Chapter
III: A History
of Jefferson
County, Texas
Spanish and
French
Activities
by
W. T. Block
During
much of the
eighteenth
century, Spain
and France
contested the
ownership of
Jefferson
County
equally.1
Spanish claims
to East Texas
rested firmly
upon the
wanderings of
Alvar Nunez
Cabeza de Vaca
and other
survivors of
the Panfilo de
Narvaez
expedition,
who were cast
ashore on, or
near,
Galveston
Island in
November,
1528.2
He possibly’
was the first
European to
visit in
Jefferson
County for one
account, which
follows,
states that
Cabeza de Vaca
travelled
extensively
during his
four years in
East Texas:
In February,
the Indians
having Nunez
left the
island and
went to the
bays of the
mainland,
where they fed
on oysters
until the end
of April, the
Indians
erecting their
lodges on beds
of
oyster-shells.
Then they
moved to
another
locality near
the coast and
fed on
blackberries
for an
additional
month. Nunez
thus was
separated from
the other
Spaniards. He
remained with
these Indians
for more than
a year, then
escaped to a
forest-dwelling
tribe and
became a
trader,
traveling far
inland and
along the
coast for
forty or fifty
leagues.3
Spain’s
claim was
strengthened
by the journey
into East
Texas of the
survivors of
Hernando de
Soto’s
expedition,
who, in 1543
under Luis de
Moscoso,
traveled in a
southward arc
between
present-day
baton Rouge,
Opelousas, and
Nacogdoches.4
French
claims to East
Texas stemmed
from the
ill-fated
voyage of
Robert, Sieur
de La Salle,
whose colony
landed,
probably in
error, at
Matagorda Bay
in Texas in
1685, where
they built
Fort Saint
Louis. La
Salle was
assassinated
by his men as
they
approached the
Trinity River
in Texas en
route to
Canada.5
Subsequent
claims arose
from the
journeys of
Louis
Juchereau de
Saint Denis,
who founded
the French
colony at
Natchitoches,
Louisianain
1713.6
Throughout
the eighteenth
century, Spain
expressed
only sporadic
interest in
East Texas,
and virtually
none in the
Jefferson
County region.
However, until
the cession of
Louisiana to
Spain in 1763,
Spain was ever
mindful of the
French and
English
attempts to
trade or
colonize in
East Texas,
and sought to
suppress such
activities.
While trade
with the
Attakapas
tribe of
Jefferson
County offered
no profit
incentive to
the Spanish,
as Father
Morfi’s
evaluation
implies, the
suppression of
the French
trade in that
area was
necessary to
avoid a
transfer of
tribal
allegiance to
the French.7
By
1730, the
French fur
traders had
crossed the
lower Sabine
River, and
were engaged
in trade with
the Orcoquisa
tribe on the
Trinity River.8
However, this
early trade
with the
Attakapas
tribe was not
highly
esteemed, for
when an Indian
trade
delegation
arrived in New
Orleans in
1733, Governor
Jean Baptiste
de Bienville
wrote as
follows:
There is
furthermore,
no ground to
expect that a
fur trade
could be
carried on
with these
[Attakapas]
Indians. They
are so lazy
that they
hardly have
anything with
which to cover
themselves. It
is true that
they have some
horses, but
the difficulty
of bringing
them would
cancel the
profit that
might be
derived from
this trade.9
In
July 1745,
Captain
Joaquin de
Orobio led a
party of
twenty-one
soldiers from
Nacogdoches to
the mouth of
the Trinity
River, giving
the tribesmen
of the
Orcoquisa
village their
first view of
Spanish
troops. Before
leaving the
Navidachos
village on the
Neches River,
Orobio
observed a
great quantity
of French
firearms and
trinkets, and
learned that
fifteen
shipwrecked
Frenchmen had
passed through
there en route
to
Natchitoches,
Louisiana.10
Orobio was
told that
French traders
who came
overland, had
visited El
Orcoquisac
regularly for
six years,
promising in
addition to
settle
permanently
among them,
and that other
Frenchmen
“came annually
by water,
entering the
Neches,
Trinity, and
Brazos
Rivers.” This
information
prompted the
Spanish to
settle
permanently
along the
lower Trinity
River.11
In
1756, the
Spanish built
the presidio
of San
Augustin de
Ahumada at El
Orcoquisac,
near -
present-day
Wallisville,
Texas, about
fifteen miles
west of
Jefferson
County. In
1774, they
added the
presidio of
Pilar de
Bucarelli on
the Trinity
River near the
Deadose Indian
village.
Bucarelli soon
became the
headquarters
of the Spanish
officer
Captain
Antonio Gil
Ybarbo.12
Under
the regime of
Spanish
governor Don
Jacinto de
Barrios, which
began in 1751,
French traders
were tolerated
for a time,
and a trader
named Joseph
Blancpain
settled
permanently at
El Orcoquisac.
When an
expected
transfer and
promotion
threatened to
implicate the
governor in
1754, Barrios
had Blancpain
arrested and
sent to Mexico
City, where
the latter was
imprisoned and
later died.
Blancpain
stated that he
had traded
among the
Attakapan
tribes for
twenty-five
years without
previous
molestation by
the Spanish.
His
imprisonment
and death
brought a
protest from
Governor
Kerlerec of
Louisiana, who
claimed that
the Trinity
River flowed
within French
territory.13
Despite
warnings of
severe
treatment by
Spanish
authorities,
French
fur-trading
continued, and
within months
after
Blancpain’s
arrest, a
Spanish
soldier
reported that
French fur
traders were
active again
on the Trinity
River.14
These traders
were probably
employed by
Blancpain’s
competitors,
M. de Masse
and his
partner, an
errant priest
named Abbe
Disdier, and a
neighbor named
Cortebleau,
who operated
“rancherias”
at a point
east of the
Sabine River,
but on land
claimed by
Spain.15
In
July 1755, M.
de Masse’s
petition to
re-settle in
Texas,
accompanied by
the governor’s
letter, which
described de
Masse as being
the “absolute
master of the
Attacapa and
northern
tribes, owner
of twenty
Negroes, seven
hundred head
of cattle, and
one hundred
horses,” was
forwarded to
the Spanish
viceroy.16
Masse’s
petition was
refused, but
he continued
to control the
fur trade with
the Attakapas
Indians along
the Coast for
years
afterward.17
The
cession of
Louisiana to
Spain in 1763
did not
appreciably
diminish the
border
tensions for
inter-provincial
trade between
Texas and
Spanish
Louisiana
remained
forbidden.18
Violators
occasionally
pleaded
ignorance of
the law, as
did Augustin
de
Grevenverge,
captain of the
Spanish
militia at
Attakapas,
Louisiana,
when he was
intercepted in
Southeast
Texas by
Captain Gil
Ybarbo.
Grevenverge
attempted to
haul a “large
quantity of
merchandise”
to San Antonio
to trade for
horses and
mules.19
In
the meantime,
rumors of
English
incursions
along the
upper Texas
coast began to
circulate
after 1770. In
September
1772, a report
that
Englishmen
were “cutting
wood for
houses and
giving
presents to
the Indians”
on the Trinity
River prompted
Captain Luis
Cazorla of
Bahia presidio
to
investigate.20
Upon reaching
the Orcoquisa
“rancheria” on
the Lower
Trinity River,
Cazorla made
the following
entry in his
diary:
I went with
thirty
soldiers in
search of the
said
rancherias… It
was full of
heathen
Indians—Orcoquisas,
Atacapas,
Vidais, and
Cocos. I found
among all of
them
indications of
the existence
of this trade,
for both men
and women went
about wrapped
in chintz,
wearing fine
camisas de
vueltas [outer
shirts?] and
ribbons.
Having
endeavored to
ingratiate
myself with
all of them,
in order to
accomplish the
purpose of my
mission, I
found that the
traffic in
which they
were all
engaged was
carried on
with some
Frenchmen who
were on the
other side of
the Rio de
Nechas…one and
one-half day’s
journey from
where I then
was. They
informed [me]
that they had
left the said
rancheria
about four
days before,
two Negroes
having gone
there with
loaded mules.
The trade is
now carried on
by a
Frenchman,
named
Distrive, who
was in the
place
mentioned,
with his
brother and
four Negroes.
They told me
that they [the
Frenchman] got
the muskets
from the
British in
order to sell
them to the
Indians, but
that they
would not
allow the
English to
come to trade.
One Englishman
who came for
this purpose
managed to win
the goodwill
of the
Indians… The
French caught
him, and sent
word to
Natchitoches,
whence ten
soldiers came
and took him
away...21
It
was a report
of an English
ship in the
Neches River
that caused
Captain Gil
Ybarbo to lead
Spanish troops
from Bucarelli
to Jefferson
County for the
first time in
July 1777. The
English voyage
had begun
about December
1776 when
Captain Joseph
David and nine
crewmen left
Jamaica en
route to New
Orleans and
Pensacola.
Having only a
small quantity
of trade goods
aboard, the
Jamaican sloop
was carrying
bricks for
ballast, which
caused the
Spanish to
regard it as a
colonizing
voyage. Like
La Salle a
century
earlier,
Captain David
miscalculated
and grounded
his vessel on
a mudflat in
the “Rio de
Nechas,”
actually
Louisiana
Point in the
Sabine Pass.22
The journal of
Captain George
Gauld, master
of the British
surveying
sloop Florida,
gives a
graphic
portrayal of
the Jamaicans’
plight:
The wreck at
the entrance
of Chicouansh
[Sabine Pass]
was a sloop
from Jamaica
bound to the
Mississippi.
Having fallen
in to the
westward, they
bewildered
themselves on
this
inhospitable
coast, and
after they
were cast
away, the
savages
plundered them
and the vessel
of everything
they could
carry off,
even the sails
and rigging.
Only three
people
remained out
of nine, the
master and all
the rest
having died on
the coast.
These three
men in a small
boat wandered
along the mast
for some
months in
quest of the
Mississippi,
but after a
fruitless
search, they
had returned
to the wreck
for some
provisions,
and were just
going away
again, when
providentially
the surveying
sloop Florida
appeared
and relieved
them from
their distress
July 22, 1777,
after they had
been eight
months from
Jamaica.23
When
Gil Ybarbo
arrived in
Jefferson
County, the
Attakapan
tribesmen told
him that three
Englishmen
were still
guarding the
wreck, and
that another
English ship
had entered
the Neches
River during
1774, the crew
camping out on
the east side
of the river
while they
planted and
harvested a
crop. Ybarbo
then circled
the western
shore of
Sabine Lake
until he found
the wrecked
vessel, but
the three
sailors had
disappeared.24
Ybarbo
left for the
Trinity River
to search for
another
English
vessel, but
found only a
“lost and
almost naked”
Englishman
named Miller,
who had
wandered
aimlessly
along the
coast for
seven months.
Miller
recounted that
he had left
Jamaica with
Captain David,
and that the
captain had
“cast him
adrift in a
canoe” in
order to rob
Miller of five
slaves that he
owned aboard
the Jamaican
sloop. Ybarbo
took Miller to
Bucarelli, but
the account
does not state
what
subsequently
happened to
him 25
The
Spanish
returned to
Jefferson
County in May
1785, when Don
Jose de Evia
mapped and
sounded the
Louisiana and
Texas coasts.
Evia left the
Mississippi
River in two
schooners, but
later switched
to smaller
boats powered
by both oar
and sail. At
the mouth of
the Sabine
Pass, Evia
discovered a
wrecked
English
brigantine.26
He and his men
camped out on
the Front
Ridge at
Sabine Pass,
and later
crossed Sabine
Lake to the
mouths of the
Sabine and
Neches Rivers.
In 1799, the
results of
Evia’s work
was published
as Juan de
Langara’s “Map
of The Mexican
Gulf.”27
In
1 800, France
recovered the
Louisiana
cession from
Spain. At the
time, the
French
government
considered the
Rio Grande to
be the western
boundary of
Louisiana.28
Three years
later, France
sold Louisiana
to the United
States, and
American
commissioners
arrived in New
Orleans in
December 1803
to assume
control of the
government. 29
The
French sale of
Louisiana to
the United
States caused
the Spanish
great concern.
In 1805,
Spanish forces
in East Texas
were
reinforced and
placed under
the command of
General Simon
Herrera. A
small
detachment
reoccupied
Atascosita
near El
Orcoquisac.
Another force
crossed the
Sabine River
and occupied
the old
presidio of
Los Adaes near
Natchitoches,
Louisiana.30
Danger of
conflict ended
in 1806, when
Herrera and
General James
Wilkinson,
commander of
United States
troops in
Louisiana,
concluded the
Neutral Ground
Agreement,
leaving the
area between
the Sabine
River and the
Arroyo Hondo
unoccupied by
the troops of
either nation.31
This agreement
remained in
effect until
the Adams-Onis
Treaty of 1819
established
the point of
landfall on
the west bank
of the Sabine
River, Sabine
Lake, and the
Sabine Pass as
Texas’ eastern
boundary.32
Spanish
ownership of
Jefferson
County ended
in 1821 when,
by the Treaty
of Cordova,
Texas became a
part of the
revolutionary
republic of
Mexico.33
The Spanish
influence
continued in
Texas until
the period of
the Texas
Revolution.
Except for
some place
names and
units of
measure, the
heritage of
the
Franco-Spanish
colonial era
was barely
discernible in
nineteenth
century
Jefferson
County, for
the
Anglo-American
pioneers
quickly
substituted
the laws,
customs, and
standards of
the United
States.
A
renewal of the
heritage came
in the
twentieth
century when
significant
numbers of
Mexican and
Acadian French
minorities
migrated to
Jefferson
County. Their
arrival
accounts for
the
preservation
of both
languages and
some of the
folkways,
music,
customs, and
dances, which
stem from the
French and
Spanish
colonial
periods of
American
history.
VALENTINE
WIESS—As
an 18-year-
old Jasper
County youth,
V. Wiess
enlisted in
Co. A,
Spaight’s Bn.
(in which unit
three of his
brothers also
served) and
fought at the
Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass. He was a
leading
Beaumont
financier
after 1872.
ABEL
COFFIN, JR.—An
early Sabine
hardware
dealer, ship
carpenter, and
steam boatman,
Coffin
participated
in the
offshore
battle that
resulted in
the capture of
the
blockaders.
Endnotes
1
Because of the
vague
information on
Melish’s map
used by the
negotiators,
even the
Adams-Onis
Treaty of 1819
did not
identify
precisely the
true eastern
boundary of
Texas to the
satisfaction
of the United
States. As
late as 1838,
Secretary of
State John
Forsyth
insisted that
the Neches was
actually the
Sabine River.
If this
interpretation
had prevailed
at the
Texas-United
States
boundary
negotiations
of 1839-1840
and been
accepted by
the Republic
of Texas,
Jefferson
County would
have been
split in half.
See George P.
Garrison
(ed.),
Diplomatic
Correspondence
of The
Republic of
Texas, in
American
Historical
Association
Annual Report,
1907, (3
volumes;
Washington, D.
C.: Government
Printing
Office,
1908-1911),
II, Part 1,
pp. 138, 284.
2
Charles W.
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise on
The Limits of
Texas and
Louisiana (4
volumes;
Austin:
University of
Texas Press,
1931), I, pp.
35, 80-81,
415n, 424n,
and II, pp.
294-295,
388-389;
Gerald
Ashford,
Spanish Texas
Yesterday and
Today (Austin:
Jenkins Book
Publishing
Company,
1971), pp.
13-15, 20-24.
3
Cleve
Hallenbeck, Alvar
Nunez Cabeza
de Vaca: The
Journey and
Route of The
First European
To Cross The
Continent of
North America,
1534-1536 (reprint;
Port
Washington,
New York:
Kennikat
Press, 1971),
p. 127.
4
F. W. Hodge
and T. H.
Lewis (eds.),
Spanish
Explorers in
The United
States,
1528-1543 (reprint;
New York:
Barnes and
Noble,
Incorporated,
1953), pp.
238-241; B. F.
French
(compiler), Historical
Collections of
Louisiana
(Philadelphia:
Daniels and
Smith, 1850),
pp. 108,
195-196, and
fold-out map
of Guillame de
l’Ille.
Naudacho and
Naguatex are
variant names
for the
“pueblo” of
the Navidachos
Indians, a
Hasinai-Daddo
tribe, who
occupied the
area around
Nacogdoches.
See Hackett
(ed.), Pichardo‘s
Treatise, III,
pp. 47-49,
599-600.
5
Alcee Fortier,
A History
of Louisiana
(4 volumes,
New York:
Manzi, Joyant
and Company,
1904), I, pp.
26-29.
6
Ibid., p.
79; Ashford, Spanish
Texas, pp.
93-96.
7
H. E. Bolton,
Texas in
The Middle
Eighteenth
Century (reprint;
Austin:
University of
Texas Press,
1970) pp.
35-38, 418.
8
Ibid., p.
36.
9
Lauren C.
Post, “Some
Notes on The
Attakapas -
Indians of
Southwest
Louisiana,” Louisiana
History, Ill
(Summer,
1962), p. 225.
10
H. E. Bolton,
“Spanish
Activities on
The Lower
Trinity River,
1746-177 1,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, XVI
(April, 1913),
pp. 340-341.
11
Ibid., pp.
342-343; Isaac
J. Cox, “The
Louisiana-Texas
Frontier, Part
I: The
Franco-Spanish
Regime,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, X
(July, 1906),
p. 21.
12
Bolton, Texas
In The Middle
Eighteenth
Century, pp.
74, 405-408;
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise, I,
p. 380 and II,
p. 196.
13
Bolton, Texas
In The Middle
Eighteenth
Century, p.
359; Bolton,
“Spanish
Activities on
The Lower
Trinity
River,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
348-349; Cox,
“The
Louisiana-Texas
Frontier, Part
I,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
21-22; Hackett
(ed.), Pichardo’s
Treatise, I,
pp. 376, 380
and II, pp.
198-20 1.
Father Morfi
stated that
Biancpain
settled in
Texas “by
permission of
the governor
and in the
character of
Spanish
vassals.” Ibid.,
p. 201.
14
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise,
I, p. 380n.
15
Ibid., II,
pp. 201 -202.
16
Bolton,
“Spanish
Activities on
The Lower
Trinity
River,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
367.
17
Ibid Cox,
“The
Louisiana-Texas
Frontier, Part
I,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
22-23; Bolton,
Texas In
The Middle
Eighteenth
Century,
pp. 359-361.
18
Cox, “The
Louisiana-Texas
Frontier, Part
I,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
32.
19
E. Bolton,
“The Spanish
Abandonment
and
Reoccupation
of East Texas,
1773-1779,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, IX
(October,
1905), pp.
120-121.
20
Ibid p.
101.
21
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise,
I, p. 395.
22
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo‘s
Treatise,
I, pp.
384-386, map
389; Bolton, Texas
in The Middle
Eighteenth
Century, pp.
425-426;
Bolton,
“Spanish
Abandonment
and
Reoccupation
of East Texas,
1773-1779,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
117-118.
23
Map D-965,
July 22, 1777,
British
Admiralty
Archives, copy
owned by the
writer.
Gauld’s map,
superbly drawn
and detailed,
compares
favorably with
modern-day
cartography.
24
Bolton, Texas
in The Middle
Eighteenth
Century, p.
425; Bolton,
“Spanish
Abandonment
and
Re-Occupation
of East Texas,
1773-1779,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
117-118; Fray
Juan Augustin
Morfi, History
of Texas, 16
73-1779 (2
volumes:
Albuquerque:
The Quivera
Society,
1935), H, pp.
427-428.
25
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise,
I, p. 386;
Bolton, Texas
in The Middle
Eighteenth
Century, p.
426.
26
This was not
Captain
David’s ship.
A brigantine
has two masts
whereas a
sloop has only
one.
27
Hackett (ed.),
Pichardo’s
Treatise,
I, pp.
364-367. An
unverified,
secondary
source states
that, in 1800,
Spanish troops
arrested the
crew of a
wrecked
English ship,
encamped on
the ridge at
Sabine Pass,
and charged
them with
attempting to
colonize on
Spanish soil.
See Beaumont
Enterprise, August
2, 1927.
28
Richard
Stenberg, “The
Western
Boundary of
Louisiana,
1762-1803,” South
Western
Historical
Quarterly, XXXV
(October,
1931), p. 100.
29
Odie B. Faulk,
The Last
Years of
Spanish Texas
(The
Hague: Mouton
and Company,
1964), p. 119.
30
Julia Garrett,
Green Flag
Over Texas: A
Story of The
Last Years of
Spain in Texas
(Austin:
Pemberton
Press, no
date), pp.
12-13.
31
Faulk, Last
Years of
Spanish Texas,
p. 125;
E. Wallace and
D. M. Vigness,
Documents
of Texas
History (Lubbock
Texas Tech
Press, 1960),
pp. 37-38
32
Wallace and
Vigness, Documents
of Texas
History. Pp
41-42; Robert
L. and Pauline
H. Jones,
“Texas’
Eastern
Boundary,” Texana,
Ill
(Sumnler,
1965), p. 124.
33
L. J. Wortham,
A History
of Texas From
Wilderness To
Commonwealth
(5
volumes; Fort
Worth: Wortham
Molyneaux
Company,
1924), I, p.
103.
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