Wednesday, January 15, 2025

YTURRIA'S BOOK ABOUT HIS ANCESTOR GAVE INSIGHTS INTO HIS LIFE

(Frank Yturria died at a Houston hospital on Nov. 26, 2018  at the age of 95. Yturria was a lawyer, but dedicated most of his life to his ranch and conservation projects, including huge easements to protect ocelots and other endangered species. He also had a flair for acting in westerns as a young man. His book about his ancestor "The Patriarch" gives an insight into his background. We reprint this review we published at the time.)


"The Patriarch"
By Frank D. Yturria
Pub. UTB-TSC
2006
319 pages

By Juan Montoya
Having known the author personally, I had hesitated to write a review of Frank's book.

It is a well-known fact that I consider Charles Stillman, Mifflin Kenedy and Richard King – all of the contemporaries and associates of his ancestor Francisco Yturria – as Robber Barons who ultimately dispossessed the rightful owners of their property in South Texas with the help of the Texas Rangers and have been portrayed as the saviors of civilization in paid narratives passing off as history.

Nonetheless, as I read Frank's book carefully, I came to the realization that writing about your ancestors forces your hand and gives you an insight of people's lives that you would otherwise see in a different light.

The first thing that strikes you as a contradiction in Yturria's book about his adoptive great-grandfather is that he wasn't his great-grandfather at all. And the next thing is that the book's title, "The Patriarch," is a misnomer of the first degree.

His ancestors Francisco and Felicitas Yturria could not bear children for four years after they married and despite traveling to New Orleans to get expert medical advice, were told to forget about having offspring. 

The current batch of "Yturrias" are the descendants of an ill-conceived offspring between an Irish soldier who came with the invading U.S. Army and a poor Mexican woman from old Guerrero, upriver from Brownsville.

Yturria himself relates this in his tale. After the couple found out they could have no children, a friend advised them to look for a likely child to adopt.

In 1858, Dan Sullivan, a San Antonio businessman, offered to help them adopt one. He was talking about a child born to a Dolores Serna from her relationship with Sullivan's business agent, an Irishman who came with Zachary Taylor's army, one Daniel Louis McGraw.

So in reality, Frank and his brother Fausto and the descendants of his grandfather Daniel are really McGraws.

"It took some persuading, but the arrangements finally were complete," Yturria writes of the couple's first adoption.

According to his account, the friend told Francisco that "You and your wife have so much to offer a child, much more than a poor family can...They might consider letting you adopt the child since you could give him all the things she never will be able to."
Francisco and Felicitas arranged for McGraw to deliver the boy – and named him Santiago – after Francisco's younger brother. The boy died from a fever a year later.

The boy's father had "moved on," and the couple contacted S. G. Cole, a friend in Edinburg, and "arranged" to adopt Dolores Serna's second child. She was "understandably hesitant" to part with her second child.
Negotiations continued until November 1860, when Yturria accompanied by a priest fetched the 18-month-old child. The boy's name was Daniel and he traveled with his mother to Brownsville because she was still breast feeding him. She remained with the boy for a short time and weaned him before returning to Guerrero.

He spent the closing months of the Civil War in 1865 with his mother before returning to Brownsville. After helping her financially "for at least a number of years," they ruptured all contact with the biological mother.
"As far as I know, my grandfather (Daniel) never reestablished contact with his birth mother, nor sought to discover her ultimate fate or that of his father," Yturria writes. "Neither did my father, nor have I, as yet."

Yturria outlines the methods used by his ancestor along with King, Kenedy and Stillman to acquire huge amounts of land. Even though he assures us that everything was on the up and up as they swallowed huge estates from the heirs of the original grant holders, most historians are not as charitable. They cite instances where "questionable" methods were used to cheat the heirs of their valuable lands.

However, Yturria insisted that his ancestor went the extra mile to convince the heirs of land-grant families like the Cavazos family to sell him and his partners thousands of acres for a song.

In the history books, Yturria is known as a "Civil War profiteer and banker," son of Capt. Manuel Maria and Paula Navarro (Ortuzu) Yturria, was born in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, on October 4, 1830. He was married to Felicitas Treviño, daughter of Ygnacio Treviño, an original Spanish land grantee in Cameron County, Texas. True to form, both Kenedy and King also married to daughters of families who inherited land grants and used that relationship to buy off the rest of the family members.

The original Yturria began his career in business by working as a clerk for Stillman, the founder of Brownsville, Texas, and by purchasing lands adjoining those of his wife's inheritance.

As a top aide to Stillman, Yturria was involved in the formation of Mifflin Kenedy and Company, the Rio Grande river boating monopoly that Stillman financed and that Kenedy and King operated. Yturria became the leading cotton broker of Matamoros during this time.

He not only established and operated the Francisco Yturria Bank of Brownsville under a private charter, he also owned and established a mercantile house in Matamoros.
For his business friends in Brownsville during the Civil War, Yturria became the registered owner of record of boats belonging to King, Kenedy, and Stillman, allowing their boats loaded with cotton and bound for European ports to sail past vessels of the Union blockade flying the Mexican flag.

In 1864 Emperor Maximilian of Mexico knighted Yturria and appointed him customs collector on the Rio Grande, a position he held until 1867.

When the Civil War ended, Stillman, King, and Kenedy fled to Matamoros and to Yturria's protection; in 1867 they returned to Brownsville, and Yturria fled to Europe to live in France. He returned to Brownsville two years later to again take over his many business enterprises and continue his service to his old friends Stillman, Kenedy, King, and others.

At the time of his death Yturria owned 130,000 acres in Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy, Kenedy, and Starr counties.

The vast Punta del Monte Rancho was the headquarters of an 85,000-acre tract of land in Willacy and Kenedy counties, which produced 2,000 steers per year. Yturria would travel by boat to New Orleans and by train to Kansas, where he sold his cattle; he returned to Texas by way of New York, where he made his deposits in the Hanover National Bank.

He was one of the wealthiest and most influential men of his time in southwest Texas. Yturria died on June 12, 1912, in Brownsville. And his adoptive descendant Frank Yturria died at 95 on November 26, 2018. 

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

Again, a lot of information but who really cares?

Anonymous said...

Correction first sentence: Having known......

Anonymous said...

Who cares??? All history is gossip.

Anonymous said...

CONSERVATIVE PROJECTS??? LIKE STEALING FROM THE POOR? PINCHE COCO MAMON!!!

Anonymous said...

GO TEACH AT BISD MAMON or you don't have the credential burro

Anonymous said...

PINCHE MOJADO MAMON you can barely espiquilee ingglis IDIOTA

Anonymous said...

this is a non-formal blog PENDEJO

Anonymous said...

Who cares??? All history is gossip.
January 15, 2025 at 6:49 AM

The brainless, hamster🐹, voicing his perspective view of HISTORY and GOSSIP.....

HISTORY; helps us understand how societies, cultures, and institutions have evolved over time. By examining historical events, we can learn valuable lessons, avoid past mistakes, and make informed decisions that positively impact our personal and professional development. History also fosters critical thinking, cultural awareness, and the ability to anticipate future trends based on historical patterns. It provides a clear picture of how various aspects of society, such as technology and governmental systems, ETC...

GOSSIP;
[ˈɡäsəp]
noun
casual or unconstrained conversation or reports about other people, typically involving details that are not confirmed as being true:

So, HAMSTER, keep spinning your life in your cage!!!

Anonymous said...

That book "The Patriarch", is $125.00 on Amazon....what are they still trying to hit on us poor Tejanos?

Anonymous said...

again como chingas culo what you typed you copied your brain is not that advanced, not yet anyguey..ESTUPIDO call your mama I miss her chupones culo!

Anonymous said...

copy cat one that can not come up with original thoughts como tu mama y tu par de jotitas...

Anonymous said...

And you keep sucking up to my dick.

Anonymous said...

Hey Hamster....what are trying to say? All you talk is shit, you make no sence or or it because your are made out of shit?

Anonymous said...

To the Brainless Hamster, aka El Rrun Rrun's #1 Estúpido Hamster:
Keep spinning in your tiny cage! Your endless running brings endless laughs, perfectly matching your tiny feet with your tiny brain. 🐹 Keep those brainless responses coming—pure comedy gold!

Anonymous said...

IDEA will hire you Juan !
They work longer hours
Pay less per hour
And have no credential requirements
Plus all the students are from Matamoros

Anonymous said...

7:53

Why just BISD? There is also Harmony, IDEA, and a whole bunch of other educational institutions. St. Mary's or St Joseph ya sacate la caveza del culo

Anonymous said...

Ke Buenas hijas tenia Frank Yturria

Anonymous said...

January 15, 2025 at 4:41 PM
you find those books on any alley with the exception of el gran southmost. books are not allowed in that barrio.

Anonymous said...

Hamsters are rodents (RATAS)belonging to the subfamily Cricetinae. No seas pendejo la RATA eres tu y tu estupida famila GO BACK TO MESCO PINCHES RATAS MOJADAS!

Anonymous said...

Es lo que tienes metido en tu fufi bisd guey

Anonymous said...

don't even know, he gets paid because of readers to this blog like yourself bola de idiotas the more pendejos like yourself read this blog the more he gets paid PENDEJO!!!

Anonymous said...

January 16, 2025 at 9:37 AM "Brainless Hamster, aka El Rrun Rrun's #1 Estúpido Hamster"

Ok Brainless Hamster, aka El Rrun Rrun's #1 Estúpido Hamster: So you know your ancestry, good for you Brainless Hamster🐹 Just in case you don't know what "ancestry" means, Estupido Hamster, here is the definition;
an·ces·try
[ˈanˌsestrē]
noun
one's family or ethnic descent: In your case Hamsters "RATAS" which are
the evolutionary or genetic line of descent of an animal ...please keep making us laugh with your brainless replies/comments. You make this blog pure comedy gold! Thank you and up your CULO, again!!!

rita