There is a special section where Graf examines the role of Juan Nepomuceno Cortina, the son of
Doña Estefana Goseascochea de Cortina, granddaughter of Salvador de La Garza, the largest landowner in Cameron County whose ranch, Rancho Viejo was established in 1770 and the King of Spain gave him the royal grant in 1781.
Unlike most Texas historians and apologists, Graf's characterization is not one that brands him as a bandit and killer after he occupied Brownsville in September 28, 1859, but rather takes a dispassionate overview of the maligned heir of the Espiritu Santo Grant. Some excerpts follow below.)
Cortina, in a proclamation issued immediately after the raid (Sept. 30), reiterated that he and his men, as North American citizens, sought merely to punish those six or eight oppressors who were taking advantage of Mexicans, terrorizing them and compelling them to abandon their property, to give up their land for little or nothing...
It is, however, significant that this first declaration, published in Matamoros and probably not written by by Cortina, carried no cry of "Death to the North Americans!" Instead, it carefully singled out the oppressors of the Mexicans, and, incidentally, the enemies of Cortina.
(Footnote: A Presbyterian missionary [Melinda Rankin] in Brownsville at this time has revealed her own reactions to conditions immediately following the Cortina raid: "For two weeks after the assault of Cortina I remained in my house and continued my school, as I knew his murderous designs were only against his enemies. As long as he had his own ban of men, who were fully instructed upon whom to commit violence, I felt no apprehensions that any harm would befall me. But when he was reinforced by desperadoes from all parts, I became convinced I should be in danger in case they succeeded in getting into town.")
Conflicting stories reached the distant federal authorities, who were not entirely convinced that the blame was all on one side. It is unfortunate that the citizens of the Valley in their enthusiasm to secure federal assistance circulated stories grossly exaggerating the state of affairs.
One of these stories reported the taking and burning of Brownsville. When these reports proved false, the authorities in Washington concluded that the entire episode was over-dramatized in an effort to regain the lost largess of the military post.
The report of the consul at Matamoros, accurately reporting that a personal dispute was the origin of the trouble, was typical of those received in Washington.
During the night of September 28, 1859, after the celebration in Matamoros on national holiday in which a number of Americans from the Texan side of the river had taken part, the people of Brownsville were aroused by the surprise "attack" of a band estimated at between 60 to 100 men led by Cortina. Taking his headquarters in vacant Fort Brown, he sent men to hunt those whom he intended to kill.
As a matter of course, he freed the prisoners, all Mexicans, although in so doing it was necessary to kill the jailor because he resisted. Others killed were young (Bob) Neale, a blacksmith named George Morris, and two Mexicans, in each case for reasons which seem to be entirely personal. Although they searched widely, Cortina's men were unable to ferret out (Adolphus) Glaevecke and the city Marshall (Robert Shears). The former had taken refuge in Samuel Belden's store.
Belden would not give him up, and on account of the friendship Cortina felt towards Belden and his partner (Charles Stillman), he use no violence in getting possession of is greatest enemy.
Such forbearance is not the mark of the ruthless raider who respects no rights but his own and who holds no hope that he will ever again resume his place in normal life of the community. If this were an isolated instance, one might with justice discount it as the creation of those seeking to minimize the gravity of the attack, but in other respects he did not behave like atypical raider.
To add to the skepticism of the federal authorities, close upon the heels of the original attack came the report of the Grand Jury which took the extreme position that, "they do conclude, without hesitation, that the entry upon the city of Brownsville, on the 28th of September, 1859, was an invasion of American territory by armed Mexicans under the Mexican flag, with hostile intentions against the constituted authorities of our State and country."
From the very first, Cortina had interrupted the mails, but not in order to plunder them. Five days after the foray into Brownsville, the mail from Rudyville was delayed for some three hours, but the mail bag was not opened. Such a delay, however, was enough to render the mails unreliable for any important communication. Men were cautions of their correspondence and spoke not at all of the disturbances, for they feared the wrath of Cortina if he discovered their opposition.
Up to the time of leaving they did not attempt to plunder or rob. They appeared to be after those persons who volunteered to accompany the sheriff on his former expedition to arrest him, which never started, and those who could be witnesses against him for his former offenses.
Although Cortina ruled his men with an iron hand, it was inevitable that as they continued to hold the city and get into liquor, they should become disorderly.
Major excesses were prevented, however, by Cortina's decision to withdraw, in accordance with the advice of his friends Don Miguel Tijerina and Don Agapito Longoria, aided by his cousins General Jose Maria Carvajal, in command of the Mexican forces in Matamoros, and Don Manuel Trevino, Mexican consul in Brownsville.
The important point, in view of the later absurd charges made by the Americans, is that when Brownsville was completely in his control, he did not take advantage of it to permit to plunder at will. It would certainly have been easier for him, since it is hard to believe that a number of his men were not motivated largely by the hope of plunder. That he prevented such disorders is another evidence that he did not regard himself yet as totally outside the legal and social pale of his former life (Memoirs of John Rip Ford).
Cortina, in a proclamation issued immediately after the raid (Sept. 30), reiterated that he and his men, as North American citizens, sought merely to punish those six or eight oppressors who were taking advantage of Mexicans, terrorizing them and compelling them to abandon their property, to give up their land for little or nothing...
It is, however, significant that this first declaration, published in Matamoros and probably not written by by Cortina, carried no cry of "Death to the North Americans!" Instead, it carefully singled out the oppressors of the Mexicans, and, incidentally, the enemies of Cortina.
(Footnote: A Presbyterian missionary [Melinda Rankin] in Brownsville at this time has revealed her own reactions to conditions immediately following the Cortina raid: "For two weeks after the assault of Cortina I remained in my house and continued my school, as I knew his murderous designs were only against his enemies. As long as he had his own ban of men, who were fully instructed upon whom to commit violence, I felt no apprehensions that any harm would befall me. But when he was reinforced by desperadoes from all parts, I became convinced I should be in danger in case they succeeded in getting into town.")
Conflicting stories reached the distant federal authorities, who were not entirely convinced that the blame was all on one side. It is unfortunate that the citizens of the Valley in their enthusiasm to secure federal assistance circulated stories grossly exaggerating the state of affairs.
One of these stories reported the taking and burning of Brownsville. When these reports proved false, the authorities in Washington concluded that the entire episode was over-dramatized in an effort to regain the lost largess of the military post.
The report of the consul at Matamoros, accurately reporting that a personal dispute was the origin of the trouble, was typical of those received in Washington.
During the night of September 28, 1859, after the celebration in Matamoros on national holiday in which a number of Americans from the Texan side of the river had taken part, the people of Brownsville were aroused by the surprise "attack" of a band estimated at between 60 to 100 men led by Cortina. Taking his headquarters in vacant Fort Brown, he sent men to hunt those whom he intended to kill.
As a matter of course, he freed the prisoners, all Mexicans, although in so doing it was necessary to kill the jailor because he resisted. Others killed were young (Bob) Neale, a blacksmith named George Morris, and two Mexicans, in each case for reasons which seem to be entirely personal. Although they searched widely, Cortina's men were unable to ferret out (Adolphus) Glaevecke and the city Marshall (Robert Shears). The former had taken refuge in Samuel Belden's store.
Belden would not give him up, and on account of the friendship Cortina felt towards Belden and his partner (Charles Stillman), he use no violence in getting possession of is greatest enemy.
Such forbearance is not the mark of the ruthless raider who respects no rights but his own and who holds no hope that he will ever again resume his place in normal life of the community. If this were an isolated instance, one might with justice discount it as the creation of those seeking to minimize the gravity of the attack, but in other respects he did not behave like atypical raider.
To add to the skepticism of the federal authorities, close upon the heels of the original attack came the report of the Grand Jury which took the extreme position that, "they do conclude, without hesitation, that the entry upon the city of Brownsville, on the 28th of September, 1859, was an invasion of American territory by armed Mexicans under the Mexican flag, with hostile intentions against the constituted authorities of our State and country."
From the very first, Cortina had interrupted the mails, but not in order to plunder them. Five days after the foray into Brownsville, the mail from Rudyville was delayed for some three hours, but the mail bag was not opened. Such a delay, however, was enough to render the mails unreliable for any important communication. Men were cautions of their correspondence and spoke not at all of the disturbances, for they feared the wrath of Cortina if he discovered their opposition.
Up to the time of leaving they did not attempt to plunder or rob. They appeared to be after those persons who volunteered to accompany the sheriff on his former expedition to arrest him, which never started, and those who could be witnesses against him for his former offenses.
Although Cortina ruled his men with an iron hand, it was inevitable that as they continued to hold the city and get into liquor, they should become disorderly.
Major excesses were prevented, however, by Cortina's decision to withdraw, in accordance with the advice of his friends Don Miguel Tijerina and Don Agapito Longoria, aided by his cousins General Jose Maria Carvajal, in command of the Mexican forces in Matamoros, and Don Manuel Trevino, Mexican consul in Brownsville.
The important point, in view of the later absurd charges made by the Americans, is that when Brownsville was completely in his control, he did not take advantage of it to permit to plunder at will. It would certainly have been easier for him, since it is hard to believe that a number of his men were not motivated largely by the hope of plunder. That he prevented such disorders is another evidence that he did not regard himself yet as totally outside the legal and social pale of his former life (Memoirs of John Rip Ford).
18 comments:
It's nice that you are doing your damndest to rehabilitate this outlaw, Montoya. But an outlaw he was.
Tornado alert drill set for 11 a.m.
ARE YOU SERIOUS the ship is sinking and we have a tornado alert ARE YOU SERIOUS???
WOW!
I am saying NOTING!
Que paso primo bro??? pinche coco
You maggots better not congregate around the restrooms any more. Yea we know what you're doing.
Is it illegal to cut trees in this stinking city? El Cenote city, COB?
Are there any enviromentalist on this blog that are concern abt people cutting trees?
If concern call this number and object to them cutting trees: (956) 213-9400 ask for Alex Guerra - Executive Director.
PUTIN/TRUMP 2020
A DUMBASS HANDLES CORONAVIRUS:
Donald Trump is incapable of truth, heedless of science, and hostage to the demands of his insatiable ego.
Recall, since the start of the coronavirus crisis, the litany of bogus assurances, “hunches,” misinformation, magical thinking, drive-by political shootings, and self-stroking:
“We have it under control. It’s going to be just fine.”
“By April, you know, in theory, when it gets a little warmer, it miraculously goes away.”
“The Obama Administration made a decision on testing that turned out to be detrimental to what we’re doing . . . ”
“We’re going very substantially down, not up. . . . We have it so well under control. I mean, we really have done a very good job.”
“As of right now and yesterday, anybody that needs a test [can have one], that’s the thing, and the tests are all perfect, like the letter was perfect— the transcription was perfect.”
“They would like to have the people come off [the Grand Princess cruise ship, off the coast of California]. I would like to have the people stay. . . . Because I like the numbers being where they are.”
More than 1,000 people in the U.S. have already been diagnosed with the coronavirus in 38 states, leaving at least 29 people dead. But Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told members of the House Oversight Committee that “we will see more cases, and things will get worse.”
PUTIN/TRUMP 2020
Let me see if I have this right. Cortina attacks Brownsville with a murder list and is a good guy because his list wasn't longer. What a bunch of whitewash bullshit!
Trump lied when he said the number of Americans infected with coronavirus was declining even as health officials told him and the public the truth about it rising. He lied when he said there were enough coronavirus tests for every American even when Vice President Mike Pence ― who’s leading the administration’s response ― said that wasn’t true, and he lied when he blamed the shortage of tests on former President Barack Obama. He lied when he compared a year’s worth of influenza deaths to a few months’ worth of coronavirus fatalities in an effort to mislead Americans about the severity of the new disease.
Watch the news, do not listen to Trump...
This son-of-a-bitch is more worried about his fucking IMAGE than human lives??? Wait what am I saying? He cheated his way out of serving to let others DIE for him. He mocks the disabled, scams seniors... this man is the DEVIL. Do not call him 'president,' call him 'occupant'.
Texas 21 cases or the virus where are the plans??
The presidency used to be a job that required unmatched decency, experience, knowledge and discipline. It's supposed to be our job as voters to choose a president, or any political leadership role for that matter, based on a strong predisposition for these ideals.
As voters, we're hiring an employee to do something almost no one can do. We're hiring a national steward to manage the most colossal and powerful government in human history. We're not hiring a bug-eyed TV pundit to loudly regurgitate all our rants, biases and vendettas. The presidency isn't luggage for stowing our feelings, our grievances or our social media brands. The presidency isn't about our identities, it's not about "owning" the other side and it's not about telling us what we want to hear. It's about rational, steady leadership, and there's none of that in the White House today as the world shuts down around us.
As voters and as employers, we need to stop acting like selfish children, making our selections all about us and our hang-ups, and instead begin to realize that it's a job that only 44 other people have been chosen to occupy. It's a job of significant gravity and solemnity.
The presidency isn't a show, elections aren't a game and the president should never be a game-show host.
The ascendency of Donald Trump, along with this three-year, seemingly endless plasma stream of abnormalcy, now metastasizing into full-on Trump fatigue, is a consequence of this glitch in our fellow Americans' perception of the modern presidency. This week and in the weeks to come, people will die because too many of us forgot what this job ought to signify and what qualities those who occupy it need to possess...
Be a Coco - be proud - Put Texas 1st! The United States of America 2nd. I pledged allegiance to the flag of the U.S.A. as a child and still hold to it. Amen.
Go kiss the flag like your idot trump and dodge the draft pendejo...
March 14, 2020 at 10:18 AM
LOL hahahahaha ha hahaha coco hahahahaha lol hahahahaha mamon lol ha
Next war head on to canada with the gringos your primos
@ March 15, 2020 at 1:10 PM
"idot trump" -- well done you dumb Meskin -- go take a siesta under a palm tree.
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