AI dismantles El Rrun Rrun's latest fallacies:
Here’s a calm historical assessment of what El Rrun Rrun is doing and why it reads
the way it does by separating (1) what the sources actually say, (2)
what El Rrun Rrun is doing rhetorically, and (3) what historians
generally conclude about the issue.
1. What the government document actually shows
The document El Rrun Rrun cites is a U.S. House Committee on
War Claims report (1890) concerning the heirs of Miguel Salinas.
What it confirms:
- In 1846,
the U.S. Army under Zachary Taylor camped on Salinas’s plantation
near the Rio Grande.
- Army
quartermaster G. H. Crossman rented seven houses from
Salinas for $1.50 per day each.
- Buildings
and crops were later destroyed during the construction and defense of Fort
Brown.
- The
Salinas heirs later petitioned Congress for compensation decades later. (El Rrun Rrun)
This type of claim was extremely common after the
Mexican-American War. Thousands of civilians across Texas, California, and
Mexico filed similar claims when armies occupied private property.
Important point:
➡️ This document is about
compensation for wartime damage — not proof that Charles Stillman stole the
land.
The report itself even mentions title disputes involving
Cavazos, meaning the legal ownership question was already complex and
unresolved at the time. (El Rrun Rrun)
2. Where El Rrun Rrun stretches the argument
The blog makes a leap that historians would consider unsupported.
The chain of claims goes like this:
- The
U.S. Army rented buildings from Salinas.
- Buildings
were destroyed during the war.
- Salinas
heirs later sought compensation.
- Therefore
Stillman stole the land.
That leap skips a lot of legal and historical steps.
The actual issues historians debate are:
- Spanish/Mexican
land grant boundaries
- Sales
and transfers after 1848
- The
role of Charles Stillman and Sabas Cavazos in purchasing
disputed tracts
- How
American courts adjudicated Mexican titles after the war
Those are complicated land-law issues, not simple
theft narratives.
3. The Fort Brown land question (what historians
generally say)
The core historical points usually accepted:
A. A ranch existed there before the U.S. Army
Yes — the lower Rio Grande had ranches before the war.
That part of the El Rrun Rrun’s blog is correct.
The area near the future fort had:
- ranch
structures
- crops
- fencing
- agricultural
activity
This is documented in multiple sources.
B. The army occupied land during wartime
When the U.S. Army arrived in 1846 it:
- occupied
the site
- rented
some buildings
- destroyed
others for military reasons
This was standard wartime practice in the 19th
century.
C. The ownership question became tangled afterward
After the war several overlapping claims existed:
- Salinas
interests
- Cavazos
claims
- later
purchases
- federal
military reservation
Many Mexican-era titles were poorly documented or
disputed.
That is where Stillman enters the story.
D. Stillman’s role
Stillman’s involvement historically was:
- purchasing
land claims
- developing
the town site
- organizing
the Brownsville Town Company
- financing
the trade network of the region
He did not arrive as a military occupier — he was already a merchant
operating in Matamoros since the 1820s.
The El Rrun Rrun narrative reverses the chronology to
create a villain.
4. The Cortina connection
El Rrun Rrun often uses the land narrative to justify Juan
Cortina.
But historians distinguish between:
- real
land disputes after 1848
- Cortina’s
armed raids and executions
Even scholars sympathetic to Mexican landowners generally
acknowledge:
- Cortina
killed civilians
- he
attacked Brownsville
- he
initiated two violent uprisings
These events are documented in both U.S. and Mexican
sources.
5. El Rrun Rrun's comments section
The comments illustrate why serious historians avoid blogs
as sources.
They include:
- racial
insults
- political
arguments unrelated to the topic
- invented
calculations about rent over 175 years
Example:
The commenter multiplying the 1846 rent contract to modern times is not a
historical calculation. The rental agreement ended when the buildings were
destroyed or the army vacated.
6. The rhetorical pattern of the blog
The writing style follows a common activist-history
formula:
- Find
a real document.
- Remove
the legal context.
- Insert
a moral conclusion.
- Use
modern political language (“theft”, “corruption”).
- Reinforce
it with comment-section outrage.
This produces compelling storytelling, but not
careful scholarship.
7. The irony for the Stillman Papers project
The Stillman Papers series actually undermines that
narrative.
The documents show:
- day-to-day
trade
- credit
networks
- shipping
logistics
- regional
commerce
That is the real economic history of the Rio Grande
frontier.
Those letters reveal a merchant building infrastructure, not
a cartoon villain.
My honest assessment
The post is not entirely wrong, but it is highly
selective.
True elements:
- the
army used land belonging to Mexican residents
- compensation
disputes existed
- land
titles after 1848 were messy
Misleading elements:
- implying
Stillman personally seized the land
- presenting
a wartime compensation claim as proof of theft
- ignoring
decades of legal transactions afterward
To dismantle the argument publicly,
the best response would be something like:
The 1890 War Claims document
confirms that the U.S. Army rented houses from Miguel Salinas in 1846 and later
destroyed them during construction of Fort Brown. This is a wartime
compensation dispute. It does not demonstrate that Charles Stillman seized the
land. The later land titles involved multiple parties, including Cavazos
claimants, and were litigated for decades.
The Case Behind the Myth: The Espíritu Santo Land Grant
1. The original Spanish/Mexican land grant
The Espíritu Santo Grant was issued during the
Spanish colonial period to families in the lower Rio Grande region.

Important facts:
- It
covered a huge area of land north of the Rio Grande.
- The
grant was held by members of the Cavazos family.
- Over
decades the land was subdivided, inherited, and sold among
relatives.
By the 1830s–1840s the grant had become fragmented into
many claims.
This is very typical of Spanish colonial land systems.
2. The 1848 problem: sovereignty changed
After the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848):
- The
United States took control of the north bank of the Rio Grande.
- Mexican
land titles were supposed to be recognized and adjudicated by U.S.
courts.
But several problems appeared immediately:
- Many
titles were vague or incomplete.
- Surveys
were inconsistent.
- Boundaries
relied on natural landmarks that moved or disappeared.
- Multiple
heirs claimed the same parcels.
This created decades of litigation across South Texas.
3. The Cavazos–Stillman transactions
This is where Charles Stillman enters the story.
Stillman did not simply “take land.”
What he actually did was common frontier business practice:
- He purchased
land claims from Mexican landowners.
- He
financed transactions for heirs who needed cash.
- He
consolidated tracts in order to establish the Brownsville town site.
One of the key people involved in these transfers was:
Cavazos was part of the family that controlled large
portions of the grant.
Stillman purchased interests from Cavazos and others.
4. Why lawsuits erupted
Later heirs began challenging earlier sales.
Common arguments were:
- heirs
did not understand the contracts
- land
values later became much higher
- family
members sold more land than they owned
- American
courts favored English-language documents
These lawsuits appeared in Texas courts and federal
courts for decades.
None of this is unusual in land-grant regions.
The same thing happened in:
- California
- New
Mexico
- Arizona
5. The key court rulings
Several late-19th-century cases examined the titles.
The courts generally concluded:
- Many
of the sales to Stillman and associates were legally valid purchases.
- Some
boundaries of the original grant were uncertain or exaggerated.
- The
Cavazos heirs did not retain exclusive ownership of the entire grant.
In other words:
The courts rejected the idea that the entire region was
still legally owned by the original grant holders.
6. Why the myth persists
The myth survives because of three overlapping narratives.
A. Mexican land-loss narrative
After 1848 many Tejano families genuinely lost land due to:
- legal
costs
- unclear
documentation
- Anglo-American
legal systems
This happened across Texas.
B. Cortina mythology
Supporters of Juan Cortina portray him as a defender
of Mexican land rights.
But historians note that Cortina:
- attacked
towns
- executed
prisoners
- conducted
raids unrelated to land cases
His movement became political and violent.
C. modern reinterpretation
Late-20th-century writers reinterpreted the disputes as systematic
Anglo land theft.
Some elements of that interpretation are legitimate.
But in Brownsville’s case the evidence is far more
complicated.
7. The overlooked reality: Stillman built the economic
system
What gets ignored in the El Rrun Rrun narrative is
something the Stillman letters clearly show.
Stillman was responsible for:
- organizing
the Rio Grande cotton trade
- building
warehouses and shipping networks
- financing
merchants
- connecting
the frontier to New York capital
Without that infrastructure Brownsville would likely have
remained a small ranch settlement.
Instead it became:
- a
trade hub
- a
customs port
- a
commercial center
The Stillman documents show that process unfolding.
8. The Cortina reality
Historians today usually place Cortina somewhere between:
- regional
caudillo
- political
insurgent
- bandit
leader
His first raid in 1859 involved the killing of Marshal
Robert Shears.
The conflict escalated into the Cortina Wars.
Even Mexican officials eventually distanced themselves from
him.
Later Porfirio Díaz exiled Cortina to Mexico City,
removing him from power.
That outcome alone tells you how the Mexican government
ultimately viewed him.
9. Why this work matters
The Stillman Papers do something extremely valuable:
They show primary evidence.
Not ideology.
Not retrospective interpretation.
But the actual letters of the people building the frontier
economy.
That material is the strongest antidote to historical
mythmaking.
⭐ A fascinating twist
One of the most ironic facts about the Cortina legend:
Many of the merchants Cortina targeted were Mexican-born
traders in Matamoros, not just Anglo Americans.
The violence disrupted the entire border economy,
including Mexican merchants.
The Cavazos Land Litigation (late 1800s)
These cases revolved around a simple question:
Did the Cavazos family still legally own the entire
Espíritu Santo Grant after earlier sales?
Several heirs claimed that:
- earlier
sales were invalid
- purchasers
had taken advantage of them
- the
entire grant still belonged to the original heirs
If those claims had been upheld, Brownsville itself would
have been sitting on land whose title could be voided.
That is why these cases mattered enormously.
What the courts examined
The courts had to analyze:
- Spanish
and Mexican grant documents
- inheritance
records
- sales
contracts made before and after 1848
- the
chain of title to parcels around Brownsville
This required reconstructing decades of transactions.
Texas courts were already accustomed to this kind of work
because similar disputes were happening across the state.
The central legal finding
The courts generally concluded that:
members of the Cavazos family had already sold portions
of the grant long before the lawsuits were filed.
Those sales were considered:
- voluntary
transactions
- legally
binding
- recognized
under Texas property law
In other words:
➡️ Later heirs could not reclaim
land that earlier family members had sold.
This is the legal principle known as chain of title.
Once property passes through valid transfers, later
descendants cannot simply undo them.
Why this matters for the Stillman narrative
Stillman appears in the record primarily as:
- a purchaser
of land interests
- a town
developer
- a commercial
investor
The litigation never established that he illegally seized
the property.
Instead the courts treated the transactions as ordinary
land purchases, even if they occurred under frontier conditions.
That is a very different picture from the one presented in
polemical writing.
The Fort Brown land question
Another issue often blended into the story is the land used
for Fort Brown.

Ft Brown Cemetery
The military occupation of land during the Mexican-American
War produced many compensation claims.
The government sometimes paid them, sometimes not.
But those claims were directed against the U.S.
government, not against Charles Stillman.
That distinction often disappears in modern storytelling.
The Cortina factor
The legal disputes also intersect with the rise of Juan
Cortina.

Cortina framed his movement as a defense of Mexican
landowners.
However historians point out that:
- many
of the disputes he referenced were civil court matters
- his
raids targeted towns and merchants
- his
forces killed civilians, including law enforcement officers
The first major incident involved the shooting of Brownsville
marshal Robert Shears in 1859.
The conflict escalated rapidly from there.
Even Mexican authorities later treated Cortina as a regional
strongman rather than a legitimate land reformer.
Eventually the Mexican government removed him from the
border and confined him to Mexico City.
Why this debate never dies
The argument persists because it sits at the intersection of
several emotional historical themes:
- Mexican
land loss after 1848
- Anglo
economic dominance
- border
violence
- regional
identity politics
Each side of the story contains elements of truth.
But the documentary record — especially court decisions and
primary business papers like the ones we are studying — usually shows a far
more complicated frontier reality.
Why the Stillman Papers project is valuable
The letters do something extremely important.
They show the everyday mechanics of frontier commerce:
- shipments
- credit
- river
transport
- cotton
trade
- merchant
networks
That material helps historians understand how the region
actually functioned economically.
It moves the discussion away from simplified villains and
heroes and back toward the real complexity of the 19th-century borderlands.
[EDITED FOR LENGTH]
Why ideological narratives persist
El Rrun Rrun’s contrived Stillman–Cortina debate
survives because both figures can be used to represent larger historical
themes:
Stillman becomes a symbol of:
- American
expansion
- capitalist
development
- Anglo
dominance in Texas
Cortina becomes a symbol of:
- resistance
- Mexican
land rights
- regional
identity
Once historical figures become symbols, their real lives
often get simplified.
The historian’s approach
Professional historians usually try to do something
different:
They reconstruct the structures behind the personalities.
In the Rio Grande case those structures include:
- land
grant systems
- merchant
credit networks
- river
and coastal shipping
- border
politics
When you look at those structures, the story becomes much
richer and more complex than the hero-versus-villain narrative.
The value of the Stillman papers work
The letters being organized are especially valuable because
they show the day-to-day mechanics of that system.
They reveal things that rarely appear in later histories:
- the
uncertainty
- the
negotiations
- the
dependence on distant investors
- the
logistical challenges of the Rio Grande frontier
Those details allow historians to understand how the border
economy actually functioned.