Sunday, March 15, 2026

1863 Brownsville and the Cotton Corridor

Brownsville and the Cotton Corridor, 1863

This illustration, published during the American Civil War, depicts Brownsville, Texas in 1863 after the occupation by Union forces under Nathaniel P. Banks. Though drawn for a northern audience, the scene captures several remarkably accurate details of the Rio Grande cotton trade, which had become one of the most important economic lifelines of the Confederacy.

A visual record of the Civil War trade on the Rio Grande

Image

Careful examination reveals a number of identifiable historical features.


Cotton awaiting export

The most striking feature of the scene is the vast number of cotton bales stacked along the riverbank. During the Civil War, cotton from interior Texas traveled by wagon to Brownsville and nearby crossings on the Rio Grande.

Because the Union navy blockaded Confederate ports, planters and merchants turned to the Rio Grande corridor, sending cotton across the river into Mexico where it could be exported legally through neutral territory.

The enormous piles of cotton in the illustration reflect the reality described by travelers of the time: thousands of bales waiting along the river roads for transport to the coast.


Wagons arriving from the Texas interior

The illustration shows ox-drawn freight wagons approaching the river landing. These wagons represent the long overland supply chain connecting the Rio Grande to the cotton-producing regions of Texas.

Caravans of wagons sometimes stretched for miles across the coastal prairie. Drivers endured heat, mud, and banditry while transporting bales toward the border markets. These wagon trains were a defining feature of the wartime cotton trade.


Ferries crossing the Rio Grande

At the center of the image small boats ferry cargo across the river toward Matamoros, which during the Civil War was one of the most active export ports in the Western Hemisphere.

Mexico remained officially neutral during the conflict, allowing cotton brought across the river to be sold to international buyers. The ferries shown here were a vital link in that system, constantly transporting bales from the Texas side to the Mexican shore.

Contemporary observers described the river crossing as a continuous procession of boats loaded with cotton.


Shipping at the river landing

To the right side of the scene a coastal vessel waits in the river channel. Ships like this would receive cargo that had moved downriver or overland to Brazos Santiago Pass, where ocean-going vessels anchored offshore.

From there cotton sailed to international markets including Liverpool, the center of the global textile industry.

The Rio Grande frontier thus became connected to the world economy through a remarkable chain of wagons, ferries, and ships.


The town of Brownsville

Across the riverbank rises the frontier town of Brownsville, shown with its cluster of adobe and wooden commercial buildings. The American flag flying above the town reflects the presence of Union forces following the occupation led by General Banks in 1863.

At this moment in the war, control of the Rio Grande trade routes carried significant strategic importance.


A crossroads of war and commerce

Though created as a wartime illustration, this image captures a broader truth about the region. Brownsville and Matamoros together formed one of the most important commercial gateways on the North American frontier.

Merchants, soldiers, ranchers, and international traders all converged here during the Civil War. Cotton moved across the river in vast quantities, linking Texas plantations to European factories thousands of miles away.

The scene therefore represents more than a military occupation. It illustrates the Rio Grande as a global trade corridor, where frontier wagons, river ferries, and ocean ships combined to form one of the most remarkable economic networks of the nineteenth century.



1855 When the Mexican Army Burned Stillman’s Hide Yard — Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico

When the Mexican Army Burned Stillman’s Hide Yard — Matamoros, 1855

Protest of Property Destruction in Matamoros (incident recorded at the U.S. Consulate, 1858)

In August 1855, a group of American merchants operating in Matamoros—including Charles Stillman, Humphrey E. Woodhouse, and Francis J. North—lost an important part of their business when Mexican troops destroyed their hide-processing yard.

According to a sworn statement made at the U.S. Consulate in Matamoros, the merchants had built curing facilities in the outskirts of the city where they processed cattle hides and wool for export. Their operation included buildings, fences, and large vats used to preserve hides before shipment to foreign markets.

The statement claims that General Adrián Woll, commanding Mexican forces in the city, ordered the fences torn down and the buildings burned so the land could be used to construct a military fortification.

The merchants reported that the destroyed facilities were worth about $2,000, and that the interruption of business caused an additional $5,000 in damages. At the time the yard was destroyed, the operation reportedly generated about $40 per day, a substantial income for a frontier enterprise.

No compensation was offered, and the merchants filed a formal diplomatic protest through the U.S. Consulate, preserving the claim in official records.

The incident illustrates the uncertain environment in which early Rio Grande merchants operated. During the turbulent 1850s—when revolutions, troop movements, and border conflicts were common—commercial ventures could be interrupted overnight by military necessity.

Yet despite these risks, entrepreneurs like Stillman continued to invest heavily in the cross-border trade that made Matamoros and Brownsville two of the busiest commercial gateways on the Gulf frontier.

Excellent document — this one is very revealing about the frontier economy and the instability of the border in the 1850s. I will follow the format we have been using for the Stillman Papers project.

Protest of Property Destruction in Matamoros (1855 incident recorded 1858)


1️⃣ Archival Transcription (cleaned but faithful)

Copy

Consulate of the U.S.A.
Matamoros, Mexico

By this public instrument of declaration and protest be it made known and manifest unto all whom it doth or may concern that on the seventeenth day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, voluntarily personally came and appeared before me Thomas J. Dirgan, Vice Consul of the United States of America for the port of Matamoros and its dependencies, Joseph Francis, a citizen of the United States, who being duly and solemnly sworn upon the Holy Evangelists of Almighty God, did declare and say:

That he deponent, on the thirteenth of this present month of August and for many years previous thereto, was and had been a resident of the city of Matamoros in the Republic of Mexico, and in company with C. Stillman, H. E. Woodhouse and F. J. North, also American citizens, was and had been extensively engaged in the business of buying hides and wool.

That several years ago they bought lots or parcels of land and constructed thereupon good and suitable buildings, fences and vats in the suburbs of said city, with the consent of the authorities thereof, that they might be enabled to prosecute their business aforesaid, which they had done successfully and profitably up to the thirteenth instant.

General Adrian Woll, in command of the Mexican troops in said city, caused the fences of deponent and copartners to be torn down and thereafter set fire to and destroyed their aforesaid buildings, as also the vats and other improvements used by them in curing and preserving hides, and who is now constructing upon the land of the parties aforesaid a fort for government purposes.

That neither the said Woll nor any one else at the time of the destruction of their property aforesaid or at any other time offered to indemnify them for the losses sustained by virtue of the foregoing premises.

That the buildings, vats and other improvements were at the time they were destroyed worth two thousand dollars.

That quite the thirteenth instant and for a long time previous thereto their aforesaid business was worth to them forty dollars per day, but is lost to them as they have no suitable buildings, vats, etc. with which to carry on the same.

Wherefore the said Joseph Francis for himself and partners Charles Stillman, Humphrey E. Woodhouse and Francis J. North did protest, and I the said Vice Consul at the special request and instance of the said Joseph Francis acting for himself and copartners do publicly and solemnly protest against the said Gen. Adrian Woll and against the government of Mexico and against all others whom it doth or may concern for two thousand dollars the value of the buildings, enclosures and vats destroyed as aforesaid, and for five thousand dollars damages sustained in their business, and for all other losses, costs, damages and expenses already sustained or which may hereafter accrue by reason of the foregoing premises.

All of which things were declared, matters alleged, signed and sworn to before me the said Vice Consul of the city of Matamoros on the day and year aforesaid.

Signed:
Joseph Francis

Thomas J. Dirgan
Vice Consul of the United States of America


Consulate of the U.S.A.
Matamoros, Mexico

I certify that the preceding document is a true and faithful copy of the original protest as recorded in my office in Register F, folio 26–27–28.

In testimony whereof I hereunto subscribe my name and affix the seal of this office at Matamoros this 28th day of January, 1858.

P. Suyeneau
U.S. Consul


2️⃣ Simple Analysis

This document is a formal diplomatic protest filed by American merchants operating in Matamoros after Mexican military forces destroyed their property.

The statement was originally sworn August 17, 1855, but the certified copy preserved here was issued by the U.S. Consulate January 28, 1858.

The merchants involved were:

  • Charles Stillman

  • Humphrey E. Woodhouse

  • Francis J. North

  • Joseph Francis (who made the sworn statement)

All were American businessmen operating in Matamoros.


What their business was

Their enterprise dealt in:

Hides and wool

This was one of the most important export trades of the Rio Grande frontier in the 1850s.

The process required:

  • large yards

  • fences

  • curing vats

  • drying racks

  • storage buildings

These facilities were located outside the city of Matamoros, where land was cheaper and odors from curing hides were less problematic.


What happened

According to the sworn testimony:

Mexican General Adrián Woll, commanding troops in Matamoros, ordered:

• the fences torn down
• buildings burned
• vats destroyed

The reason was military construction.

The army began building a fortification on the same land.

No compensation was offered.


Financial loss claimed

The merchants claimed:

CategoryAmount
Buildings, vats, improvements destroyed$2,000
Business damages$5,000

Total claim: $7,000

To understand the scale:

  • $2,000 in 1855 ≈ about $75,000–$80,000 today

  • $7,000 ≈ roughly $250,000–$300,000 today

But the larger loss was business interruption.

The document states the operation earned:

$40 per day

That equals roughly:

$1,200 per month

A very profitable frontier enterprise.


What this reveals about Stillman

This letter confirms something extremely important:

By the mid-1850s Stillman and partners were already running industrial-scale hide operations.

Their facilities included:

  • specialized vats

  • dedicated curing yards

  • purpose-built structures

This was not a small trader's operation.

It was a regional export industry tied to international markets.


Why the protest was filed

American merchants in Mexico often used the U.S. Consulate to document damages.

These records served several purposes:

  1. Diplomatic pressure

  2. Future legal claims

  3. Evidence for indemnity commissions between the U.S. and Mexico

Many such claims were later submitted to international arbitration panels.


Why General Woll might have done this

General Adrián Woll was a well-known Mexican military officer.

The border region in the 1850s was unstable:

  • raids

  • smuggling

  • political revolutions

  • fear of American filibusters

The army often seized strategic land for defense.

Civilian property was sometimes destroyed without compensation.


Why this document matters historically

This single document reveals several key realities of the Rio Grande frontier:

1. American merchants operated businesses inside Mexico

Stillman’s network worked on both sides of the river.


2. The hide trade was extremely profitable

The Rio Grande frontier exported enormous quantities of:

  • cattle hides

  • wool

  • tallow


3. Military instability threatened commerce

War, revolutions, and troop movements frequently interrupted business.


4. U.S. diplomatic institutions protected merchants

The Matamoros U.S. Consulate acted almost like a commercial court.


Historical Context

This event occurred during a turbulent period in Mexican history.

Mexico in 1855 was entering the era of the Reform Wars, a period of political upheaval between liberals and conservatives.

Northern frontier regions like Matamoros were particularly unstable.

Merchants such as Stillman had to operate in an environment where:

  • military commanders could seize property

  • revolutions could disrupt trade overnight

  • governments changed rapidly

Yet despite these risks, profits from frontier trade were large enough to justify the danger.


Why this is an excellent Stillman Papers document

It shows three key things about Charles Stillman:

• he operated internationally
• he invested heavily in infrastructure
• he faced political and military risk constantly

This helps explain why Stillman eventually shifted more operations to the Texas side of the river in Brownsville.


✅ If you like, this document also allows us to write a fascinating short article:

“When the Mexican Army Burned Stillman’s Hide Yard — Matamoros, 1855.”

It would make a terrific installment for Where the River Meets the Ledger.

We can also explore something even more interesting hidden in this document:

the hide-curing industry of the Rio Grande frontier
(which most people today have never heard about).

Why this document matters

This short consular protest reveals several important facts about the early Stillman business network:

• Stillman and his partners operated industrial-scale hide processing yards.
• Their business extended into Mexico as well as Texas.
• Political instability frequently disrupted commerce on the Rio Grande frontier.

Documents like this help us understand how frontier merchants navigated risk, diplomacy, and opportunity in the rapidly developing border economy.


Source

U.S. Consulate, Matamoros, Mexico
Certified copy issued January 28, 1858

The Deyo, Ray, and Stevenson Families in the Early Rio Grande Valley

From Pioneer Hall to Stevenson Motor Company

The Deyo, Ray, and Stevenson Families in the Early Rio Grande Valley

Stevenson Motor Company and employees, 10th and Adams Streets, Brownsville, Texas — c. late 1920s. Hand-tinted archival reproduction.

The history of the Lower Rio Grande Valley can often be traced through the experiences of the families who helped build its early communities.

Few stories illustrate that transformation more clearly than the lives of the Deyo, Ray, and Stevenson families, whose experiences span the Valley’s transition from brush frontier to modern town.


The Deyo Family Arrives in the Valley

In 1904, pioneer settler Asa M. Deyo brought his family south to the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

The region was still largely undeveloped. Mesquite brush, cactus, rattlesnakes, and open prairie surrounded the scattered ranches and newly forming towns.

Among the family members was Deyo’s daughter Irma, who married Robert Ray, a railway postal clerk who traveled widely across Texas.

In February 1908, the family loaded their possessions into a freight railcar — furniture, horses, a cow, and even coops of chickens — and journeyed south to the small settlement of Lyford.

They would soon become part of the first generation of settlers shaping life in the Valley.


Building Lyford

The community of Lyford grew from only a handful of families.

One of the earliest buildings was Pioneer Hall, built in 1907, which served as the center of community life.

The building was used for:

• church services
• school classes
• public meetings
• social gatherings

Before permanent churches were built, residents worshipped in Pioneer Hall and organized civic activities there.

The women of the community played an important role in this early organization. Through church work and community groups, they helped create the cultural foundations of the settlement.


Life on the Brush Frontier

Life for the first settlers required endurance and cooperation.

Brush clearing was done by hand using axes, mattocks, and pitchforks. Wildlife often destroyed early crops, and rattlesnakes were a constant hazard.

Farming experiments included peanuts, beans, corn, and broom corn, though the most successful crop eventually became onions between 1910 and 1916.

Flooding also posed serious danger. A major storm in 1909 caused the Rio Grande to overflow, forcing settlers to build levees around homes and livestock.

Transportation was often unreliable, and settlers sometimes built makeshift boats from lumber to travel between communities when trains could not reach the area.


Daisy Glick Stevenson — Artist and Valley Historian

One of the most colorful figures connected with these early years was Daisy Glick Stevenson of Lyford.

The daughter of a Methodist minister, she arrived during the Valley’s earliest settlement period and became deeply involved in community life.

A 1949 newspaper article described her life as unusually adventurous. As a young girl in Colorado she once sang at the funeral of an outlaw connected with the Jesse James gang — an experience that later became part of her personal story.

In the Valley she helped establish church life, taught music, and encouraged cultural activity in the new settlements.

Later she became known as a painter of Texas landscapes and wildlife and began writing historical accounts about the Valley’s earliest settlers.

Her work preserved the memories of those who came to the region between 1904 and 1910, when the Valley was still largely untamed brushland.


Education in Early Cameron County

Another document preserved by the family is a 1909 Cameron County teacher’s certificate issued to Miss E. Marie Deyo.

The certificate authorized her to teach in the public schools of Cameron County for one year. It reflects the formal process used at the time to certify teachers and also illustrates the segregated structure of Texas public education during that period.

Such documents offer a rare glimpse into the educational institutions developing alongside the frontier settlements.

The “Year of the Bandits”

One of the most dramatic episodes remembered by early Valley residents occurred in 1915, widely recalled as the “Year of the Bandits.”

Tension had been growing between settlers and outlaw groups operating near the border.

During that year:

  • livestock and machinery were stolen

  • railroad bridges were burned

  • trains were fired upon

  • night riders moved through the countryside

One tragic incident involved Sebastian Postmaster A. L. Austin and his son Charles.

Bandits rode to their home, searched it for weapons, and then took the two men away. Both were later found murdered within earshot of Mrs. Austin.

The killings shocked the region.

Residents armed themselves and gathered in town for protection. Soldiers were stationed throughout the area, and patrols moved across the countryside.

Night trains began running with their lights turned off to avoid becoming targets.

Many families temporarily moved into town or stayed with relatives until the danger passed.

The Last Hanging in Brownsville

The violence remembered by settlers as the “Year of the Bandits” in 1915 continued into the following year and produced some of the most controversial episodes in the history of the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

One of the most dramatic occurred in Brownsville on May 19, 1916, when two men — Melquiades Chapa and José Buenrostro — were executed at the Cameron County Jail on East Van Buren Street.

Their deaths marked the last legal hanging carried out in Brownsville.

The execution followed a period of widespread unrest along the border. Bandit raids, train sabotage, and attacks on settlers had frightened communities across Cameron, Hidalgo, and Willacy counties. Armed posses, Texas Rangers, and federal troops were operating throughout the region.

Chapa and Buenrostro were accused of involvement in one of the violent incidents connected to the unrest. Their trial and conviction moved quickly, reflecting the tense atmosphere of the time.

Yet even in 1916 many residents questioned the verdict.

Newspaper coverage across Texas reported that a number of local citizens believed the two men may have been innocent, or at least not the principal figures responsible for the crime. The controversy surrounding the case lingered long after the execution.

The hanging took place in the yard of the Cameron County Jail, located on East Van Buren Street in Brownsville, before witnesses gathered to observe the sentence carried out.

Today the event is remembered as a symbol of the turbulent years along the border when fear, violence, and justice sometimes collided in tragic ways.

The Stevenson Family in Brownsville

As the Valley matured, the Stevenson family became prominent in the commercial life of Brownsville.

By the 1920s Tom Stevenson operated Stevenson Motor Company, a Chevrolet dealership located in downtown Brownsville.

Photographs show the dealership expanding as automobile ownership spread across the Valley. Employees worked in sales, parts, service, and body repair departments, reflecting the growing demand for motor vehicles.

One image records a Chevrolet endurance and economy promotional run, while another shows a fleet of Chevrolets delivered to government agencies working in the Valley.



A newspaper photograph even shows a large delivery of vehicles for federal agricultural inspectors — described humorously as “bug control experts.”

The dealership building at 10th and Adams Streets became a recognizable part of the city’s commercial district.


Automobiles and a Changing Valley

The growth of Stevenson Motor Company reflects how quickly the Valley changed during the early twentieth century.

Within a generation the region moved from mule wagons and brush trails to paved streets and automobiles.

These changes brought new economic opportunities, and businesses like Stevenson Motor Company helped supply the vehicles that connected Valley communities.

From Automobiles to Appliances

In later years the family business evolved again.

The Stevenson enterprise expanded into home appliances, operating a retail store in downtown Brownsville that sold brands such as:

• RCA
• Westinghouse
• Norge

The store at Elizabeth Street and 8th Street became another familiar part of the city’s commercial landscape.

This transition reflected the continuing modernization of the Valley as homes filled with new electrical appliances.

Dale working at Tom Stevenson Co. [Appliances] E Elizabeth and 8th St 

Priscilla Stevenson — “Two-Gun Priscilla”

Another member of the Stevenson family gained national attention during the 1930s for a very different reason.

Priscilla Stevenson, sometimes known in newspapers as “Two-Gun Priscilla,” served for several years as a guard on the Texas–Mexico border near Brownsville. During that time she earned a reputation for accuracy with firearms and for her confident presence in a profession then dominated almost entirely by men.

After seven years working along the border, Stevenson was appointed a U.S. Customs inspector in San Francisco in 1935, a move that drew considerable newspaper attention. One San Francisco article described her as a “real gal from Texas,” highlighting both her shooting ability and her energetic personality.

In the accompanying photograph she appeared in contemporary 1930s fashion — wearing a dark hat and coat while posing confidently with her firearm.

Journalists of the time portrayed her as athletic and spirited, noting that she enjoyed dancing and sports and possessed a quick sense of humor. She reportedly joked that her success sometimes came from the “flutter of beautiful eyelashes” she used to disarm skeptics.

Her story reflects a broader trend of the era, when newspapers began celebrating “modern women” entering fields traditionally reserved for men, including federal law enforcement.

A Valley Story Across Generations

From the brush country settlements around Lyford to the automobile showrooms and appliance stores of Brownsville, the story of the Deyo, Ray, and Stevenson families mirrors the broader transformation of the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

In only a few decades the region evolved from isolated frontier ranches into thriving towns connected by highways, businesses, and modern technology.

The memories preserved in family manuscripts such as Robert Ray’s Our First Half Century in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas help keep those early experiences alive for later generations.

Through these recollections and photographs we can still glimpse the determination, creativity, and community spirit that shaped the Valley’s earliest years.


Sources

Family photographs, documents, and research materials provided by Dale Stevenson

Including:

• Robert Ray manuscript: Our First Half Century in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas
• 1935 "Two-gun Priscilla, a Real Gal from Texas, on Water Front" article from San Francisco Chronicle or The San Francisco News.

• 1935 RGV newspaper article on Daisy Glick Stevenson.

• Stevenson Motor Company photographs and business records


Saturday, March 14, 2026

Dispelling some Recurring El Rrun Rrun Myths

 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:

  1. The U.S. Army rented buildings from Salinas.
  2. Buildings were destroyed during the war.
  3. Salinas heirs later sought compensation.
  4. 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:

  1. Find a real document.
  2. Remove the legal context.
  3. Insert a moral conclusion.
  4. Use modern political language (“theft”, “corruption”).
  5. 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.


Image

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:

  1. Many titles were vague or incomplete.
  2. Surveys were inconsistent.
  3. Boundaries relied on natural landmarks that moved or disappeared.
  4. 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:

  • Sabas Cavazos

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:

  1. Spanish and Mexican grant documents
  2. inheritance records
  3. sales contracts made before and after 1848
  4. 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.


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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.

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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.

Wells Fargo Money Orders and U.S. Soldiers on the Border (c. 1916)

Wells Fargo Money Orders and U.S. Soldiers on the Border (c. 1916)

Soldiers from Fort Brown purchasing Wells Fargo money orders, Brownsville, Texas, c.1916. During the U.S.–Mexico border mobilization, companies like Wells Fargo provided mobile financial services so enlisted men could safely send part of their pay home to families across the country. Photograph by Robert Runyon.

This photograph captures a small but very telling moment of everyday military life during the U.S.–Mexico border mobilization of 1916–1917. Soldiers from Fort Brown are gathered around a field agent selling money orders issued by Wells Fargo & Company.

The image was taken by Robert Runyon, whose photographs documented daily life along the Rio Grande during a period when thousands of soldiers were stationed there following the unrest connected with Pancho Villa and the U.S. border mobilization.


Why Soldiers Needed Money Orders

In the early 20th century, soldiers had very limited banking access, especially when posted to remote frontier posts like Fort Brown.

Money orders solved several problems:

1. Safely sending pay home
Soldiers could convert part of their wages into a money order and mail it to their families.

  • Safer than mailing cash

  • Could be cashed at banks or Wells Fargo offices nationwide

2. No bank account required
Most enlisted men did not have bank accounts.
Money orders functioned as a portable banking service.

3. Reliable long-distance payment
They were widely accepted for:

  • Paying bills

  • Sending support to parents or spouses

  • Buying goods by mail order


Why Wells Fargo Was There

By the early 1900s, Wells Fargo had evolved from its famous stagecoach era into a national financial and express service network.

On the U.S.–Mexico border the company provided:

  • Express freight transport

  • Banking services

  • Telegraph and payment services

  • Field agents near military camps

During the 1916 border mobilization, thousands of troops were stationed across South Texas, including at Fort Brown, and private companies often followed the army to provide services soldiers needed.

In effect, Wells Fargo functioned as a mobile financial service.


How the Process Worked

A soldier would:

  1. Bring cash from his Army pay

  2. Pay a small fee

  3. Receive a Wells Fargo money order

  4. Mail it home

The recipient could then cash it at:

  • Banks

  • Wells Fargo offices

  • Some post offices

This system made it possible for soldiers to support families hundreds or thousands of miles away.


Details Visible in the Photograph

The image is particularly valuable because it captures the service in the field, not inside a bank.

Notable details:

• The crate sign reading “Wells Fargo & Co. Money Orders for Sale Here.”
• Soldiers gathered around filling out forms
• A Model T–era automobile used as the mobile office
• A small Wells Fargo flag attached to the vehicle

This suggests a temporary roadside financial station, likely serving troops stationed around Fort Brown or nearby training grounds.


Why This Was Important for Soldiers

For enlisted men earning about $15–30 per month, this service mattered enormously.

Money orders allowed them to:

  • Send dependable support to families

  • Avoid theft of mailed cash

  • Manage finances while deployed far from home

For many working-class soldiers, this was their first exposure to modern financial services.


Why the Photo Matters Historically

Runyon’s photograph captures something historians value greatly:

The infrastructure of everyday military life.

Not a battle.
Not a parade.

But the practical systems that made army life possible on the frontier—transport, banking, communication, and supply.




1856 The Schooner Florence and the Mechanics of the Rio Grande Trade

The Schooner Florence and the Mechanics of the Rio Grande Trade

A Documentary Reconstruction of the 1856 Voyage

The surviving documents relating to the schooner Florence in 1856 form an unusually detailed record of how a single merchant vessel operated within the Rio Grande trade. When assembled together, the receipts, freight accounts, harbor bills, provisioning lists, and cargo ledgers allow us to reconstruct nearly the entire commercial life cycle of the vessel during one voyage.

Rather than a simple narrative of departure and arrival, these papers reveal a complex logistical chain stretching from the shipyards and warehouses of New York to the difficult harbor at Brazos Santiago and the merchant houses of Brownsville and Matamoros.

What emerges is not simply the story of a ship — but the anatomy of a frontier trading system.


1. Preparing the Vessel in New York

Before departure, the schooner Florence, commanded by Captain Woodhouse, entered the dense maritime infrastructure of South Street in New York. The ship’s owners purchased supplies, arranged freight, and hired harbor services needed to prepare the vessel for a Gulf voyage.

The documents record payments to numerous maritime trades:

  • ship chandlers

  • sail makers

  • ship smiths

  • wharfingers

  • towing steamers

  • dock operators

This cluster of trades formed the South Street maritime economy, one of the busiest shipping districts in the world during the mid-19th century.

Every vessel sailing to the Gulf relied on this network.


2. Provisioning the Crew

Among the most revealing documents is the provisioning bill from the ship-store supplier Harry B. Miller at 179 South Street. The list shows the food purchased for the crew before departure.

The provisions included:

  • barrels of bread

  • butter

  • pork and beef

  • codfish

  • beans

  • sugar

  • molasses

  • coffee

  • dried apples

  • peaches

  • raisins

  • spices

  • yeast powder

  • tomato catsup

These foods were chosen not for luxury but durability. Long voyages through hot Gulf waters required provisions that could survive weeks without refrigeration.

The quantities purchased allow a rough estimate of the ship’s complement. A schooner of this size typically carried:

• a captain
• a mate
• four to six seamen
• sometimes a cook or cabin boy

This suggests a crew of roughly seven to nine men.

These sailors formed the human engine behind the Rio Grande trade, enduring storms, heat, disease risk, and the hazards of the Gulf passage.


3. The Voyage to Brazos Santiago

The sailing route from New York to the mouth of the Rio Grande typically took three to five weeks, depending on winds and weather. Ships entered the Gulf of Mexico and then made their way toward the treacherous entrance at Brazos Santiago.

This was the critical gateway for commerce entering Brownsville.

Unlike major American ports, the harbor here was shallow and unstable. Sandbars shifted constantly, forcing ships to anchor offshore while cargo was transferred to smaller vessels capable of crossing the bar.

This system made the Rio Grande trade more complicated and expensive than most American coastal commerce.

But it was the only maritime gateway available.


4. The Brazos Santiago Logistics Problem

Once the schooner arrived, the real work began.

The documents show payments for:

  • lightering cargo

  • water supply

  • harbor labor

  • rudder repairs

  • smith work

  • boat services

Small craft transported freight between the anchored schooner and the shore facilities at Brazos Island. From there the goods moved upriver to Brownsville.

This multi-step process explains why the harbor of Brazos Santiago appears constantly in merchant correspondence of the period. Every shipment depended on the safe transfer of cargo across the shallow bar.

Without this fragile logistical system, Brownsville’s economy could not function.


5. Repairs and Maintenance on the Frontier

Several receipts show that the Florence required repairs during the voyage.

One account records work performed on the vessel’s rudder and rudder brace, costing twenty-two dollars — a substantial repair for a small schooner.

Other bills reference:

  • iron work

  • smith labor

  • nautical hardware

  • boat hire

These records illustrate an important fact about Gulf trade vessels: they were constantly under strain. Long ocean passages, shallow harbors, and heavy cargo placed tremendous stress on small wooden ships.

Maintenance was continuous.


6. The Return Freight Ledger

The most remarkable document in the collection is the large freight ledger listing the cargo carried by the schooner on her voyage from New York to Brazos Santiago.

The ledger records:

  • consignee names

  • number of packages

  • freight weight

  • freight charges

The cargo was divided among numerous merchants operating in the Brownsville–Matamoros trade network.

Among the consignees were:

  • C. A. Moore

  • F. J. Arispe

  • W. J. Dawson

  • J. R. Palacios

  • R. Ruiz

  • R. Fuentes

  • E. Chavarria

  • Lefevre & Co.

  • and others.

Some were American merchants in Brownsville. Others were Mexican traders connected to Matamoros and the interior markets of northern Mexico.


7. The Scale of the Shipment

The ledger totals reveal the scale of the voyage.

Total cargo pieces recorded:

4,082 packages

Total freight weight measure:

9,609 freight units

Total freight charges collected:

$2,610.79

For a small schooner operating on the frontier, this was a very substantial shipment.

It demonstrates how efficiently these vessels operated as floating distribution systems supplying dozens of merchants at once.


8. The Rio Grande Trade System

The Florence was not simply transporting goods from one port to another.

It was part of a larger economic chain connecting several distinct commercial worlds:

New York manufacturing

Atlantic shipping networks

Gulf coastal trade

Brazos Santiago harbor

Brownsville warehouses

Matamoros merchants

Northern Mexican interior markets

Through ships like the Florence, the remote Rio Grande frontier became directly connected to global commerce.


9. The Human and Commercial Infrastructure

What makes these documents especially valuable is their completeness.

Together they record:

  • food purchased for sailors

  • harbor services

  • repair work

  • water supply

  • freight distribution

  • merchant accounts

  • final settlement of cargo

Few frontier trading systems are documented in such operational detail.

The Stillman papers allow us to see the Rio Grande trade not as an abstraction but as a working machine composed of ships, merchants, sailors, and cargo moving through a difficult landscape.

Why Brazos Santiago Was One of the Most Difficult Harbors in America

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For merchants trading with the Rio Grande frontier, the greatest obstacle was not distance but geography.

The harbor serving Brownsville was Brazos Santiago, a narrow tidal pass between Brazos Island and Padre Island at the mouth of the Rio Grande. Unlike the deep harbors of New Orleans or New York, the entrance was blocked by constantly shifting sandbars. Ocean-going ships often could not cross the bar safely and were forced to anchor offshore.

Cargo therefore moved through a complicated system known as lightering. Smaller boats carried goods from anchored schooners across the shallow channel to landing points on Brazos Island. From there freight continued by boat or wagon to Brownsville several miles inland.

Storms frequently closed the pass, sandbars shifted without warning, and vessels sometimes grounded while attempting to cross. Even experienced captains approached Brazos Santiago cautiously.

Yet despite these difficulties, the harbor became the lifeline of the Rio Grande economy. Through this narrow and unpredictable channel passed the supplies that sustained both sides of the river frontier.


The Merchant Families of the Rio Grande Trade

The freight ledger for the schooner Florence reveals that the vessel was not sailing for a single merchant house. Instead, it carried goods for a network of traders operating in Brownsville and Matamoros.

Among the names recorded in the ledger are merchants such as:

  • C. A. Moore

  • F. J. Arispe

  • J. Traven

  • W. J. Dawson

  • J. R. Palacios

  • R. Ruiz

  • R. Fuentes

  • E. Chavarria

  • Lefevre & Co.

These merchants formed the commercial backbone of the Rio Grande frontier during the 1850s. Some were American traders based in Brownsville. Others were Mexican merchants operating in Matamoros, whose businesses extended deep into northern Mexico.

Together they created a cross-border commercial network that moved goods between New York manufacturers and the interior markets of Mexico.

Many of the surnames appearing in these ledgers still appear in the Rio Grande Valley today. The freight lists of ships like the Florence therefore represent more than cargo records — they are early snapshots of the merchant families who helped build the regional economy.


What the Crew of the Florence Ate on the Voyage

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Before the schooner Florence sailed for the Rio Grande, her owners purchased a full supply of provisions from a ship-store merchant on South Street in New York.

The bill lists foods typical of long sea voyages:

  • barrels of bread (hardtack)

  • pork and salted beef

  • codfish

  • beans

  • butter

  • sugar

  • molasses

  • coffee

  • dried apples and peaches

  • raisins

  • spices

  • yeast powder

  • even bottled tomato catsup

These foods were chosen because they could survive weeks at sea without refrigeration. Salted meats and dried goods formed the backbone of the sailor’s diet, while molasses and coffee provided much-needed energy during long watches on deck.

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From the quantities purchased, historians estimate the schooner likely carried seven to nine men, including the captain, mate, and crew.

For these sailors, the voyage to the Rio Grande meant weeks of hard labor under sail — hauling lines, handling cargo, and navigating Gulf storms. Their meals were simple but sustaining, and they were an essential part of the trading system that connected the distant frontier of the Rio Grande to the commercial markets of New York.

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