Thursday, March 19, 2026

๐Ÿ“œ 1850 0915 — From Brownsville to Britain: Wool, Textiles, and a Global Trade Link

๐Ÿ“œ 1850 0915 — From Brownsville to Britain: Wool, Textiles, and a Global Trade Link



A Frontier Merchant Writes to Edinburgh—and Names a Cavazos


By mid-September 1850, Charles Stillman’s correspondence reveals a commercial network extending far beyond the Rio Grande frontier. While much of his trade flowed between New York, Brownsville, and the Mexican interior, this letter shows another dimension: a direct connection to Edinburgh, Scotland.

Yet even in this transatlantic exchange, the local world remains present. In a single line, Stillman references Don George Cavasos (Cavazos)—a name rooted in the Rio Grande Valley—suggesting that global trade and local families were tightly interwoven.

This letter stands at the intersection of those two worlds.


๐Ÿ“œ Letter — September 15, 1850

Charles Stillman & Bro. → Mr. E. D. Smith, Edinburgh


Transcription (Archival, Revised)

Brownsville Sept. 15th 1850

Mr. E. D. Smith
Edinburgh

Dear Sir,

We are in receipt of your esteemed
respects of the 7th inst. with bill lading for £300
which has been found correct and entered accordingly.

Herewith we ship you with invoice
and bill lading of sundries amounting to £946.7.6 shipped
per “Comanche” agreeable to your order of the 1st inst.,
but you omitted to state the class of prints you
wish and have sent you all maroons, they are
cheap and only made to sell, we have got £18
freight.

We note your remarks respecting
wool obtained, all you send we shall allow you
eighteen pence per lb. delivered here.

I have seen Mr. Conway and fear
that our account against Mathews is rather
a bad case.

When you see Don Jorge Cabasos say
to him that we wish to see him this
way on the sheep business.

Still we can afford to pay
1½ for a fair lot though we are paying generally 12/__.

Yours &c.
Chas. Stillman & Bro.


Reading the Letter

This letter operates simultaneously on two geographic scales: the Atlantic world and the Rio Grande frontier.

On one hand, Stillman is corresponding with a merchant in Edinburgh, shipping goods valued in pounds sterling aboard the vessel “Comanche.” The cargo includes textiles—specifically printed cloth (“prints”), sent in a single color (maroons) due to the lack of detailed instruction. His comment that they are “cheap and only made to sell” reflects a practical merchant’s logic: goods are selected for marketability, not refinement.

At the same time, the letter reveals an active wool trade, with Stillman offering a fixed price of eighteen pence per pound delivered in Brownsville. This indicates a two-way relationship: manufactured goods move outward, while raw materials—particularly wool—flow inward, linking the frontier to the textile economies of Britain.

Yet the most revealing moment comes in a brief but significant instruction:

“When you see Don George Cavasos…”

Here, the global network collapses back into the local. The mention of Cavasos (Cavazos) suggests a known figure within the regional economy, likely involved in livestock or wool production. Stillman expresses a clear interest in bringing him “this way on the sheep business,” indicating that sheep raising—and by extension wool supply—was becoming an important component of the frontier economy.

This is not incidental. It suggests that Stillman was not only trading goods but also actively encouraging the development of supply networks, likely tied to export markets.

The closing lines reinforce the economic conditions behind this effort. Stillman notes that while he can pay 1½ (likely per pound or unit) for a fair lot, the prevailing rate is lower—“generally 12/__.” This reflects a competitive and fluctuating market, where price differences could determine whether goods moved or stalled.


What This Letter Reveals

This document expands the scope of the Rio Grande trade network in several key ways:

  • Transatlantic Reach
    Brownsville is directly connected to Edinburgh, linking frontier commerce to British industrial markets.

  • Bidirectional Trade
    Manufactured textiles move outward, while wool and other raw materials move inward.

  • Local Participation
    Figures such as Don George Cavazos appear within the same network, tying regional families to international commerce.

  • Emerging Livestock Economy
    The reference to “the sheep business” suggests growing interest in wool production as a stable export commodity.

  • Practical Merchant Strategy
    Goods are selected, priced, and shipped based on demand and turnover—not preference or prestige.


๐Ÿ”— Context Within the Series

Placed alongside recent letters:

  • 1850 0909 (Morell) — inland trade structured through controlled consignments

  • 1850 0911 (DeWitt) — steam transport reshapes movement between Brazos and Brownsville

  • 1850 0915 (this letter) — the network extends across the Atlantic while remaining rooted in local relationships

Together, they show a system that is not only expanding geographically, but also diversifying in both goods and participants.


๐Ÿ“œ Editorial Note

This transcription preserves original spelling and phrasing as closely as possible. The reading of “Don George Cavasos” reflects a corrected interpretation of the manuscript and is likely associated with the Cavazos family of the Rio Grande region. Monetary values and abbreviations have been retained in their original form where legible.


Closing Observation

This letter demonstrates something easily overlooked:

Even as goods crossed the Atlantic, the system still depended on people known by name.

A shipment might sail to Edinburgh.
But its success could depend on whether Don Jorge Cavazos entered the sheep trade.

That is how this network worked—
global in reach, but local in its foundations.

The reference to “Don Jorge Cavazos” likely points to a member of one of the long-established ranching families of the lower Rio Grande. By 1850, such families controlled extensive grazing lands and livestock herds, making them essential participants in the emerging wool trade. Stillman’s interest in bringing Cavazos “this way on the sheep business” suggests an effort not merely to trade goods, but to organize production at the ranch level for export markets.

Love it—this is exactly the kind of piece that ties your letters to real people on the ground. Let’s keep it grounded, cautious where needed, and anchored to what your documents actually show.


The Cavazos Ranching Network and the Rio Grande Trade, 1850

Land, Livestock, and the Foundations of a Frontier Economy


By 1850, the lower Rio Grande was not an empty frontier waiting to be developed. It was already a lived-in landscape shaped by long-established ranching families, among whom the Cavazos (Cavasos) family stood prominently.

The commercial letters of Charles Stillman reveal a rapidly expanding trade network—but they also show that this network depended on people who were already there: landowners, stock raisers, and suppliers whose roots reached back to the Spanish and Mexican periods.

One brief but revealing line in a September 15, 1850 letter makes this connection explicit:

“When you see Don George Cavasos say to him that we wish to see him this way on the sheep business.”

This passing reference opens a window into a much deeper system.


๐ŸŒฟ A Ranching World Before Stillman

The Cavazos family were part of the original porciรณn land grant system along the Rio Grande, dating to the late 18th century. These grants divided riverfront lands into long, narrow tracts designed to provide access to water, grazing, and transportation.

By the mid-19th century, families like the Cavazos:

  • Controlled extensive grazing lands

  • Maintained herds of cattle and sheep

  • Supplied regional markets with:

    • hides

    • tallow

    • livestock

This was not a marginal economy—it was the foundation upon which later trade networks would build.


๐Ÿ„ Livestock and the Export Economy

Stillman’s letters repeatedly mention hides, one of the most important export commodities of the region. These were not produced by merchants—they came from ranchers.

At the same time, another product begins to appear: wool.

In his correspondence with Edinburgh, Stillman offers:

“eighteen pence per lb. delivered here”

This indicates a structured market for wool, tied to international demand. For that system to function, merchants needed reliable suppliers.

Families like the Cavazos were the logical source.


๐Ÿ‘ The “Sheep Business” — A Growing Opportunity

Stillman’s instruction regarding Don Jorge Cavazos is direct and purposeful:

“…we wish to see him this way on the sheep business.”

This suggests more than a casual transaction. It points to an effort to:

  • Encourage expanded sheep raising

  • Secure a steady wool supply

  • Integrate ranch production into a broader trade system

In other words, Stillman was not only buying goods—he was attempting to shape what was produced.


๐Ÿงญ From Ranch to Market

When viewed alongside other letters in the series, a clear structure emerges:

  • Ranchers (Cavazos and others)
    → produce cattle, hides, and wool

  • Merchants (Stillman & partners)
    → finance, organize, and export

  • Transport networks
    → mule trains, wagons, and river steamers

  • Market centers
    → Monterrey, Saltillo, San Luis Potosรญ

  • Global connections
    → New York and even Edinburgh

The Cavazos family, and others like them, were essential at the very first stage of this chain.


⚖️ Continuity and Change

What makes this moment particularly important is the balance between continuity and transformation.

The ranching system itself was not new. It had been in place for generations. But by 1850:

  • New markets were opening

  • New goods were flowing in

  • New transport methods (steamers) were emerging

  • New financial systems were linking distant places

The result was not the replacement of the old system, but its integration into a larger one.


๐Ÿ”— A Name in the Record

The appearance of Don Jorge Cavazos in Stillman’s letter is brief, but it matters.

It confirms that:

  • Local ranching families were known to merchants by name

  • They were active participants in trade decisions

  • Their role extended beyond production into negotiation and collaboration

This is where the global and the local meet—not in abstraction, but in identifiable individuals.


๐Ÿ“œ Editorial Note

This article is based in part on a September 15, 1850 letter from Charles Stillman & Bro., in which “Don George Cavasos” is referenced in connection with the sheep trade. The name has been interpreted as Cavazos, a well-documented family of the lower Rio Grande region. While specific identification of the individual remains tentative, the broader historical context of Cavazos family ranching activity is well established.


Closing Observation

The Rio Grande trade network did not begin with merchants.

It began on the land—with families like the Cavazos, who raised the animals, worked the ranges, and sustained the local economy long before goods moved across oceans.

Stillman’s letters show what came next:

A system that reached outward—
but never left its foundations behind.


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