Tuesday, March 20, 2018

CAMARGO BEFORE U.S. COLONIES, TEXAS, OR BROWNSVILLE,

By Juan Montoya
Twenty-seven years before the the 13 colonies issued their Declaration of Independence from England, a full 87 years before Texas broke away from Mexico, and 99 years before Brownsville was founded, Camargo Tamaulipas already existed.

This March, Camargo – and Reynosa downriver – are celebrating the 269th anniversary of their founding.
The first settlement to be founded on the Lower Rio Grande was that of Nuestra Señora de Santa Ana de Camargo.

Camargo is located almost directly across the river from Rio Grande City.
 It was founded on March 5, 1749, with the dedication to Señora Santa Ana by captain Don Blas Maria de la Garza de Falcon at the eastern edge of the San Juan River near its confluence with the Río Grande.

The foundation had 85 families – a total of 531 persons. Most of the settlers for this township came from Ceralvo, Cadereyta, Monterrey and surrounding townships
Following that, another settlement, Reynosa, 10 leagues downriver, was founded by Colonel Jose de Escandon. Reynosa was named after the Spanish town of Reinosa located in Cantabria (Spain).
The new settlement was dedicated to the Virgin of Guadalupe.

Reynosa was planted on 14 March 1749, in an extensive fluvial plain. Most of the initial settlers were from the New Kingdom of León.

In 1846, when Zachary Taylor invaded Mexico, Camargo was occupied by the US Army.
This river port served as a jumping off point for the invasion on Monterrey and Saltillo. The Army was transported via steamboats from the mouth of the river area, and Matamoros. Disease plagued the troops and it is said that hundreds of U.S. soldiers were buried in Camargo, and between that city and Monterrey, in unmarked graves. The command was said to have made the fatal mistake of establishing camp below the confluence of both rivers, where raw sewage and waste from the city drained into the water they used to drink.


Since the Battle of Palo Alto just north of present-day Brownsville in May 1846 signaled the beginning of the Mexican American War, the town of Camargo has close historic ties with our city.

In fact, the founder of the first ranch in Cameron County came from there. Rancho Viejo was established by Salvador de La Garza in 1770 and the King of Spain gave him the royal grant in 1781.

His daughter, Doña Estefana Goseascochea de Cortina was born in Camargo in 1782 (the Rio Grande wasn't a border then) and died in 1867 on her El Carmen Ranch ( named after her daughter) at 85.

Carmen Avenue connected these two ranches. Santa Rita (now Villanueva, and the first seat of Cameron County) was also founded by Doña Estefana.

She had two sons, Sabas, and his half brother Juan Nepomuceno Cortina, who defied Texan authorities following the loss of Mexican territory north of the Rio Grande after 1848.
Sabas went on to become a county elected official and was one of the wealthiest land owners in the new entity.

Juan "Cheno" Cotina would battle Brownsville, Texas, and U.S. forces and was exiled to Mexico City where he died.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your crush with Juan Nepomuceno "Cheno" Cortina is big as the ocean

Unknown said...

The Count of Sierra Gordo or “Conde” Jose de Escandon was born in Soto de la Marina in the province of Canribria Northern Spain. Next to Laredo also in Cantibria Villa de Carmargo is down the road next to Santander. Going south you’ll go past the town of Reynosa then Matamoros then you enter Burgos. From Burgos headed toward Basques Country you will by the towns of Hinojosa and Trevino. All within a 100 mile radius. Just like south Texas and northern Mexico And you wonder where we come from. The Spaniards brought democracy and first elected officials to the United States 100 years before the Mayflower landed on the East Coast. The Laws of Burgos prohibited Spanards from owning slaves especially the native Americans.

Anonymous said...

Cortina was a cattle stealing serial killer. Of course he said he did it for his people so that made it all right in the minds of the ignorant Mexicans then and now.

Anonymous said...

So were your heroes like austin, crockett, bowie, travis houston and many othes. Murderers, cut throats, crooks, thieves. The ignorant gringos who represent stupidity, like yourself

rita