U. S.,
Republic of
Texas once
nearly clashed
because of
fees
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
Saturday July
24, 1999.
NEDERLAND --
Most readers
are probably
unaware that
the Republic
of Texas
almost got
into a
"shooting war"
with the
United States
in Sabine Lake
in 1844.
The cause
went back to
the Adams-Onis
Treaty of 1818
with Spain,
wherein the
boundary was
established at
Sabine River,
and
jurisdiction
of Sabine
River waters
was granted to
the United
States to
landfall on
the west bank.
That
jurisdiction
continued
after Mexico
secured its
independence
from Spain.
A problem
quickly arose,
however,
because the
Republic of
Texas
contended that
the water
jurisdiction
ended at the
Sabine River
delta, whereas
the United
States claimed
jurisdiction
all the way to
the Gulf of
Mexico.
Hardly had
the guns of
San Jacinto
been silenced
before five
New Orleans
cotton
schooners
began
anchoring at
the mouths of
Neches and
Sabine rivers,
to load Texas
cotton, which
had been
freighted down
the rivers.
Many tales
survive of
efforts to
avoid paying
Texas Republic
customs and
tonnage fees,
the best known
being the
rolling of
barrels of
merchandise
across Bolivar
Peninsula at
Rollover. In
1843 American
ships anchored
close to shore
and sold
duty-free
merchandise to
the residents
of Sabine
Pass.
In 1838 the
United States
opened its
customhouse at
Garrison Ridge
on Sabine
Lake, only a
few miles from
the Republic
of Texas
customhouse.
The U. S.
revenue cutter
Woodbury began
patrolling
Sabine Lake,
purportedly in
search of
African slave
ships, but
often it
escorted the
cotton
schooners.
The Texas
revenue cutter
Santa Anna
also patrolled
in Sabine
Lake, and in
1844 the
cutter
delivered two
12-pound
cannons to the
Texas
collector.
Although Texas
Collector W.
C. Dashiell
could not
collect
customs fees
from the
schooners, he
was instructed
to collect
tonnage fees
from them.
On April 17,
1844, when the
cotton
schooners
Louisiana and
William Bryan
sailed south
past the
customhouse,
Dashiell fired
a warning shot
across the bow
of each
vessel. When
neither
schooner
responded,
Dashiell fired
six
cannonballs as
he endeavored
to sink them.
Each captain
cast anchor
and came
ashore, where
they executed
bonds for
tonnage fees
under protest,
as well as
protests to
Stewart
Newell, the U.
S. consul at
Sabine Pass.
The incident
triggered a
number of
nasty
diplomatic
notes, which
were still in
progress when
Texas entered
the Union.
Collector
Cucullu of New
Orleans
ordered the
Woodbury "to
extend all
protection to
American
coasting
vessels in
Sabine
River..."
On Feb. 17,
1845 the Santa
Anna ordered 2
schooners
loading cotton
to stop at
Sabine Pass
and pay
tonnage fees.
The Texas
cutter then
anchored at
the customs
house, loaded
its cannons,
when soon
afterward the
schooners,
escorted by
the Woodbury,
began sailing
through the
Pass.
Dashiell
judiciously
chose not to
fire at them.
A bill for a
Joint
Resolution for
Texas
Statehood had
just been
filed, and
Pres. Houston
did not wish
to anger any
further the
Abolitionist
congressmen,
whom he knew
would oppose
the bill.
Within a
year, the
border dispute
was settled
with Texas’
entry into the
Union. And
Collector
Dashiell, who
had fired the
cannons, also
became United
States
Collector of
Customs at
Sabine Pass in
1846.
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