a fragile balance—one that could be disrupted by weather, water, or the shifting winds of international trade.

Balance Sheet

Charles Stillman & Brother — Santa Maria
December 31, 1854


DR — BALANCE SHEET

Merchandise / Accounts

Manuel Saenz
Salvador Savara
Guadalupe Saenz
Carolina Gonzalez
Francisco Osegueda
J. M. Owane
Dr. Stratten (agency)
Starr Ranch Co.
Rancho del Paso
Yznaga & Co.
Mejia Cabazas
Ransey & Co.
Richard King
R. D. Love
Rafael Cantu
A. H. Chase
Baez & Mora
F. H. Karrie
W. M. Chapman
M. Volumoy
Francisco Garcia
Urbano Cruz
C. Minerva
Jose Mier Miranda
No. Bustamante
Bruno Saenz
A. Hancumbarran
Jorge Cardenas
J. S. Wilson
Garcia & Turner
Saenz & Gonzalez
John Webb
Ranchos y Saenz

Total: $986,309.88


CR — BALANCE SHEET

Antonio Rayada
J. P. Trevino
Lira & Co.
J. S. Andrade
Thos. Devine
Baez & Mora (accounts)
Stillman & Co.
T. C. Powel
Jose Morell

Total: $787,267.52


COMMISSIONS

John Wall
Sheppard & Co.
Gino Garcia Saenz
Bell & Crecelius
Lopez & Co.
C. Dickenson
Cash Account
Commission
River Credit

Total: $290,516.32


BILLS RECEIVABLE

Antonino Cruz
N. S. Trevino
W. W. Chapman
Bruno Saenz
F. W. Sanbano
Pedro Duran
John Wall
W. M. Stewart
Anton Saenz
John Salazar
M. Young Gordon
Juan Villano
Antonio Rangel
R. D. Love
Yznaga & Garcia

Total: $78,350.46


SUSPENSE ACCOUNT

Alvino Perez
Oros Felix
Melqui Aragon
Ant. Ninojosa
Adolph Glasser
W. Nelson
A. J. Mason
P. Molina
J. M. Camargo
Santos Jimenez
Juan S. Sena
J. M. Tobar
F. P. Escorosa
Nancy Morales
W. Johnson
R. J. Ramirez
Santos Gomez
J. P. M. Darangha
Henrique Sanchez
Rafael Sales
Henry Brack
F. Martinez

Total: $1,622.52


Final Statement

Total Assets:
$2,871,206.52

Total Liabilities:
$2,871,206.52


Balance Sheet
Charles Stillman & Brother
Santa Maria (Matamoros)
December 31, 1854


2️⃣ Ships Identified in the 1854 Letters

The following vessels and captains appear connected to Stillman’s trade network.

Ships

Ship Latimer
Captain J. W. Latimer
– Antwerp trade
– passenger and cargo transport

Ship Magna
Captain J. M. Magna
– Antwerp shipping correspondence
– reports dull freight market

Unnamed Mobile cotton vessels
Referenced by:

James Rogers
Robert May

Letters describe 16 ships waiting in port, illustrating the shipping congestion.


Trade Route Network

The letters collectively show this shipping chain:

Rio Grande / Matamoros

Brazos Santiago

Apalachicola / Mobile

New Orleans / New York

Liverpool / Antwerp

This is the complete export system for Rio Grande cotton.


A clear visual explanation of the export system to help us understand how a frontier ranch economy became tied to the global cotton market. Below is a clean diagram concept.


The Rio Grande Cotton Export Pipeline (1850s)

RANCHES & FARMS OF THE LOWER RIO GRANDE
(South Texas & Northern Mexico)

Cotton grown on ranches
↓
Packed into bales
↓
Loaded on ox-carts / mule wagons


WAGON ROADS TO THE RIVER
(Mier – Camargo – Reynosa – Matamoros)

Cotton hauled to merchant warehouses
↓
Stored and financed by trading houses
↓
Charles Stillman & Brother


RIO GRANDE LANDINGS
(Matamoros / Brownsville riverfront)

Cotton transferred to river craft
↓
Moved downriver to the coast


BRAZOS SANTIAGO PASS
(Mouth of the Rio Grande)

Cargo moved onto ocean-going vessels
↓
Ships assemble cargo for export


GULF PORTS
(Apalachicola – Mobile – New Orleans)

Cotton consolidated
↓
Freight contracts arranged
↓
Insurance issued


ATLANTIC SHIPPING
(Trans-Atlantic voyage)

Ships sail to:
• New York
• Liverpool
• Antwerp
• Havre


EUROPEAN TEXTILE MILLS

Cotton spun into cloth
↓
Industrial manufacturing
↓
Global textile trade

What This System Created

This pipeline turned a remote frontier into a wealth-generating trade corridor.

Each step created income for different groups.

Ranchers

Grew the cotton.

Teamsters / Wagon Drivers

Transported the bales.

Riverboat crews

Moved cargo to the coast.

Ship captains and sailors

Carried cotton across oceans.

Merchants like Charles Stillman

Financed the entire system.

European textile mills

Converted cotton into industrial wealth.


The Human Network Behind the Trade

The 1854 ledger is extremely valuable because it names the people inside this system.

Many appear to be:

  • ranch owners

  • commission merchants

  • credit clients

  • freight partners

  • agents

Examples visible in the ledger:

  • Bruno Saenz

  • Jose Morell

  • Antonio Rayada

  • Pedro Duran

  • Rafael Sales

  • John Webb

  • Richard King 

Many surnames in the list still exist across the Rio Grande Valley today.

That means the ledger is not just a financial record — it is a genealogical map of the early regional economy.


One More Important Insight

The 1854 ledger reveals something historians often miss.

The Rio Grande trade economy was not controlled by outsiders alone.

It was a mixed network of:

  • Mexican merchants

  • Tejano ranchers

  • American traders

  • European shipping houses

Working together in a single commercial system.

The ledger proves this.


Monday, March 9, 2026

Did Boston and Matamoros Influence Brownsville’s Market Square?

Did Boston and Matamoros Influence Brownsville’s Market Square?

When the city of Brownsville was established in 1848–1850, its founders did not invent a market square from nothing. Across the Atlantic world and the Gulf of Mexico, public markets had long served as the economic heart of port towns.

Two of the most likely architectural influences were:

  • Faneuil Hall Market, Boston (expanded 1826)

  • Mercado Juárez, Matamoros (built 1835)

Both markets existed before Brownsville was founded and were connected to the same maritime trading networks that shaped Charles Stillman’s early life.


1. Boston: The Merchant Tradition Charles Stillman Knew

Boston’s Faneuil Hall, originally built in 1742 and expanded in 1826, served two purposes:

Ground floor — open public market
Upper floor — civic meeting hall

Farmers, fishermen, and merchants sold food below while civic debates and political meetings took place above.

Architecturally it featured:

  • a rectangular hall

  • arcaded or open market areas

  • central cupola or tower

  • dual civic-commercial purpose

This combination of market below and civic authority above became a recognizable American urban model.

Charles Stillman’s father, Francis Stillman, was a merchant captain sailing Atlantic trade routes in the early 19th century. Young Charles traveled with him and would have seen port markets like those in:

  • Boston

  • New Orleans

  • Havana

  • Gulf Coast towns

The idea of a market hall that doubled as town hall was already well established in American port cities.


2. Matamoros: The Immediate Regional Model

Across the Rio Grande, Matamoros had already built Mercado Juárez in 1835, more than a decade before Brownsville was founded.

Its architectural elements are strikingly similar to Brownsville’s early market:

  • long arcaded walls

  • open-air vendor spaces

  • central tower or clock feature

  • public gathering plaza

The market functioned as:

  • produce market

  • meat market

  • trading center

  • social meeting place

Because Brownsville and Matamoros formed a single economic region, historians often point to this market as the closest comparison.

But this explanation is incomplete.

3. New Orleans: The Gulf Coast Market Tradition

New Orleans had one of the largest public markets in the Gulf world: the French Market.

It shared several characteristics with both Matamoros and Brownsville:

  • long arcaded structures

  • open stalls facing the street

  • produce and meat vendors

  • integration with port commerce

Because ships regularly moved between New Orleans, Matamoros, and the Rio Grande, the market form spread easily across Gulf ports.

Stillman himself traded extensively through New Orleans.

4. Brownsville’s Market House (1851)

Brownsville’s first market building combined the same key features seen in earlier examples:

Architectural elements

  • arcaded ground floor

  • open vendor stalls

  • central cupola or tower

  • rectangular civic hall

Functional structure

Ground floor:

  • food vendors

  • farmers and ranchers

  • open-air trading

Upper floor:

  • city meetings

  • civic functions

  • public gatherings

This market-below / town-hall-above arrangement mirrors Boston’s model almost exactly.


5. The Role of Charles Stillman

Historians often emphasize that Brownsville’s market resembles Matamoros.

That is certainly true.

However, an important point is often overlooked:

Charles Stillman donated the land for the public square.

As the town’s founder and primary developer, he likely had influence over the design concept.

Given his background, Stillman had exposure to:

  • Atlantic port markets

  • Gulf Coast trading towns

  • Mexican plazas and mercados

  • American civic market halls

The Brownsville design therefore appears to be a hybrid of three traditions:

  1. American civic market halls (Boston)

  2. Mexican plaza markets (Matamoros)

  3. Gulf Coast open markets (New Orleans)


Conclusion

Brownsville’s Market Square was not simply copied from Matamoros, nor invented locally.

Instead it represents a transnational market tradition that moved with merchants, ships, and trade networks around the Atlantic and Gulf worlds.

Charles Stillman—raised in that maritime environment—stood at the crossroads of those influences.

The result was a marketplace that served both purposes:

commerce below, civic life above — the true center of the frontier city.