Chapter
IV: A History
of Jefferson
County, Texas
Filibustering,
Piracy and the
African Slave
Trade
by W. T.
Block
The era of
filibustering
against Spain
has bequeathed
a romantic
chapter to the
history of
Jefferson
County and to
oral frontier
folklore.1
Between 1816
and 1821,
Galveston
Island and
adjacent Point
Bolivar were
bases for the
filibustering
enterprises of
Xavier Mina,
Luis de Aury,
and Captain
James Long, as
well as of de
Aury’s
successor, the
pirate Jean
Lafitte. As a
result,
Jefferson
County became
a focal point
of illicit
slave
smuggling, the
second phase
of which did
not end until
the late
1830’s.
Xavier Mina, a
Spanish
liberal,
arrived at
Galveston
Island in
November 1816,
with three
shiploads of
men and
supplies and
“the view of
emancipating
Mexico.”2
The forces of
Don Jose
Herrera, who
represented
the
revolutionary
government of
Mexico in the
United States,
and Luis de
Aury had
arrived two
months
earlier. Aury,
who was
appointed
military
governor of
Texas by the
revolutionary
junta, was
ordered to
harass Spanish
shipping with
his
privateers.3
Mina invaded
Mexico in 1817
with a small
army, but
despite
initial
successes, the
expedition
ended
ingloriously
with Mina’s
capture and
execution.4
Aury set up a
revolutionary
government on
Galveston
Island,
replete with
an admiralty
court to
condemn his
prizes. He
held letters
of marque from
the
revolutionary
governments of
Venezuela,
Mexico, and
New Granada,5
and, within a
short time,
his
privateering
fleet had
“completely
swept the
Mexican gulf”
of Spanish
shipping.6
Aury’s crews,
among whom
were many
unwilling to
abide by the
rules of
privateering,
were mostly
Spanish and
French
refugees and
mulattoes from
Barrataria
Bay,
Louisiana.7
Their prizes
were often
Spanish
slavers
arriving from
the west coast
of Africa.
With no other
market
available, a
brisk slave
trade soon
developed
between
Galveston
Island and
Louisiana.8
Two routes,
one by water
and the other
by land, soon
developed for
the delivery
of slaves to
Louisiana. The
water route
was via the
Gulf of
Mexico, while
the land route
extended from
Point Bolivar
across
Jefferson
County, on to
the Sabine
River. Some
purchasers,
the agents of
commercial
companies in
Louisiana,
went directly
to “Galveston,
the mouth of
the Sabine, or
Calcasieu,” to
“engage the
lot they
wanted” at
$1.00 per
pound.9
Jean Lafitte
fell heir to
this unsavory
commerce when
he settled at
Galveston in
April 1817,
following
Aury’s
abandonment of
the island.10
Like Aury,
Lafitte held
letters of
marque from
the republic
of Carthagena,
and had
engaged in
contraband
slave trading
before he was
driven from
Barrataria
Bay,
Louisiana.11
Upon arriving
at Galveston,
he sought to
perpetuate
some of Aury’s
trappings of
respectability,
including
admiralty and
criminal
courts.12
Lafitte’s
ships sailed
along the
coast of Cuba
in search of
Spanish
merchantmen
and slavers,
while some of
Aury’s
captains
continued to
sell slave
cargoes at
Galveston as
well.13
While engaged
in the
Louisiana
slave trade,
the Galveston
pirate
discovered
that he could
multiply his
profits by
bartering his
chattels at
his
headquarters
on the Sabine
River. In
December 1817,
the collector
of customs at
New Orleans
reported that
Lafitte was
building slave
barracks on
the Louisiana
boundary.14
On April 24,
1836, William
F.
Gray, a
Virginian en
route from
Texas to
Louisiana,
made the
following
entry in his
diary upon
reaching
Ballew’s
Ferry, ten
miles north of
Orange, Texas
on the Sabine
River:
This is one of
Lafitte’s old
stations...
Here stands an
old shed, part
of the shelter
constructed
for the
African
Negroes that
he [Lafitte]
used to bring
here. It is
now a shelter
for cows 15
Lafitte
reported that
James, Rezin,
and John Bowie
were his best
customers,
whose slave
traffic was
centered
principally in
Louisiana, but
occasionally
carried the
brothers as
far north as
Saint Louis,
Missouri.16
The Bowies,
who ferried
slaves
overland and
by water,
utilized a
flaw in
American law
to obtain
legal title
and resale
papers for
their
Africans. Upon
arriving in
St. Landry
Parish,
Louisiana with
a slave
coffle, the
Bowie brothers
informed the
nearest
officer of the
presence of
contraband
Negroes. The
slaves were
then
repurchased at
an auction
sale, with
one-half of
the purchase
price returned
to the
informers as a
rebate.17
While this
method was
costly, it
successfully
circumvented
the United
States Slave
Trade Acts of
1808 and 1820,
the latter
carrying a
death penalty
upon
conviction.18
In 1852, John
Bowie stated
that he and
his brothers
realized a
$65,000 profit
from
slave-trading
between
1818-1820 from
the sale of
1,500 illegal
Africans
purchased from
Lafitte.19
The American
filibusterer,
Dr. James
Long, was a
neighbor and
contemporary
of Jean
Lafitte, but
the pirate
expressed no
interest in
the
filibusterer’s
enterprise.
Long and his
wife crossed
Jefferson
County “by way
of the
Calcasieu,”
when he
established
his base of
operations at
Point Bolivar
in February,
1820.20
In 1821,
Long’s
expedition
invaded
Mexico, but,
despite the
Treaty of
Cordova ending
Spanish rule,
his men were
imprisoned in
Mexico City,
where Long was
assassinated
on _
the
street.21
The lengthy
vigil
maintained by
his widow,
Jane Long, at
Point Bolivar
is one of the
more
impassioned
tales of
feminine
heroism in
frontier
Texas.22
An incident
offshore from
Sabine Pass
marked the
beginning of
the end for
the corsair
camp on
Galveston
Island. In
October 1819,
George Brown,
one of
Lafitte’s
lieutenants,
attempted to
capture an
American
merchantman.
The United
States cutter
Lynx
immediately
attacked Brown,
and while
attempting to
escape, ran
his vessel
aground,
apparently on
McFadden
Beach, west of
Sabine Pass.
Brown and his
men hid out on
the beach,
later
returning
overland to
Galveston.
Lafitte,
fearing
reprisal from
the United
States as a
result of the
attack,
ordered that
Brown be
hanged.23
In 1820, the
capture of an
American
vessel in
Matagorda Bay,
coupled with
the complaints
of the Spanish
minister in
Washington,
sealed
Lafitte’s
fate. The
United States
navy
dispatched the
brig Enterprise
to evict
the buccaneers
from Galveston
Island.24
After dining
with Mrs. Jane
Long aboard
his flagship Pride,
Lafitte
sailed away
into
historical
obscurity.25
With the
passing of
Jean Lafitte,
Jefferson
County was
granted a
fifteen-year
respite from
the traffic in
human
chattels.
Within a
generation,
Lafitte had
become a
legend in
Southeast
Texas, -
but it
was his
supposed
treasure
sites, not the
slave trade,
which was his
legacy to the
early folklore
of the area.
Each treasure
tale which
evolved
carried a
spine-chilling
account of the
“patron” who
guarded the
pirate’s money
usually a
cutlass-swinging
skeleton, a
big
rattlesnake,
or,
occasionally,
eerie lights
and
apparitions.
Generations of
money hunters
scoured the
lakeshores and
marsh ridges,
carrying
“maps” and
strange
detecting
devices. With
the passing of
time, the
river people,26
who were
Southeast
Texas’
“Coronado’s
children” of
yesteryear,
disappeared,
taking with
them an
abundance of
oral folklore
that was never
recorded.
Perhaps the
lone,
surviving
example is the
famed McGaffey
legend, “The
Stranger at
Sabine Pass,”
which was
published by
J. Frank Dobie
in his Tales
of Old-Time
Texas.27
Early in 1836,
slave traders
took advantage
of the social
upheaval in
East Texas to
renew the
smuggling of
Africans. Mrs.
John McGaffey,
the widow of
Sabine’s
founder and
the heroine of
Dobie’s
legend,
reported that
the English
brig Elizabeth
was the
first slave
ship to dock
in the Sabine
Pass after her
arrival there.
In 1836, the
vessel
remained
moored for
several weeks
in a marshy
locality,
which was
known
thereafter as
the “Brig
Landing.”
Captain John
Taylor had
purchased the
slaves at
Barbados in
the West
Indies. 28
Crewmembers
soon
discovered the
McGaffey
residence on
Shell Ridge
and came there
often to
purchase fresh
meat. On one
occasion, they
had an
unfortunate
encounter with
a black bear,
which left one
crewman badly
mauled. While
on a
slave-trading
journey
through East
Texas, Taylor
brought his
slave coffles
by yawl boat
to Grigsby’s
Bluff on the
Neches River
and then
overland to
San Augustine.
After
returning to
Sabine, he
sailed for
Galveston
Island, where
he hoped to
sell the
remainder of
his cargo.29
One slave
escaped and
denounced
Taylor for
selling
Negroes who
were British
citizens as
well as freed
slaves who
were serving
five-year
indentures.
The English
sent the brig
of war Pilot
to Texas,
where
authorities
released
Taylor to
their custody
William
Kennedy, the
British consul
at Galveston,
recorded that
Taylor was
sentenced to
fourteen
years
imprisonment,
but a French
diplomatic
letter states
that he was
eventually
acquitted.30
Kennedy
is the source
of another
slave voyage
to Sabine
Lake, recorded
by him in a
report to the
Foreign Office
and entitled
“Slave Trade
No. 1:”
In the summer
of the same
year [1836], a
schooner under
the Spanish
flag,
commanded by
one Moro, a
Spaniard, and
owned by a
person named
Coigley, born
of American
parents
carried 200
slaves from
Cuba, ran up
the river
Sabine, which
divides the
United States
from Texas. It
is not known
here, whether
the slaves
were landed or
not. There is
a story that
the owner,
Coigley, who
was aboard,
was murdered,
and that the
Spanish Master
went off with
cargo and
schooner…31
An article in
the Houston
Telegraph and
Texas Register
relates
that an
English slave
ship,
similarly
laden, ran
aground in
Sabine Lake,
near Johnson’s
-
Bayou,
Louisiana, in
1837.32
According to
one source,
Henry Griffith
of Johnson’s
Bayou, an
acquaintance
of James
Bowie,
acquired
slaves from
the cargo who
spoke only
African
dialects. The
owners
purchased
cattle from
Griffith to
feed the
emaciated
Negroes. While
gorging on the
raw meat and
blood, the
Africans
staged a riot,
which required
the use of
firearms to
quell. The
source added
that the
slaver, under
pursuit by an
English
warship
offshore,
wrecked at
Blue Buck
Point, the
northeastern
terminus of
the Sabine
Pass.33
In 1836,
Sterling,
Pleasant, and
Leander
McNeil, Brazos
River
plantation
owners,
unloaded forty
slaves on
Caney Creek,
later ferrying
them across
the Neches
River en route
to Louisiana.34
In the midst
of the Runaway
Scrape, W. F.
Gray recorded
in his diary
on April 19,
1836, that he
had encountered
“the McNeil’s,
with their
African
Negroes,”
while
traveling
across west
Jefferson
County.35
Later, the
McNeil’s
advertised for
the recovery
of runaway
slaves who
could speak no
English and
bore tribal
scars on their
faces.36
The renewed
slave trade
soon gained
the attention
of three
nations, as
can be found
in the
official
records of
Texas,
England, and
the United
States. In the
Texas
Constitution
of 1836, the
importation of
slaves from
other than the
United States
was defined as
an act of
piracy.37
President Sam
Houston
declared in
the Slave
Trade
Proclamation
of 1836 that
“extensive
projects… have
been executed
to introduce
Africans and
Negroes... by
landing them
on the sea
beach, or on
the east bank
of the river
Sabine.”38
The Houston Morning
Star reported
that slave
ships fitted
out at New
Orleans were
destined to
run slaves
from Cuba “up
the Sabine and
land them on
the United
States coast.”
The editor
added that the
United States
sought to
frustrate the
plan by
“appointing
Captain Green,
formerly of
the revenue
cutter
Woodbury [in
the Sabine
Lake, as]
United States’
collector at
the Sabine.”39
Since Sabine
Lake, Sabine
River, and
Sabine Pass,
or inlet, were
defined by
treaty as
territorial
waters of the
United States,
Texas lacked
the right to
inspect
incoming
vessels for
contraband
slaves. The
Texas charge
d’affaires in
Washington was
instructed to
point out the
plight of
Texas, who,
because of its
inability to
search
“vessels
within the
waters of the
Sabine, or the
bay and pass
or outlet of
the same, .
. . the
introduction
of slaves from
any foreign
country .
. . will
be exposed to
frequent
violation in
that quarter.”40
The United
States replied
that it “could
not consent to
allow the
right to
search
American
vessels as
this had been
refused to the
British
government.”41
In 1838, the
American
collector of
customs at New
Orleans
advised his
superior that
slave
smuggling was
being
conducted at
“the mouth of
Sabine river,”
and that
“foreign
vessels go
into that
river from the
British and
Spanish West
Indies, with
slaves, and
land them in
the United
States.” The
letter added
that the
collector kept
his revenue
cutter “pretty
constantly in
that
neighborhood,”
but that slave
ships found it
easy to escape
“her
vigilance…
even in
daylight.”42
England was
also aware of
the Sabine
Lake slave
trade. In
1837, the
British consul
at New Orleans
notified the
Foreign Office
that “there
are still one
or more
American
vessels
employed in
this most
detestable
traffic,
landing the
slaves on the
East Side of
the Sabine.”
The letter
added that two
of the vessels
were the
American
schooners Waterwitch
and Emperor.43
Although
diplomatic
letters
discussed the
Sabine Lake
slave trade
until 1839,
the writer
does not
believe that
any slave
ships arrived
in Jefferson
County after
1837, an
opinion
supported by a
Houston
newspaper.
Replying to an
allegation in
the New York Sun
that the
African slave
trade to Texas
still
continued, the
editor of Telegraph
and Texas
Register wrote
in 1843 that
the
shipwrecked
British slaver
in Sabine
Lake, in 1837,
was the last
to arrive.44
There is no
information on
the number of
contraband
slaves that
arrived in
Jefferson
County during
the 1830’s.
For years
after the
slave trade
had ended, a
grim reminder
of the era
remained in
Sabine Lake.
The ex-slaver
Waterwitch
carried
cotton from
Sabine to
Galveston from
1839 until 1845.
When a
hurricane
destroyed all
but four
buildings in
Orange on
September 13,
1865, all
the vessels in
the harbor,
including the
steamer Florilda,
capsized and
sank in the
Sabine River
except Captain
Whiting’s aged
schooner, the
Waterwitch. However,
the vessel
disappeared
with all hands
on a
subsequent
voyage.45
Endnotes
1
The tales of
Lafitte
legendry in
Jefferson
County were
once so
extensive that
almost every
bayou and
shell bank on
Sabine Lake
and the Neches
River had its
own “patron,”
or ghost, as
the guardian
of Lafitte’s
gold. These
stories were
circulated
orally among
the itinerant
river folk,
trappers and
fishermen, who
lived in
semi-permanent
houseboat
villages on
the Neches
River at
Beaumont and
Port Neches.
The dream of
windfall
wealth (and
its pursuit
during spare
moments)
enlivened the
otherwise drab
and
poverty-stricken
lives of the
river people.
Only one of
the legends is
known to have
been published
before they
ceased to
exist.
2
Dudley G.
Wooten, A
Comprehensive
History of
Texas, 1685 To
1897 (2
volumes;
Dallas:
William G.
Scharf, 1898),
I, pp. 88-89.
3
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas,
I, pp. 88-89.
4
H. Yoakum, History
of Texas (2
volumes; New
York:
Redfield,
1855, as
reprinted by
Steck Company,
Austin), I,
pp. 185-186.
5
William
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects of
The Republic
of Texas (reprint;
Fort Worth:
The Molyneaux
Craftsmen,
Incorporated,
1925), p. 25;
Yoakum,
History of
Texas, I,
p. 183; Eugene
C. Barker,
“The African
Slave Trade in
Texas,” Texas
Historical
Association
Quarterly, VI
(1902), pp.
145-146.
6
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas,
I, p. 88.
7
Ibid., p.
89; Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects of
The Republic
of Texas, pp.
284, 285n;
Yoakum, History
of Texas, I,
p. 181n.
8
Barker,
“African Slave
Trade,” Texas
Historical
Association
Quarterly, p.
146.
9
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas,
I, p. 89.
10
Ibid.. p.
94.
11
Charles
Gayarre, Historical
Sketch of
Pierre and
Jean Lafitte,
The Famous
Smugglers of
Louisiana
(Austin:
Pemberton
Press, no
date), Part I,
pages
unnumbered.
12
Yoakum, History
of Texas, I,
p. 193; Lyle
Saxon, Lafitte
The Pirate (New
Orleans:
Robert L.
Crager and
Company,
1950), p. 217.
13
Fred Robbins,
“The Origin
and
Development of
The African
Slave Trade in
Galveston,
Texas and
Surrounding
Area From 1816
To 1836,” East
Texas
Historical
Journal, IX
(October,
1971), p. 156.
14
Ibid. pp.
155-156.
15
William F.
Gray, From
Virginia to
Texas, 1835:
The Diary of
Colonel
William F.
Gray (reprint;
Houston:
Fletcher Young
Publishing
Company,
1965), p. 170.
Gray alleged
that two early
Jefferson
County
settlers,
Richard Ballew
and David
Choate, were
former
“confederates”
of Lafitte.
After crossing
the Sabine
River, Gray
stayed
overnight at
the home of
one of
Lafitte’s
former
captains,
Arsene LeBleu
de Comarsac,
the cattle
drover, whom
Gray had
encountered at
James Taylor
White’s ranch
at Turtle
Bayou. Ballew
was arrested
for smuggling
in 1839, but
no record of
conviction
exists. See
Criminal
Docket,
District
Court,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas
and
Journal of
Jean Lafitte:
The Privateer
and Patriot’s
Own Story (New
York: Vantage
Press, 1958),
pp. 42-43, 94.
16
Journal of
Jean Lafitte,
pp. 93,
107.
17
Yoakum, History
of Texas, I,
p. 184.
18
Warren S.
Howard, American
Slavers and
The Federal
Law (Los
Angeles:
University of
California
Press, 1963),
- pp. 25-26.
19
Dr.
Kilpatrick,
“Early Life in
The
Southwest-The
Bowies,” DeBow’s
Review, XIII
(October,
1852), p.
381.Henry
Griffith, an
early settler
of Johnson’s
Bayou on
Sabine Lake,
reported that
James Bowie
visited his
home on two
occasions to
purchase
cattle to feed
his slaves.
20
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas, I,
p. 98.
21
Yoakum, History
of Texas, I,
p. 207.
22
Anne A.
Brindley,
“Jane Long,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, LVI
(October,
1952), pp.
224-230.
23
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas, I,
p. 99.
24
Wooten, Comprehensive
History of
Texas, I,
p. 99.
25
Brindley,
“Jane Long,” Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p
220.
26
See footnote
1.
27
J. Frank Dobie
“The Stranger
at Sabine
Pass,” Tales
of Old-Time
Texas (Boston:
Little, Brown
and Company,
1928), pp.
252-260.
28
K. D. Keith,
“The Memoirs
of Captain
Kosciuszko D.
Keith,”
(Luling,
Texas: 27-page
unpublished
manuscript,
February,
1896), p. 17;
Nancy N.
Barker, The
French
Legation in
Texas (2
volumes;
Austin: Texas
State
Historical
Association,
1973), I, p.
122. The Elizabeth
returned
to Sabine Lake
in 1838, but
refused to pay
tonnage fees
to the Texas
collector of
customs. She
was probably
the unnamed
English brig,
which remained
anchored for
weeks while
her crew cut
and loaded a
cargo of
cypress logs.
See (Houston)
Telegraph
and Texas
Register, March
17, 1838, and
R. E. L.
Crane, “The
History of The
Revenue
Service and
Commerce of
The Republic
of Texas”
(unpublished
doctoral
dissertation;
University of
Texas, 1950),
p. 270.
29
Keith,
“Memoirs of K.
D. Keith,” p.
18.
30
Barker, French
Legation in
Texas, I,
pp. 122-123;
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects, p.
762; George P.
Garrison
(ad.), Diplomatic
Correspondence
of The
Republic of
Texas, in
American
Historical
Association
Annual Report,
1907 (3
volumes;
Washington:
Government
Printing
Office,
1908-1911), m,
pp. 903-904;
(Houston) Morning
Star, September
17, 1840. The
Pilot located
six slaves who
were British
citizens and
carried them
back to
Barbados.
31
Ephraim D.
Adams (ed.), British
Correspondence
Concerning The
Republic of
Texas,
1838-1846
(Austin: Texas
State
Historical
Association,
1917), p. 257.
32
(Houston) Telegraph
and Texas
Register, July
5, 1843.
33
Quoted from
“The History
of Johnson’s
Bayou,
Louisiana,” a
brochure
published in
conjunction
with the 1971
Louisiana Fur
Festival,
Cameron,
Louisiana, a
copy furnished
to the writer
by courtesy of
the Cameron
Parish
Historical
Society.
34
Robbins, “The
Origin and
Development of
The African
Slave Trade,”
East Texas
Historical
Journal, p.
158; Barker,
“The African
Slave Trade,”
Texas
Historical
Association
Quarterly,” p.
153.
35
Gray, From
Virginia To
Texas, 1835,
p. 166.
36
(Houston) Telegraph
and Texas
Register, September
16, 1837.
37
(Houston) Telegraph
and Texas
Register, August
16, 1836.
38
E. C. Barker
and A. W.
Williams
(eds.),
The Writings
of Sam
Houston,
1813-1863 (8
volumes;
Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1970),
I, p. 510.
39
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects of
The Republic
of Texas, p.
761, quoting
the (Houston)
Morning
Star, May
1, 1839.
40
Garrison
(ed.), Diplomatic
Correspondence
of The
Republic of
Texas, I,
p. 400.
41
Ibid., I,
p. 41l.
42
Letter, J. W.
Breedlove,
collector to
Levi Woodbury,
May 26, 1838,
in House
Document No.
466, 25th
Congress, 2nd
Session, 1838,
Library of
Congress, copy
owned by the
writer.
43
Letter, J. T.
Crawford,
consul, to
Richard
Pakanham, New
Orleans, May
25, 1837, as
reprinted in
Adams (ad.), British
Diplomatic
Correspondence
Concerning The
Republic of
Texas,
1838-1846, p.
13.
44
(Houston) Telegraph
and Texas
Register, July
5, 1843.
45
(Galveston) Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, May
17, 1839;
“Arrivals and
Departures,”
R. C. Doom,
collector, to
the Secretary
of the
Treasury,
March 31,
1839, and
“Account of
Fees
Collected,” J.
D. Swain to
the Secretary
of the
Treasury, June
30, 1840, Port
of Sabine Bay
Customs
Records, File
4-21/10, Texas
State
Archives;
Beaumont
Enterprise, April
23, 1922, p.
1-B. See also
the maritime
columns of the
various
Galveston
newspapers
from 1839 to
1845.
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