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THE
SPANISH IN
JEFFERSON
COUNTY, TEXAS:
FROM EXPLORERS
TO
FILIBUSTERERS,
1528-1821
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
February 5,
1984.
Sources:
Principally
from Morfi,
HISTORY OF
TEXAS TO 1779;
also Hackett
(ed.),
PICHARDO'S
TREATISE ON
THE LIMITS OF
TEXAS AND
LOUISIANA,
1806, four
volumes; also,
H. E. Bolton,
TEXAS IN THE
MIDDLE
EIGHTEENTH
CENTURY.
A
study of three
centuries of
ownership of
Texas and
Jefferson
County by the
Spanish king
between 1528
and 1821 can
result in some
startling
conclusions
regarding the
Spanish
colonial
attitudes
toward Texas
in general.
During the
fifteen years
prior to 1543,
three Spanish
expeditions
were traveling
in Texas,
although not
simultaneously:
Cabeza de
Vaca, Luis de
Moscoso
(successor to
the ill-fated
DeSoto), and
Francisco
Coronado. By
1545, the
remnants of
all three
expeditions
were back at
the viceroy's
headquarters
in Mexico
City, and,
with minor
modifications,
those
explorers'
conclusions
formulated
Spanish
colonial
policy toward
Texas for
three
centuries.
Generally,
each explorer
reported that
there was
minimal
prospect for
mining
precious
metals in
Texas, leaving
only one other
reason for
Spanish
colonialization,
the religious
conversion of
the Indians,
within the
boundaries of
Texas.
Between
1540-1542,
Coronado
explored in a
broad
northward arc
that carried
him across the
Pecos country
and the Llano
Estacado
("Staked
Plains" of the
Panhandle) of
West Texas and
westward into
New Mexico.
Moscoco, who
led the
survivors of
Fernando
DeSoto's
expedition,
traversed an
east-west arc
between
present-day,
Baton Rouge,
Opelousas and
Nacogdoches in
1543. He
probably came
no closer to
Jefferson
County than
some point
about 100
miles north of
Beaumont.
De
Vaca and his
four
companions
were the only
survivors of
the Panfilo de
Narvaez'
fleet, which
shipwrecked
south of
Galveston
island during
a hurricane in
1528. They
spent four
years
traveling in
East Texas, at
first as
Indian
prisoners,
probably of
the Karankawa
or Orcoquisa
tribes. After
his escape, De
Vaca lived
with a
"forest-dwelling
tribe and
became a
trader,
traveling far
inland and
along the
coast for
forty or fifty
leagues (about
150 miles) . .
."
Of
the three
explorers,
only the
latter is
believed to
have traveled
in present-day
Jefferson
County.
Although both
Moscoso and De
Vaca could
report on the
East Texas
Indians, it
was the latter
who carried
back to Mexico
the Indian
tales of the
golden Gran
Quivira, or
fabled "Seven
Cities of
Cibilo," which
triggered
Coronado's
explorations
which may have
reached from
Kansas to
Arizona.
When
all three
explorers
reported no
evidence of
gold or silver
mines in
Texas, the
Spanish
quickly lost
all interest
in that
region.
However, in
1685 a
Frenchman,
Robert Sieur
de LaSalle,
while in
search of the
mouth of the
Mississippi
River,
accidently
entered
Matagorda Bay,
where he built
Fort Saint
Louis. While
he and some of
his men were
en route back
to Canada
afoot, LaSalle
was murdered
by one of his
men at a site
still argued
by historians,
but believed
by others to
be somewhere
between
Navasota and
the Trinity
River.
When
another
Frenchman,
Louis
Juchereau de
Saint Denis,
founded
Natchitoches,
Louisiana, and
traveled from
there to Nuevo
Laredo,
Mexico, in
1714 in order
to trade,
Spanish
interest was
quickly
rekindled in
order to
counter any
claims of the
French. But
unknown to the
Spanish,
French
interest was
always limited
to control of
the fur trade
in East Texas.
Like Aesop's
"sour grapes"
fable, the
Spanish may
have had no
interest in a
fur trade of
their own, but
to allow the
French traders
to pursue that
trade
unmolested
would amount
to losing the
allegiance of
the Indian
tribes.
A
second
modification
of colonial
policy came in
the year 1680
when the
Pueblo tribes
mutinied and
expelled the
Spanish from
New Mexico
with
considerable
loss of life.
In 1718,
following St.
Denis'
journeys into
Texas, the
first
permanent
Spanish
settlement and
mission was
built at San
Antonio,
Texas, and as
that century
advanced, they
moved eastward
to build
presidios at
Goliad,
Nacogdoches,
and Bucarelli
on the
(Spanish Fort)
Trinity River.
In addition,
they built
other,
although often
temporary,
Indian
missions in
East Texas
during the
1750s,
including one
among the
Tejas tribe
and another,
San Augustin
de Ahumada,
among the
Orcoquisa
Indians on the
lower Trinity,
near
present-day
Wallisville.
Despite
the
settlements
and missions,
Spanish
efforts at
colonization
and
Christianization
of the Indians
were quite
feeble at
best, and the
number of
Spanish
soldiers in
Texas at any
given moment
probably never
exceeded 500
men.
Perhaps
more
impressive
than what the
Spanish did in
Texas during
the eighteenth
century is
what they did
not do. They
ignored the
coast country
completely,
although logic
would assert
that that
region should
have been the
easiest to
reach and
supply.
Probably their
fear of
Indians or
hurricanes, or
both, acounted
for that fact.
The
Spanish had
almost no
topographical
information
about Texas
before 1750,
except for
that trade
route from
Louisiana to
become known
as the Camino
Real, or
"King's
Highway." Most
of the
eighteenth
century maps
of the
Texas-Louisiana
coast are of
French origin.
Until 1785,
the Spanish
still had made
no attempt at
coastal
map-making,
and what maps
they had were
so inaccurate
that one of
extreme
Southeast
Texas, drawn
by Fr.
Augustin Morfi
in 1777,
showed the
Neches River
emptying into
Galveston Bay.
In 1785, Don
Jose de Evia
began the
mapping of the
Texas-Louisiana
coasts, which
was eventually
published in
1799 as Juan
de Langara's
"Map of the
Mexican Gulf."
During
the
American-Spanish
negotiations
of 1818, which
led to the
Adams-Onis
Treaty, John
Quincy Adams
had to rely on
French and
English maps
to locate the
Sabine River.
And as late as
1840, during
the life of
the
Texas-United
States
Boundary
Commission,
the U. S.
Secretary of
State John
Forsyth
insisted that
the Sabine
River of the
Spanish maps
was actually
the Neches
River.
It
is also
uncertain
exactly what
part the
hostile
Indians may
have played in
Spain's
general lack
of interest in
Texas, but
many tribes
were
continually
migrating
about in Texas
and elsewhere.
Until about
1650, the
fierce Apaches
occupied most
of West Texas.
At that time,
the even
fiercer
Comanches
began their
migration
southward from
the vicinity
of Wyoming,
displacing the
Apaches to the
west, and
creating
another buffer
to Spanish
colonization
in Texas.
About
1600, the
Attakapas
tribe of
Jefferson and
Chambers
Counties
entered Texas
after losing a
battle to
another tribe
in the
vicinity of
Lafayette,
Louisiana. As
they fled
westward along
the coast, it
appears that
they displaced
the
Karankawas,
who fled
farther
southward
toward Corpus
Christi.
However, in
1818 the
Karankawas
lost a pitched
battle with
Jean Lafitte's
pirates, which
accounted for
Indians'
abandonment of
Galveston
Island.
Despite
the extreme
hostility of
many Texas
tribes,
particularly
the Kiowas and
Comanches, but
also including
the Tonkawas
and Wacos,
Spanish
expeditions in
Texas after
1745 rarely
exceeded
thirty
soldiers, and
so small a
group would
have been easy
prey for any
sizeable war
party. Hence,
it is no
secret why the
Spanish built
their missions
among such
friendly
tribes as the
Orcoquisas of
the lower
Trinity or
among the Ai,
Tejas, or
Navidachos
(Nacogdoches)
Indians of the
Hasinai-Caddo
confederation.
After 1745, as
the first
incursions of
the English
and French fur
traders moved
westward into
Texas, the
first small
Spanish
expeditions
came eastward
and south to
the coast to
expel them.
In
July, 1745,
Captain
Joaquin de
Orobio and 21
soldiers left
Nacogdoches
and made the
first
appearance of
Spanish
soldiers among
the Orcoquisas
of the
Trinity. While
visiting
earlier among
the Navidachos
of the upper
Neches region,
Orobio noticed
large
quantities of
French
firearms and
trinkets. He
also learned
that fifteen
shipwrecked
Frenchmen, who
had crossed
the Neches en
route to
Louisiana,
"came
regularly to
the Trinity to
trade for
fur," whereas
other
Frenchmen
"came annually
by water,
entering the
mouths of the
Neches,
Trinity, and
Brazos
Rivers."
This
information
led the
Spanish to
establish
Presidio Pilar
de Bucarelli
(often called
Spanish Fort)
on the upper
Trinity and
mission San
Augustin at El
Orcoquisac,
the Indian
village near
the mouth of
the Trinity.
However,
neither of
these deterred
the French and
English
trading
incursions.
Beginning
with the
regime of
Spanish
governor Don
Jacinto de
Barrios in
1751,
officials
tolerated and
in fact
colluded with
French fur
traders on the
Trinity, and a
Frenchman,
Joseph
Blancpain,
opened a
permanent
trading post
at El
Orcoquisac.
When a
transfer and
promotion
threatened to
expose the
governor in
1754, Barrios
had Blancpain
arrested and
imprisoned in
Mexico City,
where he died.
Blancpain's
arrest and
imprisonment
brought a
strong protest
to the Spanish
from
Louisiana's
French
governor
Kerlerec, who
claimed that
the Trinity
River flowed
within the
French
territory of
Louisiana. In
retaliation,
the Spanish
built Mission
Los Adaes (at
present-day
Robeline,
La.), claiming
that the
Arroyo Hondo
(Calcasieu
River) was
Texas' true
eastern
boundary. The
dispute,
resulting in
the "Neutral
Ground
Agreement" and
creation of
the "Neutral
Strip" in
1806,
continued
until the
Adams-Onis
Treaty of
1818.
Despite
Blancpains's
arrest, French
fur traders
employed by
his
competitors,
three French
fur traders
who lived on
the Sabine
River and who
controlled the
Attakapas fur
trade, visited
the Trinity
River village
again within a
few months and
apparently
returned at
intervals
annually
thereafter.
In
1763,
Louisiana was
ceded to Spain
as a result of
a treaty
between France
and England.
Yet, despite a
Spanish
governor and
army in New
Orleans, no
trade between
the two
Spanish
provinces was
permitted for
the next
fifteen years.
In 1770
Augustin de
Grevenverge,
captain of the
Spanish
militia at
Poste des
Attakapas
(Lafayette),
La., was
arrested
between
Liberty and
Beaumont by
Capt. Antonio
Gil Ybarbo of
Bucarelli. The
former had
attempted to
transport
merchandise
over the 'Old
Spanish Trail'
to San Antonio
to trade for
horses and
mules. After
the trade ban
between
Spanish Texas
and Spanish
Louisiana was
lifted in
1778, a
Spaniard named
Francisco
Garcia drove a
herd of 2,000
Spanish cattle
from San
Antonio to New
Orleans, the
first herd of
record on the
"Opelousas
Trail" to
cross the
Neches River
at Beaumont in
1779.
By
1770, there
were rumors of
English trade
incursions
along the
upper Texas
coast as well.
In September,
1771, a report
that
Englishmen
"were cutting
wood for
houses and
giving
presents to
the Indians"
prompted Capt.
Louis Cazorla
of Presidio
LaBahia to
investigate,
as this entry
from Cazorla's
journal
verifies that:
"I
(Cazorla) went
with thirty
soldiers to
the said
'rancheria'
(the Indian
town of El
Orcoquisac)....I
found that the
traffic in
which they
were engaged
was carried on
by some
Frenchmen on
the Rio de
Neches (at the
Nacazil Indian
village at
present-day
Port Neches) .
. . named
Distrive, his
brother and
four Negroes,
but they would
not allow the
English to
come and
trade. They
told me that
they had got
the muskets
from the
British in
order to sell
them to the
Indians. One
Englishman who
came for this
purpose manged
to win the
good will of
the
Indians....The
French caught
him, and sent
word to
Natchitoches,
from whence
ten soldiers
came and took
him away...."
In
1774, an
English
fur-trading
ship sailed up
the Neches
River to the
Attakapas
Indian village
at Port
Neches. The
English
remained for
about four
months, long
enough to
plant and
harvest a crop
of corn. When
the report of
another
English ship
in the "Rio de
Neches"
reached
Bucarelli in
June, 1777,
Ybarbo set out
with thirty
soldiers to
investigate,
the first
known instance
of a Spanish
expedition
reaching
Jefferson
County. He was
accompanied by
a priest, Rev.
Fr. Augustin
Morfi, whose
journal and
diary, kept
over a period
of many years
was eventually
to become the
first
chronicles of
Texas,
published as
the two-volume
"History of
Texas Until
1779."
Morfi
wrote much
about the
stone-age
culture of the
Attakapas
village at
Port Neches,
although he
said nothing
about their
alleged
cannibalistic
practices. He
and the
soldiers then
followed the
shores of Lake
Sabine until
they found an
abandoned,
shipwrecked
Jamaican sloop
at Louisiana
Point in the
Sabine Pass.
Indians
already had
plundered the
ship of sails,
rigging, and
merchandise,
but a load of
brick ballast
in the ship's
hold misled
the Spanish
into believing
that the
English had
come to Texas,
bent on
colonizing.
That
same week,
about the
middle of
July, 1777,
Ybarbo's men
almost
collided with
the English
surveying
sloop
"Florida,"
which was then
mapping the
shores of
Sabine Lake
and its river
tributaries as
well as all
the coastal
waters of
Texas and
Louisiana. At
that very
moment, both
Spain, France
and the
American
colonies were
at war with
England.
Captain George
Gould of the
"Florida" made
several
statements on
his map (No.
D-965, dated
July 22, 1777,
Admiralty
Archives) that
coincided hand
in glove with
notations in
Morfi's diary.
Morfi also
drew a map of
the Southeast
Texas area,
noteworthy
only for its
volume of
errors. In
contrast,
Gould's map of
Sabine Lake is
so accurate
that it would
compare
favorably with
aerial
topography.
The
second and
last record of
a Spanish
expedition to
Jefferson
County came in
1785 when Don
Jose de Evia
and about
twenty men
sailed two
surveying
sloops while
mapping the
shores of
Louisiana and
Texas. Evia
began at New
Orleans and
worked
westward, and
although his
mapping of the
shores of
Sabine Pass,
Sabine Lake,
and its
tributaries
was much more
accurate, he
made no
mention of
Indians
anywhere on
the Neches or
Sabine River.
Since Evia
noted the
presence of
Indians on the
nearby
Calcasieu and
Mermentau
Rivers, the
writer is thus
led to believe
that the
Nacazil
Indians of the
lower Neches
either had
moved away or
had become
extinct
through
catastrophic
action during
the preceding
eight years.
Evia's mapping
was eventually
published in
1799.
Although
Spain
abandoned many
parts of East
Texas in 1773,
it quickly
renewed its
interest in
1803, after
the Louisiana
Purchase. By
that date, it
was no longer
the French or
English that
the Spanish
feared, but
the youthful
and energetic,
new American
republic, whom
the Spanish
believed was
bent on
colonization
and expansion.
The most
noticeable,
new enemies of
Spain were the
filibusterers,
such as Philip
Nolan, Don
Luis de Aury,
James Long,
Augustus
Magee, and
Bernard
Gutierrez, who
used the new
American
territory of
Louisiana as a
base of
operations
(although
without the
sanction of
the United
States).
Spanish
General Simon
Herrerra of
Nacogdoches
and his
Louisiana
counterpart,
American
General James
Wilkinson,
continued to
dispute which
river was the
actual
boundary, but
in 1806, they
concluded the
"Neutral
Ground
Agreement,"
leaving the
wilderness
between the
Sabine and
Calcasieu
Rivers
unoccupied by
the law
enforcement or
military
troops of
either nation.
As a result,
the "Neutral
Strip" became
a sancutary
for all the
robbers and
killers, all
the social
outcasts and
human garbage
fleeing from
the law
enforcement of
both nations,
and beginning
in 1817, the
old buccaneer
Jean Lafitte
succeeded in
enlisting most
of his
Galveston-based
pirates from
that region.
As
another result
of the
dispute, the
Spanish
established a
"border
reserve" of
land between
the Sabine and
Trinity
Rivers, an
area in which
colonization
by anyone
except Indians
considered to
be hostile
toward the
United States
was forbidden.
The hostile
Comanches of
West Texas,
who of course
followed the
buffalo herds
for a food
supply, had no
interest in
East Texas. A
few Indian
tribes came
into East
Texas from the
United States
after 1800,
but generally
these were the
friendly
Alabamas,
Coushattas,
and Biloxis,
plus a few
Cherokees and
Choctaws.
After title to
Texas passed
to Mexico, the
"border
reserve" was
continued
until 1829,
when that
region was
issued as a
land grant for
colonization
to Mexican
empresario
Lorenzo de
Zavala.
In
1818, the
Adams-Onis
Treaty
established
the Sabine
River as
Texas' new
eastern
boundary, and
in 1821, the
year of the
treaty's
ratification
in the U. S.
Senate, and of
Mexico's
new-found
freedom from
colonial rule,
Spain was
evicted from
Texas and
replaced by
the new
revolutionary
republic south
of the Rio
Grande River.
But
before Spain
was evicted
from Texas,
the fortunes
and
misfortunes of
the American
filibusterers,
named earlier,
are another
exciting
chapter of the
Texas
frontier. The
first of them,
Philip Nolan,
was really no
threat to
Spain since he
was only out
to capture
wild horses
and return
them to the
United States.
However, he
was captured
and executed
by the
Spanish. Magee
and Gutierrez
were perhaps
more fortunate
at first,
capturing San
Antonio and
defeating the
Spanish
Royalists in
battle.
However, the
leaders
quarreled over
Gutierrez'
cruel
execution of
the Spanish
officers, and
eventually,
the survivors
retreated to
Louisiana.
James Long and
his associates
were the only
filibusterers
who crossed
Jefferson
County to and
from Louisiana
and their base
on Bolivar
Peninsula.
Eventually,
Long reached
Mexico City,
where he was
murdered
shortly after
Mexico was
freed.
Except
for numerous
river and
place names
and a few
adopted words,
such as 'vara'
(the Spanish
unit of
measure equal
to a yard) or
'vaquero'
(meaning
cowboy), the
Mexican and
Spanish
influence was
quickly
replaced by
the
Anglo-American
ways of life,
vocabulary,
and legal
system.
Although that
part of Texas
from San
Antonio
westward and
southward was
always
heavily-populated
by
Mexican-Americans,
the
seventy-five
years prior to
1900 saw
almost no
Mexicans in
East Texas.
Even the
Mexican
population of
Nacogdoches
abandoned that
place after
the Texas
Revolution.
Since 1900,
however, a new
migration of
Mexicans, as
well as
French-Acadians
from
Louisiana,
into Southeast
Texas has
brought about
a revival of
the Spanish
and French
dances,
language,
folklore,
music, and
cooking
techniques,
the
preservation
of which
promises to
become their
permanent
legacy to the
melting pot of
cultures in
the "Golden
Triangle"
comprised of
Jefferson and
Orange
Counties.
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