Tuesday, June 25, 2019

PHILIP COWEN: PUENTE-BRADSHAW DISSED JOHN, WE WAS PO'


From: Philip Cowen's Facebook page

I am disappointed by my nephew, John Cowen’s opponent’s reference in the Brownsville Herald where she tries to claim that the Cowens are persons of privilege in Brownsville. Obviously this person does not know our history, long term or short.

For those who do not know, let me tell you that the Cowens have lived in the Brownsville-Matamoros area since years before 1834 when my great great grandfather William Neale built a home on what is now 13th and Washington. (Ed.'s Note: Actually Brownsville wasn't laid out until 1848 or 1850, but hey, family lore is family lore.)

My grandfather, Louis Cowen, came to Brownsville in 1850, and later married Loretta Neale, who was born in Matamoros. Louis Cowen was of Jewish origin from Poland, spoke many languages, learned both English and Spanish, and established a real estate business and became a lawyer and practiced law in Brownsville and San Antonio. Our family has over 5000 relatives living in Texas, most from the Brownsville area.

My father was Louis Raphael Cowen, born in 1902. He was a lawyer and practiced in New York, where he worked for Texaco in the Chrysler Building. When his father died, he came back to Brownsville to take care of his mother, Lucille Thomas Cowen. He met my mother when he was 45, married her, and from 1946 through 1961, he and my mother brought 11 children into the world.
The early years were good.

But, by the late 1950s, cancer struck my father, and for six years, until Jan. 9, 1964, he was dying of cancer. My mother taught school, but with no father working, all of us children had to work to supplement the family income. We went from nice homes to more humble homes to the Poinsettia Project on McDavid Street. My brother Paul and I hitchhiked downtown to shine shoes. 

The little money we made went to our mother to help my mother buy food to feed us. John’s Father, John Ford Cowen, worked wherever he could to make money. At 13, he went down to the Missouri Pacific Depot and shoveled sorghum from box cars into Mexican trailers. He gave the little he made to our mother to help take care of all of us. Those who could worked as children. There were times, even when all of us worked, when no money came in and we simply had no food. Hunger is not a pleasant feeling. 

As a child, to be hungry, and knowing there is nothing at all to eat, was both frightening and humbling to me. Such feelings taught me and my siblings to be patient and to believe that God would take care of us no matter what. Our mother taught us that no matter how great the burden that God would never test us more than we can be tested. She said faith and hope would overcome any difficult situation. And she was right.

On Christmas Eve of 1963, we were told our father was going to die of cancer. Rather than cry, my mother baked a birthday cake, brought it out, had us say the rosary, and then we sang Happy Birthday to Jesus. On January 6, 1964, on the 12th day of Christmas, our home at 542 Adams street caught on fire and we became homeless. Three days later, when I was 13, and six children were younger than me, our father died from cancer. 

At 13, I had no father and no home. My mother held the family together. When she did not know what to do she made us all get down on our knees to thank God for the little we had and then had us all stay kneeing to say the rosary. Somehow, with the prayers and with the hope she inspired in all of us, we came back and have succeeded far beyond anything we could ever have dreamed of as children. 

My mother later went back to school, to A&M, and almost completed her Doctorate in English literature. She retired after 17 years from Texas Southmost College and UTB.

The Cowens have always worked hard. Growing up, we all knew we were not privileged and would have to earn every penny we made. All of us succeeded in some form or fashion.
So to John Cowen’s opponent, all I can say is that our history does not reflect privilege, but rather hard work, resilience, and a fastidious insistence not to let despair overcome any of us. 

If there was any privilege we as a family held, it was the privilege which suffering gives one to better understand human suffering in this world, it was the privilege which hunger gives one to make sure everyone has enough to eat, it was the privilege which being homeless gives one to make certain every child sleeps in a warm, dry bed, with a roof over the child’s head, it was the privilege of being allowed to exercise those skills which God gave us all and to use them to better ourselves individually, as a family, and to help improve the community we live in.

I humbly ask all of you who have not voted to please go out tomorrow to vote for John Cowen. He is a reflection of the hard work, and generosity of spirit, which our family has exhibited and has always given back to our community. He will make you proud.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hard work? None of these guys worked hard for anything. They had it handed to them.

baby boomer said...

well said, many of us had that great upbringing, work hard at an early age, keep faith (Christ in your life) nothing is given to you or you deserve it, got to work hard to achieve it. Amen

Anonymous said...

Phil Cowen is a good Fiction Teller. Every time he tells the story it gets sadder and sadder. Ralph Cowen says that they used to wear underwear in odd number days because they only had one pair. John Cowen Sr. said he used to recycle corn husks to chew on them for energy to continue for the week. Phil Cowen says he never knew that shoes had leather soles because they never wore shoes.

Yet they all paid for universities to become Lawyers, and money to start custom brokers and owners of car dealerships. No money but plenty of credit? hmmm doesn't sound like they were poor at all. Con artists yes, poor no. Not one bit of poor roots in that family.

Nice try Phil. If he is around rich people they will tell you they own Brownsville and Brownsville owes the Cowen family millions because they are the Pioneer family and they will own Brownsville again.

Anonymous said...

So our newly minted Commissioner John Ford Cowen is not a person of previlege? The qualifications he ran upon for the position of city commissioner say otherwise.

Anonymous said...

So you want the underprivileged running the City?

Ni un Chile te embona.

Anonymous said...

Sorry, you guys, but I lived down the street on Adams where the Cowens lived and I saw exactly what they had and did not have - including shoes, and an easy life. I saw their house burned down and I ran to TSC to go tell the eldest girl to get home. Mrs. Cowen was teaching at Central and every morning I saw her walk in front of my house on her way to work. She wore those old purple chancitas, a very simple dress and her books and graded papers on her hip. We would share our popsicles with the little girls. I saw this all happen before my eyes and now as an adult have read about the rich history of their ancestors and their contributions to Brownsville. So don't put anyone down if you do not know the whole story. If they got ahead by someone helping them, like most of us did, more power to them because they all kept going in spite of the hardships they endured. The only thing I have to say is that it disappoints me to see some of them not be true to themselves and not make decisions based on what used to be. It is time for them to do their best for what is best for the numbers. Both Philip and now John Jr. need to hold true to the election code of ethics.

Anonymous said...

I am very hurt because I am not a privilege person like the poor Cowen family. It's so sad to hear that this family suffer so much in the past, like having beds and food on the table to eat. Even a indoor shower and toilet. I am cry for them.

Anonymous said...

I'd be riding a limo not sittin on the back of a pickup truck.

Anonymous said...

What? We the originals that have lived here since the 1750's are still poor, no beds no tables no showers and toilets (de poso only) and only tortillas con queso and the rinches con los gringos (todos) living (and still) in high watta. NO TIENEN VERGUENZA P****

Anonymous said...

I believe he was also related to John "RIP" Ford who was sent down to take care of Juan N. Cortina along the Rio Grande, on the land that was rightfully theirs, but they are not to blame for what their ancestors did or did not do.
If the Cowens worked to come out of the hole, more power to them because they did not fall in the circle of "pobrecito syndrome." Most of them are well educated citizens of Brownsville and served the armed forces with pride and distinction. Now as a younger generation takes his newly elected position to heart, he will be able to continue the family's "ganas." Why must everyone criticize those who have dared to take on the electorate down here.

Anonymous said...

They all got help from the rinches that's how they became rich, stealing land that has never belonged to them the story of the texas gringos.

ferny said...

Fuck Philip Cowen !!

Anonymous said...

Is that a salute or a hi ya all?

Anonymous said...

"We originals", my culo. You ancestors killed, enslaved and drove the originals off this land. What a fucking hypocrit!

Anonymous said...

Pinche gringos and their fairy tales.

Anonymous said...

European cockroaches

rita