When Juan Cortina died in Mexico City under home arrest in 1892, he was buried at El Panteon de Dolores in Mexico City, Mexico, even though he yearned to be buried alongside his mother at her ranch in Santa Rita, the first seat of Cameron County.
His descendant Praxedis Cavazos of San Pedro says that at least two attempts were made to bring his body home but were thwarted by World War I and later, the Great Depression. His wishes to be buried alongside his mother were never realized.
What P.G. Cavazos failed to point out – as he is characteristically diplomatic – is that the Cortina name often incurred the wrath of his enemies who remembered him as a particularly effective resistance fighter to the encroachment and usurpation of the lands of local Mexican-American families, often at the head of an armed following.
Cavazos points out that Cortina was born in Camargo, Mexico on May 14, 1824. His aristocratic mother was one of the heirs of a large land grant in the lower Rio Grande valley, including the area that surrounded Brownsville. In fact, she was the daughter of Salvador De la Garza, who established the first ranch, now Rancho Viejo, Texas. His daughter Doña Estefana Goseascochea Cavazos de Cortina's ranch was down Carmen Road (named after her daughter) and abutted the Rio Grande River near what is now Military Highway.
The family moved to that land when Cortina was still young.
In the Mexican War Cortina served as a part of an irregular cavalry during the battles of Resaca de la Palma and Palo Alto under Gen. Mariano Arista of the Tamaulipas Brigade.
After the war he returned to the north bank of the river, where he was accused on at least two occasions of stealing cattle by the Cameron County grand jury. He had grown in popularity and political influence among the Mexicans there and even though he was seen frequently in public, he was not arrested on the indictments. After the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, Cortina developed a hatred for a group of judges, attorneys and land speculators whom he accused of stealing land from Texas Mexican unfamiliar with the American judicial system and in the process became a leader to many of the poorer Mexicans who lived along the banks of the river.
Cortina had sworn he would kill these men for stealing land from the Mexican Americans. The incident that ignited the first so-called Cortina War occurred on July, 13, 1859, when Cortina saw the Brownsville, Texas, City Marshall, Robert Shears, brutally arrest a Mexican American who had once been employed by Cortina. Cortina shot the marshall in the impending confrontation and rode out of town with the prisoner. Early on the morning of September 8, 1859, he rode into Brownsville again, this time at the head of some forty to eighty men, and seized control of the town.
Only the intervention by his relatives and officials on the Matamoros side persuaded him to lift the occupation.
Cortina afterward also fought the French invaders, with Ignacio Zaragoza in Puebla (Cinco de Mayo), another Texan from Goliad. He quickly rose to general in the Liberal Mexican Army of Benito Juarez and was present at the execution of Maximilian in Queretaro, served as military governor of Tamaulipas, and would later support dictator Porfirio Diaz when he overthrew Sebastian Lerdo de Tejada, Juarez’ successor.
He was an adroit political player, surviving the Imperial government of Maximilian, the Byzantine political changes in Mexico, and even the spillover of the Civil War, taking sides first with the Confederates, and later, with the Union.
It was the internal politics of Mexico that eventually led to his arrest and imprisonment.
Mexican presidents, especially Diaz, eager to soothe the wounded feelings of Cortina’s enemies in South Texas and anxious to placate the U.S. government, ordered him kept at the military prison of Santiago Tlaltelolco, without being tried or sentenced. He remained there until 1890, when he was paroled to a big hacienda below Mexico City. His home imprisonment in Mexico City ended with his death in 1892.
He was
Even then, when his family tried to have his remains buried in the family cemetery in San Pedro, his political opponents objected and the project was shelved.
10 comments:
Mr. Montoya it is such a pleasure to read stories like this in your blog. There is so much untold history about our people, the real owners of this land that was stolen from them. Would it not be great if all of us could get motivated to write a collection of stories from OUR view point and not the Stillman versions only. There is so much untold history in our so called Texas history books.
Thanks for for presenting the "other side of the story."
Way to go JM!
I look forward to reading your blog. I appreciate the hard work it must take to unravel the layers of duplicity and corruption that is valley politics. Your blog gives some of us a window into a world that is shrouded in back room deals and compadrismo. I also appreciate the many articles on the valleys true founding fathers like Cortina. The local establishent would rather see him disappear from memory and replace them with "approved" figures from our past.
Thank you so much Mr. Montoya for bringing this great characters of our Hispanic Mexican history back to life. I've read on this great man,General de Brigradier Don Juan N. Cortina and his accomplishments qre bigger than life keep up the good work and hopely one day you can publish a book on history on this region. If I'm not mistaken,Tamaulipas was as far north as Corpus Christi and before that is used to be called Nuevo Santender,correct me if I'm wrong. To 8:25pm and 7:10am,you can keep our history alive if you do your part by telling you children and grandchildren to be proud of our past and enriching them with our Spanish command and culture.
A poster on Mean Mister Brownsville, D P-M, I believe, just called Cortina "a border bandit".
And so it goes.
FUCK YOU ERASMO!!!! YOUR SISTER GAVE ME HERPES MAMON!!!!!
MACLOVIO O'MALLEY
I am the 7;10 writer and I am doing my best to spread the real truth about our ancestoral fathers and mothers. Some of us meet at the library on Thursdays around noon to research our past and you aught to see what we have collected in form of Seno Mexicano y Nuevo Santender and all the land grants in the area. You are correct in saying that we must not let this stories die!
Thank you 7:10 for doing you share in keeping our history alive. El inglés o el anglo sajón se hizo rico con el oro ESPAÑOL. El inglés siempre fue traicionero y cobarde y siempre fue pirata,porque inglatera Siempre le temió y envidio a la Gran ESPAÑA . Así para no enfrentar a la ARMADA ESPAÑOLA utilizaban la bandera pirata para ecudarze de la potencia mundial de ese entonces la madre patria que siempre ondio en alta mar la bandera de San Andres! Recuerdo en la historia que ESPAÑA le ayude a estados unidos a vencer a inglatera durante su independencia con la ayuda de las colonias como Cuba,Puerto Rico y México. Apoyando con proviciones armamento y utilizando el Real Español como su moneda oficial durante el conflicto. El gobernador Bernardo de Gálvez que hoy lleva su nombre la isla de Galveston,deroto a los Británicos ayudando a Estados Unidos a ser libres de inglatera.
Ah yes..The famous "resistance fighter"! I guess that is Tex-Mex for cattle thief and murdered. You failed to mention the time he invaded Brownsville with a kill list and managed to nail a few. Most have gotton out of town before him. He only left after the Mexican military commander told him, he would not be given protection in Matamoros, when the U.S Army came to kill his sorry ass.
Surely you can come up with a better hero than Cortina. If he is all you have on which to hang your pride, then you are in very bad shape.
Ah yes..The wonderful Spanish and the awful English. What part of England did Cortez come from? Was it his English soldiers who raped, murdered and pillaged what is now Madre Mejico la chingada!
What part of England did Pizarro come from? He held the last Inca King (Atahualpa) captive until he people filled us a room several times with silver and gold and then strangled Autahualpa.
Pizarro's captian Benalcazar marched north to what is now Quito Ecuador and slaughtered the inhabitants and cut them open looking for gold they might have swallowed.
Jeeze..you idiots racist hatred of America and Americans make you completely nuts and have no sense of history or truth.
Juan Cortinas is a name on my family tree! And what makes him a heroe is that He was a few of the Last that took the struggle and fought for His God given rights.A struggle that to this day has not been resolved.
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