CHAPTER
IX:
A History of
Jefferson
County, Texas
Early
Industry and
Businesses
By W. T.
Block
Since
early-day
Jefferson
County
abounded in
cattle and
timber, it was
inevitable
that the first
primitive
industries
would engage
in processing
both items
into finished
products. A
barter economy
and problems
of
transportation
and
distribution
forced each
household to
be as near
self-sustaining
as possible.
Spinning,
leatherwork,
and soap and
candle-making
are examples
of the home
manufactures
to be found on
the East Texas
frontier. The
first goal was
to supply the
family needs,
but any
surplus
production
could be
easily
bartered to
neighbors.
Hence, early
manufacturing
sought to
supply the
local demand
first, with
the prospect
that an
exportable
surplus could
be exchanged
for
merchandise
manufactured
in other
regions.
Many pioneer
households
combined
subsistence
farming with
another
occupation.
This is
illustrated by
the
agricultural
schedule for
the 1850
Federal census
which lists a
physician, two
lawyers,
numerous
shopkeepers
and cattlemen
among those
engaged in
agriculture in
the county.1
The
abundance of
timber enabled
many
subsistence
farmers to
engage in
lumber or
shingle-making,
occupations
which required
no capital
outlay other
than a few
hand tools and
a windlass for
removing logs
from the
streams.
Jefferson
County had no
natural sites
suitable for
harnessing
water power,
and there is
no record of
steam-driven
industry prior
to 1846.2
Beaumont
inhabitants
planned to
install steam
driven mills
to develop the
timber
resources, but
insurmountable
transportation
problems
frustrated
their efforts
prior to 1856.
In 1837, the
only
steam-driven
industries in
Texas were
located
between
Galveston Bay
and the Brazos
River, the
center of
Texas’
population.3
Perhaps
imitating
their
neighbors to
the west, the
Beaumont town
site
proprietors
reserved the
steam mill
square on
Brake’s Bayou
for the
exclusive use
of a steam
sawmill,4
and in
1838, conveyed
the site to W.
H. Irion upon
his agreement
to erect a
mill.5
In 1838,
the Texas
legislature
chartered the
Neches Steam
Milling
Company at
Beaumont, to
Henry Millard,
Christian
Hillebrandt
and others,
for the
purpose of
milling
shingles,
lumber, and
grains.6
However,
nothing
materialized
from the early
planning.
Irion deeded
the steam mill
square back to
the
proprietors in
the same year,
and the site
remained
unoccupied
until l856.7
By 1842,
Jefferson
County was
producing
handmade
lumber and
shingles in
sufficient
quantities to
export.8
In
December,
1843, H. A.
Cobb and
Brothers of
Galveston
advertised to
purchase
square oak
beams, from
eight to forty
feet long with
twelve to
twenty inch
dimensions, to
be delivered
to them at
Sabine Pass.9
As of
that year,
Jefferson
County could
have produced
timbers of
that size only
in its whipsaw
pits or by
horse-driven
“peck” mills.
Whipsawing
required two
men, one to
pull the
crosscut saw
above the log,
and another
man to pull in
the pit
beneath. The
“muly” or sash
sawmills were
horse-driven
adaptations of
the same
principle.10
A
characteristic
of the
horse-driven
“peck” mill
was the peck
hammer, a
swinging
multi-adze
arrangement,
which could be
heard at a
distance of
one mile
through the
forest. “Peck”
mills were
used to chip
away bark and
to square a
rough timber,
obtaining one
from each log.
By 1843, a
“peck” mill
was being
operated by
Simon Wiess at
Wiess’ Bluff,
sixteen miles
north of
Beaumont,
probably the
same mill that
Joseph Grigsby
had owned at
an earlier
date.11
Hand
shingle-making
was less
laborious. A
windlass or a
yoke of oxen
was needed to
remove the
cypress logs
from the
Neches or
Sabine rivers.
Sections of
the log were
then cut to
shingle-length,
split with
wedges, and
dressed with a
froe, a
two-handled
blade.12
Shingles
sold for $2.00
a thousand as
of 1850.13
In that
year, only
five Jefferson
County
residents
listed
themselves as
shingle-makers
with the
census
enumerator,
but the writer
believes that
many
subsistence
farmers
followed that
occupation on
a part-time
basis.
In 1846, Major
Sidney A.
Sweet, a
prominent San
Augustine
contractor and
architect,14
moved to
Sabine Pass,
where he
bought a
half-interest
in the Sabine
town site and
McGaffey
league.15
He soon
built a sash
and door
millwork
plant, a
shipyard, and
a
single-circular
steam sawmill,
operated as S.
A. Sweet and
Company.16
Sweet
was convinced
that he could
surmount the
lumber
transport
problems by
floating log
rafts down the
rivers, towing
them by
steamboat
through Sabine
Lake, and
milling them
at Sabine
Pass.
In January,
1848, Sweet
sold the
sawmill to
Henry Hubbell
of Galveston
who increased
the mill’s
cutting
capacity. By
January, 1849,
three new
circular saws,
capable of
cutting 10,000
feet daily,
had been
installed at a
cost of
$10,000.17
During the
same month,
Hubbell sold
the sawmill
for $12,000 to
David
Bradbury,
Orrin Brown,
Isaiah
Ketchum, and
Benjamin
Granger, all
of Sabine
Pass, who
formed a
partnership
under the name
of Spartan
Mill Company.
The mill’s
lien was
payable in
cash or in
“good
merchantable
cypress lumber
at $18
a thousand,”
and John
Sealy, then of
Sabine Pass,
was appointed
as trustee to
auction the
mill in case
of lien
default.18
When
Sweet died in
1849, Granger
leased and
operated the
sash and door
plant as well.
19
In 1850, the
Spartan Mill
Company cut
4,000 saw logs
worth
$5,500 into
1,200,000 feet
of lumber
valued at
$23,000. The
plant employed
fifteen men
and paid a
total of $637
in wages each
month.20
By 1857,
however, hard
times had
befallen the
company, and
the Spartan
sawmill lay
abandoned and
rusting.21
To
secure the
lien balance
of $2,000,
Sealy sold the
sawmill in
March, 1858,
to David R.
Wingate of
Newton County,
who moved soon
afterward to
Sabine Pass.22
In 1859, D. R.
Wingate and
Company,
capitalized at
$30,000, cut
7,488 saw logs
worth $11,980
into 2,496,000
feet of lumber
valued at
$43,680.
Wingate
employed ten
men, who were
paid a total
of $300
monthly in
wages.23
In
1860, a boiler
explosion,
which killed
and injured
four persons,
disabled the
saw and
planning mill
for several
weeks.24
Wingate also
owned lumber
schooners
which carried
his
manufactures
to Cuba and
Mexico, but by
1861, the
Civil War
ended his
export
business. With
no market for
the
three-quarter
million feet
of lumber
stacked at the
mill, Wingate
closed his
business, but
donated lumber
and logs for
barracks and
military
fortifications.25
On
September 25,
1862, a Union
navy squadron
occupied the
Sabine Pass
and Lake. The
sailors,
however,
generally
avoided Sabine
City because a
yellow fever
epidemic was
raging there.26
On
October 21,
1862, when
fired upon by
Confederate
pickets
ashore, the
squadron
shelled Sabine
City. A naval
detachment
came ashore
and burned the
sawmill and
other
property, a
loss estimated
at $150,000,
thus ending
the lumbering
epoch at
Sabine Pass.27
In 1856,
Samuel Remley
and John T.
Johnson built
a grist mill
and steam
sawmill at
Grigsby’s
Bluff, now
Port Neches.
In 1859,
the mill
cut 5,000 logs
worth $5,000
into 1,000,000
feet of
“planks and
scantlings”
valued at
$12,500. The
saw millers
employed six
men paid a
total of $200
monthly in
wages.28
In 1862,
Johnson left
the
partnership
upon being
commissioned
as adjutant of
Spaight’s
Texas
Battalion.29
It appears
that the
Grigsby’s
Bluff sawmill
remained
inoperative
during the
Civil War
years. Export
and local
demand ceased,
for large
lumber
inventories on
hand were not
used. Perhaps
the nail
supply was
exhausted or
wartime
necessity may
have halted
the
construction
industry.
Remley’s grist
mill, however,
is frequently
mentioned in
the
commissioner’s
court minutes,
for the
sawmiller
ground the
county-owned
corn that was
distributed to
the indigent
families of
Confederate
soldiers.30
In 1870,
Samuel Remley
is listed in
census returns
as being a
sawmiller, but
no mill
statistics
appear in
Jefferson
County’s
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry, for
that year.31
It seems
logical that
his sawmill
burned in that
year, for in
June, 1870,
Remley
purchased
another steam
saw and grist
mill from H.
C. Pedigo of
Tyler County
and erected
them on the
original mill
site at
Grigsby’s
Bluff.32
Two
months later,
the saw-miller
sold a
one-half
interest in
the new mill
to Charles H.
Alexander of
Sabine Pass,
and in 1875,
an additional
interest to
Joseph Bunn of
Orange County.33
The
Remley-Alexander
mill burned in
October, 1876,
and was never
rebuilt.34
One other
industry
existed at
Grigsby’s
Bluff during
the
Reconstruction
period. In
1866, George
F. Block
established a
shingle mill
there, which
manufactured
333,000
shingles in
1869 and
employed three
men. 35
After a wait
of twenty
years, steam
sawmilling
became a
reality in
Beaumont in
1856, and
three
single-circular
mills were
completed
there by 1859.
In January,
1856, the town
site
proprietors
transferred
the steam mill
square,
between
Mulberry and
Cypress
Streets, to
William
Phillips and
Loving G.
Clark,36
and
within six
months, the
Phillips mill
was in
operation.37
In January,
1858, William
Lewis, a
Beaumont
lawyer,
acquired
Clark’s
interest in
the Phillips
sawmill for $2,500,
and
complete
ownership a
year later.38
In 1859,
Lewis cut
2,000 cypress
and pine logs
valued at
$2,000 into
300,000 feet
of lumber
worth $5,400.
He paid five
employees a
total of $95
monthly in
wages.39
Nothing is
known of
Lewis’ mill
during the
Civil War
years. The
commissioners’
court minutes
record nothing
about the
county’s
sawmills
during the
four-year
period. In
1863, Union
prisoners of
war from the
42nd
Massachusetts
Regiment were
billeted in A.
J. Ward’s mill
at Beaumont,40
which
suggests that
the mills were
closed or
operated only
infrequently.
Confederate
troops
occupied
William
Russell’s mill
at Orange in
January of the
same year.41
William
Lewis lost
heavily on his
mill
investment,
and in 1,866,
sold the
sawmill to J.
D. Bullock for
$700.42
The latter
lost as well,
selling out
for $300 to
John F. Pipkin
and his
son-in-law,
Dr. N. G.
Haltom, who
operated the
mill during
the
Reconstruction
years.43
Early in 1857,
John R. Ross
and James R.
Alexander
freighted a
steam sawmill
overland from
the Trinity
River and
erected it on
Brake’s Bayou
adjacent to
the Woodville
Road, now Pine
Street. In
December,
1857, a
Galveston
newspaper
correspondent
was amazed at
the
“self-setter
at Ross and
Alexander’s
mill, with
which the logs
are set to the
saw, and which
reduces the
boards to an
exact
precision in
width and
thickness at
both ends.”44
The mill
exported
lumber to
Galveston, but
by November,
1858, the
ill-fated
partners were
in financial
straits.
Michael
Alexander was
appointed as
receiver to
pay the saw
millers’
indebtedness,
but the mill
and 60,000
feet of lumber
burned in
February, 1859.
Correspondent
Henry R. Green
reported a
conflagration
“which
illumined so
brilliantly
that persons
and objects
were
recognizable
at a great
distance.45
In March,
1860, Michael
Alexander sold
the mill site
and salvaged
machinery to
James Long and
his
brother-in-law,
Frank L.
Carroll.46
Although
Long repaired
the mill, it
soon ceased
operating when
Long entered
the
Confederate
army.47
The Ross
and Alexander
mill is
important
principally as
forming the
nucleus of
Long and
Company’s
post-Civil War
operations
during the
heyday of
Beaumont
lumbering. By
then, the firm
was milling
shingles at
the rate of
160,000 daily.
It soon
splintered
into two
additional
companies, the
Beaumont
Lumber Company
and Texas Tram
and Lumber
Company, owned
by Long’s
brothers-in-law,
Frank L.
Carroll,
Joseph A.
Carroll, and
William A.
Fletcher.48
In 1859, Otto
Ruff bought a
sawmill from
the Steadman
Foundry in
Indiana and
shipped it via
steamboat ‘to
New Orleans
and via
schooner to
Beaumont. It
was equipped
with a
12-by-24-inch
steam engine
and a ten-foot
drive wheel,
powered by a
double-flue
boiler.49
During
the succeeding
year, Ruff cut
8,000 logs
worth $8,000
into 1,250,000
feet of lumber
valued at
$18,750. He
employed ten
men, whose
wages totaled
$300 monthly.50
In December,
1860, Ruff
sold his mill
to Andrew J.
Ward, who
reputedly used
it to cut
timbers for
the
Confederate
government.51
In October,
1865, Ward
sold it to E.
L. Goldsmith
and M. W.
Reagan, both
of whom died
of yellow
fever at
Houston in
1867.52
Other title
transfers
occurred until
1878, when
Ruff’s mill
emerged as the
Reliance
Lumber
Company, its
sixty-one-year
history being
continuous
until 1920.53
Only one
shingle mill
is listed in
Jefferson
County in the
census returns
of 1850. In
1849, Marvin
Delano of
Green’s Bluff
(Orange)
processed by
hand 300 logs
worth $1.00
each into
576,000
shingles
valued at
$1,152. He
employed three
men, each at
$20 monthly,
and one woman
at $12
monthly.54
Steam milling
made its debut
along the
Sabine River
shortly before
Orange County
was separated
from Jefferson
County. John
Merriman built
the first mill
at Green’s
Bluff in 1851,
and was soon
followed by R.
H. Jackson’s
mill and R. A.
Neyland’s
steam shingle
mill.55
These
mills engaged
in fence
picket, lathe,
spoke, and
stave-making
as well,
accounting for
the 210,000
barrel staves
and most of
the 6,120,000
shingles
exported at
Sabine Pass in
1857.56
As early as
1844, Green’s
Bluff was
exporting
large
quantities of
barrel staves
and shingles
to GaIveston.57
The
rapid strides
of industry
along the
Sabine River
are apparent
in an article
in the
Nacogdoches Chronicle
which
states:
Messrs. Smith
and [John]
Merriman have
a large steam
mill in
successful
operation; it
is a
masterpiece of
workmanship.
Capt. [Robert
H.] Jackson
has one now
building. A
company from
Louisiana has
purchased a
lot, and will
in a short
time commence
building. Mr.
Smith has one
at the East
Pass, and
Messrs.
[Solomon]
Sparks and
Douglas are
preparing to
build one on
Old River. In
six months,
there will be
five large
steam sawmills
in operation
at or in the
vicinity of
Madison
[Orange], yet
there is room
and timber for
twenty more.
They will find
ready sale for
all the lumber
they can make.58
On May 31,
1856, the
Empire Mills,
located on the
Sabine five
miles south of
Orange, burned
along with
100,000 feet
of lumber, a
$15,000 loss.
The first
victim of the
county’s
vigilante
violence of
that year, the
mill was
described as
the “best in
the state.”59
In 1859,
correspondent
Henry R. Green
was
particularly
impressed with
Merriman’s
mill,
remarking that
“the
spoke-shaving
machine in
Merriman’s
Mills takes’
my beaver… Let
timber fall
within its
reach and it
comes out a
wagon
forthwith!”60
Jefferson
County’s early
shipbuilding
industry was
closely allied
to sawmilling
and steam
boating, the
latter being a
seasonal
activity
between
December and
June.
Shipbuilders
needed a ready
supply of
lumber, and
steam boaters
required an
off-season
occupation to
supplement
their incomes.
A shipbuilder
could expect
to earn $2.50
daily as a
carpenter and
the same or
more as a
steam boatman,
the county’s
highest-paid
occupations in
1850.61
The antebellum
shipyards at
Beaumont and
Sabine Pass
were located
at sites
adjacent to
sawmills.62
In September,
1848, S. A.
Sweet, Niles
F. Smith, and
Neal McGaffey
sold their
“Shipways of
Sabine Pass”
to Dexter B.
Jones, an
early schooner
captain.63
A year
later, Jones
sold the
property,
“being the
same … land
where … Jones
and Peter D.
Stockholm
erected a
shipyard and
ways,”64
to Isaac
B. Bailey, a
merchant who
died soon
afterward.
Jones retained
the right to
overhaul his
80-ton
schooner Ganger
during the
slack season
at the
shipyard.65
Sidney
J. Sweet, a
nephew of the
sawmiller, and
his
mother-in-law,
Mary Hawley,
acquired the
shipyard after
Bailey’s
death, selling
out to Captain
W. L. Hurd in
1854. The
Shipways of
Sabine Pass
apparently
dissolved
following
Hurd’s death
in 1856.66
As early as
January, 1846,
Charles Baxter
and John
Fielding were
engaged in
building and
repairing
schooners at
Green’s Bluff.
In February,
1847, Baxter
leased a
shipyard site
on the Sabine
River from
William D.
Smith of
Sabine County,
and in 1849,
the
shipbuilder
sold an
interest in
the business
to Peter
Stockholm of
Sabine.67
In June
of that year,
the partners
signed a
contract with
Captain Moses
Patton to
rebuild the
superstructure
of the steamer
Angelina.68
Baxter
moved to
Beaumont in
1851, leaving
Fielding as
owner of the
firm which was
subsequently
purchased by
the Levingston
brothers. In
1859, the J.
H. Levingston
Shipways
employed six
men, paid a
total of $588
monthly as
wages, and
repaired 1,104
vessels in
that year.69
In June, 1857,
the Galveston
Weekly News
reported
that Dr. Abel
Coffin was
“engaged for
some time past
in building
shipways at
the lower part
of Sabine Pass
and will have
them completed
in about a
month hence …
to accommodate
the largest
class of
vessels.” A
year later,
the newspaper
added that
Coffin’s
shipyard was
“capable of
hauling out
vessels of
large
tonnage.”70
However,
Coffin’s
business was
not listed in
Schedule V of
the Federal
census of
1860.
Little is
known about
early
shipbuilding
at Beaumont.
In 1858, the
40-foot steam
tug S. R.
Marble was
built on the
banks of
Brake’s Bayou,
at a site
adjacent to
Phillips’
sawmill.71
Shortly
after the
Civil War, a
Neches River
steamer, the Albert
Gallatin, was
built near the
same site.72
As late as
1890’s, the
steamboat Neches
Belle was
launched from
its ways
adjacent to
the Reliance
sawmill, which
furnished the
vessel’s
timbers.73
In October,
1851, the
estate of S.
A. Sweet
leased its
sash and door
millwork plant
at Sabine Pass
to William
Harris, an
English
immigrant, who
operated it
until the
1870’s.
Harris’
products
included
windows,
doors, blinds,
cabinet work,
furniture, and
coffins.74
His
manufactures
in 1869
included sixty
safes and
twenty tables.75
Leather-making
and processing
was second
only to lumber
among
Jefferson
County’s early
manufacturing
industries. By
1840, a
slaughtering
firm at
Beaumont
killed cattle
for their
hides and
tallow. By
1849, two
tanneries were
processing raw
hides into
leather. All
surplus hides
above the
processing
capacity of
the tanneries
were exported
to Galveston
or New
Orleans. A
natural
limitation
existed in the
early leather
industry. To
process 600
hides, the
tanners needed
8,000 pounds
of oak tree
bark, which
had to be
peeled from
the county’s
limited
hardwood
forests, for
producing the
necessary
tannic acid.
John Jay
French
operated a
horse-driven
tannery in
Beaumont. In
1849, French
used 300 raw
hides and
5,000 pounds
of bark,
valued at
$450, to make
600 sides of
finished
leather worth
$2,000. He
employed three
men who were
paid a total
of $40
monthly.
Larkin R.
Thomas, of
present-day
Orange County,
owned a
tannery at the
Cow Bayou
settlement. In
1850, he
utilized 300
hides and
3,000 pounds
of bark, worth
$420, to
manufacture
600 sides of
leather valued
at $2,400.
Thomas paid
three
employees a
total of $45
monthly as
wages.76
Both
John Jay
French and
Larkin R.
Thomas had
ceased tannery
operations by
1860. French’s
sons, David
and John Jay,
Jr., took over
their father’s
business and
were the only
tanners in the
county at the
outbreak of
the Civil War.77
The county’s
earliest
processors of
finished
leather
included nine
shoemakers and
five saddlers
in 1850. Since
the census
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry, for
that year
listed no shoe
or saddle
shops, each
leather
processor
apparently
made his
product at his
residence.78
All of
the 1850
saddlers
resided in
present-day
Orange County,
and none were
enumerated in
the 1860
Jefferson
County census
returns.79
In 1860, nine
shoemakers,
five of whom
were European
immigrants,
resided in
Jefferson
County, but
none were
recorded in
the county’s
Schedule V
return of that
year.80
By the
1870’s, the
Jefferson
County
shoemakers
were adopting
factory
methods. In
1879, D. J.
Coleman
employed seven
men at his
Beaumont shoe
factory,
paying his
skilled
craftsmen
$3.00 and
unskilled
laborers $2.00
for a 10-hour
work day. He
operated one
leather
sewing-machine,
and utilized
during the
year 340 sides
of upper and
sole leather
valued at
$7,000.
Coleman’s
products
included 900
pairs of boots
worth $10,000
and 670 pairs
of shoes
valued at
$4,020. 81
There were
five
blacksmiths in
Jefferson
County in
1850,82
and
eight in 1860.
During the
latter year,
Isaiah Junker
and Gabriel
Landrum were
blacksmiths at
Beaumont,
Leopold
Gianbrun owned
a shop at
Sabine Pass,
and H. A. Reed
operated a
blacksmith
shop in the
Pine Island
community. The
county’s other
four
blacksmiths
were employed
by the Texas
and New
Orleans
Railroad at
Beaumont.83
Closely
allied to
blacksmithing
was the
wagon-making
trade, an
occupation in
which two
early
Beaumonters,
Joseph E.
Rogers and
August
Blumaier, were
engaged.84
During the
late 1830’s,
Jefferson
County began
licensing the
retailers of
liquor and
merchandise.
The county’s
“Record of
Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,”
indicates that
many merchants
failed in
business, and
that only a
few stores
survived
during the
antebellum
years.
Licenses could
be obtained
for one year
or for as
little as four
months. It is
also apparent
that the
licensing
ordinances
were
frequently
evaded. Some
merchants, who
functioned
continuously
over long
periods,
obtained one
license, but
did not bother
to renew it;
other
merchants are
not recorded
at all. The
county’s early
“Criminal
Docket Book”
verifies that
liquor dealers
could expect
prompt
punitive
action for
non-compliance,
but only one
merchant was
brought to
court. The
case against
Dr. Niles F.
Smith, who
began and sold
many
businesses at
Sabine, was
nol-prossed in
1844, and the
physician
dutifully paid
his fees
thereafter.85
After Henry
Millard moved
to Galveston
in 1842, his
store passed
to Sidney H.
Millard and
his
brother-in-law,
George Bryan,
who paid the
license fees
continuously
until May 8,
1846, the
approximate
date that
Bryan moved to
Galveston. The
firm’s name
was then
changed to J.
P.
Pulsifer
and Company, a
partnership
composed of
Pulsifer and
Dr. J. 0.
Millard, which
continued
until the
latter’s
death.86
As of
1850, the
business was
conducted in
the only
two-story
building in
Beaumont.87
In
1849-1850,
Jefferson
County leased
the building’s
second story
from Pulsifer
and Millard
for use as a
courthouse.88
In 1838, Simon
Wiess, a
former
Nacogdoches
merchant,
floated a
keelboat
loaded with
cotton to
Sabine Lake,
after which he
founded a
grocery store
on the Neches
River at
Beaumont. In
1839, Wiess
sold out to
his clerk
William P.
Herring, and
began another
store at
Grigsby’s
Bluff.89
In
December,
1839, Wiess
formed a
mercantile
partnership
with Dr. John
A. Veatch and
settled
permanently
thereafter at
Wiess Bluff in
southwest
Jasper County.90
License
records
indicate that
William P.
Herring paid
his store fees
regularly,
beginning in
1841.91
By 1851, he
was engaged in
cotton-buying
and ginning at
his location
at the foot of
Pearl Street,92
and
prospered
until his
death in l859.93
Two brothers,
James R. and
Michael
Alexander,
purchased the
Herring
grocery and
operated it
until 1861,
when they sold
out to Isaiah
Junker.94
License
records reveal
that other
Beaumont
merchants were
less
successful. In
1840, G.
Winslow and L.
Czarnikow,
early Houston
merchants,
paid a $200
merchandising
fee for a
store in
Beaumont, but
failed to
renew their
license a year
later.95
In 1841
and 1842,
Alexander
Calder paid
annual $100
retail fees to
sell
merchandise in
Beaumont. In
1842, George
Anthony Nixon,
the former
land
commissioner
at Nacogdoches
for the
Galveston Bay
and Texas Land
Company, paid
a $250 retail
fee for a
store at
Beaumont, but
allowed his
license to
lapse upon
expiration.96
There are
several
descriptions
of Beaumont’s
antebellum
business
community. In
October, 1856,
K. D. Keith,
upon arriving
to manage W.
A. Ferguson’s
new hardware
store, roomed
at Cave
Johnson’s
hotel. Keith
recalled that
Beaumont
contained:
…two stores —
one owned by
Mr. W. P.
Herring, the
other owned by
Herring and
Ruff.97
The Herrings
were brothers.
I found one
saloon owned
and managed by
C. H. Ruff,
brother of the
merchant. One
blacksmith
shop owned by
Isaiah Junker.
A ferry across
the river in
the northern
part of town,
owned by Mrs.
Hutchinson.
One sawmill on
Brake’s Bayou,
north of town,
owned by
William
Phillips …
There was one
doctor, G. W.
Hawley, who
owned a drug
store.98
There were two
lawyers in
town, John
Calhoun
Robertson and
Walking Gray.99
Walking was a
nickname given
to Mr. Gray
because he
walked around
the circuit to
attend the
courts…100
In 1854,
Frederick
Olmsted spent
the night at
Beaumont’s
“very
tolerable
little village
hotel,” and
crossed the
Neches River
on the
Hutchinson and
Collier’s
ferries.101
As early
as 1843,
Joseph and
Nancy Tevis
Hutchinson had
been licensed
to operate a
“public
boarding house
in Beaumont.”102
In 1856, a
roving
Galveston Weekly
News correspondent
observed that
Beaumont
contained:
…twenty-four
families all
told, two
doctors, two
lawyers, two
merchants, one
grocery, one
wagon shop,
one blacksmith
shop, one
carpenter
shop, one
apothecary
shop, one
school …
one
steam mill and
another going
up, one
shoemaker, and
one
substantial
courthouse,
which is an
ornament to
the town. The
dwelling
houses are
handsome,
frame
buildings,
built of
cypress which
is found here
in abundance…103
Two months
later, the
same reporter
added that:
…Some new
buildings are
going up, and
the town seems
to be shaking
the accustomed
dreariness. A
heavy
mercantile
firm [W. A.
Ferguson’s]
has just been
opened for the
accommodation
of the
upcountry
people, making
the third
establishment
of the kind in
the place.
Cotton is
coming in from
the upper
counties, and
the streets
are daily
filled with
wagons, coming
and returning
with alternate
loads of
cotton,
merchandise,
and groceries…104
The fall of
1856 also
witnessed
perhaps the
largest
eastbound
cattle
movements
through
Beaumont.
Correspondent
Henry R. Green
reported in
November that:
…from accounts
kept at this
place, it
appears that
fifteen
thousand head
of beef cattle
have crossed
the river here
this fall en
route to New
Orleans. They
come in from
all
directions,
but mostly
from the San
Antonio,
Guadalupe, and
Colorado
Rivers. Three
droves came in
last night
from Refugio
County… These
animals seem
to lose
nothing in
flesh from
their long
march and are
the finest
specimens of
cattle that I
have ever
seen. The
animals have
been passing
almost daily
for about five
weeks, and
still they
come…105
License
records
indicate that
numerous
persons paid
fees to “hawk
and peddle”
door-to-door
in the
countryside.
During the
1840’s, fees
were paid by
John Fabrigas,
Mordecai
Primrose,
Jacques
Noguess, Simon
Goldman, Hadon
Graham and
Company, and
others.106
On one
occasion, the
traveler
Olmsted
encountered
the “mud-cart
of a grocery
peddler whose
wheels were
broad blocks
sawn from a
log.”107
The history of
some early
firms is
closely linked
to the
shipping
industry. Some
merchants
entered
business and
later found it
necessary to
acquire a
schooner or
steamboat on
which to ship
cotton and
other
commodities.
Hence, many
pioneer
merchants
doubled as
ship captains.
Orange’s
second
merchant of
record,
Captain
Christian
Warner,
operated the
sloop William
Wallace in
the Sabine
Lake-to-Galveston
trade for
several years
before opening
his store
adjacent to
Delano’s
shingle mill.108
During a
voyage in
February,
1844, he
carried 4,000
barrel staves
and 56,000
shingles from
Green’s Bluff
to the Island
City.109
A. G. and
William Swain,
“having
located at
Green’s Bluff
… for the
purpose of
selling
merchandise,”
were the
earliest
merchants at
present-day
Orange, but
they paid no
fees after
1842.110
As of that
year, A. G.
Swain was the
deputy
collector of
customs in
charge of the
Sabine River
region.111
In 1847,
Dennis Call
began a
mercantile and
cotton
brokerage
business at
Green’s Bluff,
which
continued
until his
death in 1881.
As an exporter
and
blockade-runner,
he owned a
number of
schooners and
the steamer Dennis
Call in
the course of
his lifetime.
There is no
record,
however, that
he paid any
retail tees
prior to 1852.112
Captain
Augustine
Pavell was
another early
cotton trader,
blockade-runner,
and
merchant-sailor,
who owned the
schooner
Sophia and
a store at
Pavell’s
Island, the
delta island
in the Sabine
River.113
Many merchants
were attracted
to early-day
Sabine Pass,
but only two
were in
business
continuously
for a decade
or longer. The
first
merchant,
Augustus
Hotchkiss,
arrived with
the founding
of the Sabine
City Company
in January,
1839, and
began
exporting
cotton. He
remained until
1842, when he
returned to
Sabinetown.114
The second,
Stephen H.
Everett, a
Jasper County
resident who
surveyed the
town site City
of the Pass in
1839, enjoyed
a lucrative
cotton trade
as well, prior
to his death
of yellow
fever at New
Orleans in
1845.115
Niles F.
Smith’s
merchandising
activities are
chronicled in
numerous deed
and newspaper
records, the
earliest being
dated in
March, 1842,
the year of
Hotchkiss’
departure.116
His
licenses to
retail liquors
and
merchandise
are continuous
from 1844,
when he was
indicted for
unlicensed
retailing,
until 1852.117
After S. H.
Everett’s
death in 1845,
a number of
San Augustine
residents
opened cotton
commission
businesses at
Sabine.
Matthew
Nicholson came
in 1845 and
remained two
years. Two
partners, John
Burke and John
Perry,
forwarded
cotton at
Sabine from
1846 until
1848.118
In 1847,
Captain
Alanson
Canfield, the
founder-publisher
of San
Augustine Redlander,
settled at
Sabine, where
he operated a
cotton
brokerage and
mercantile
firm.119
Beginning in
1847, the
latter four
men felt the
brisk
competition
preferred by
two newcomers
from
Galveston,
John H.
Hutchings and
John Sealy.
Nicholson,
Burke, and
Perry soon
returned to
San Augustine,
and in August,
1850, Canfield
sold out to
Sealy and
moved to
Matagorda.120
During 1848,
the
Nacogdoches Times
carried
each week the
advertisements
of Sabine
commission
merchants A.
W. Canfield,
Border and
Brothers,
Isaac B.
Bailey, and
Hutchings,
Sealy, Simpson
and Company.
Border and
Brothers
remained in
business about
one year and
returned to
San Augustine.
Bailey died in
1850 and his
assets were
liquidated.121
In
1849, Bondies,
Roehte and
Company
operated
.stores at
Nacogdoches
and Sabine. In
1853, Captain
Bondies closed
his stores and
moved his
steamboat Kate
to the
Trinity River
trade.122
In 1853,
Captain John
Clements, who
shipped cotton
from
Bevilport,
Jasper County,
aboard his
steamer Pearl
Plant,
purchased the
“large and
commodious
warehouse at
Sabine
formerly
occupied” by
John G. Berry
and Hugh
Ochiltree.123
Otis
McGaffey, who
opened a store
at Sabine Pass
in 1847, was
the lone
merchant
survivor when
the seven-year
Hutchings and
Sealy era
ended.124
Arriving at
Sabine with a
credit
consignment of
goods from
their former
employer,
Henry
Hubbell, the
Galveston
partners
joined with
Niles F. Smith
to found
Hutchings,
Scaly, Smith
and Company in
1847.125
In May, 1848,
Smith sold his
interest to
his realty
associate,
William M.
Simpson, and
the store
became
Hutchings,
Scaly, Simpson
and Company
until the
latter partner
sold out and
returned to
Nacogdoches.126
Having
realized a
$50,000 profit
in gold, the
shrewd traders
returned to
the Island
City in 1854,127
and shortly
afterward, a
new firm,
Ferguson,
Alexander and
Company of
Jasper,
occupied the
Galveston
titans’ former
site on the
Pass. W. A.
Ferguson
dissolved his
interest in
the store in
1857, leaving
C. H.
Alexander and
Company to
become the
largest
trading firm
at Sabine.128
In 1857, K. D.
Keith settled
at Sabine
Pass, where he
married a
daughter of
Otis McGaffey
and bought a
half-interest
in his
father-in-law’s
store, •one of
the town’s two
cotton
brokerage
firms as of
that year. In
1859, upon
assuming the
Sabine agency
for the Morgan
Steamship
Lines,
McGaffey sold
out to John
Craig.
McGaffey
reentered the
business in
1861, when
Craig opened a
store in
Beaumont.129
Keith
described the
Sabine Pass of
1857 as a
“small village
of 250
inhabitants …
The houses
were all of
wood and
strung along
the Pass …
There was not
a doctor or
lawyer in the
place, but the
people were
the happiest,
most social,
healthy, and
generous of
people I ever
saw.”130
The increase
of upcountry
cotton (18,000
bales arrived
in 1859) and
the
construction
of the East
Texas Railroad
brought a
sudden influx
of population
which reached
about 500
freemen and
100 slaves by
July, 1860,
and about
1,500 persons
in 1861.131
One
description of
1858 observed
that there
were “four
commission and
forwarding
houses, four
dry goods
stores, one
tin shop, one
blacksmith
shop, one
gunsmith, two
retailing
groceries, two
hotels … three
wharves
forty-five
families,
forty-odd
voters … [and]
some 400
inhabitants”
in the
community.132
Describing the
antebellum
seaport,
Captain E. I.
Kellie, who
had been a
printer’s
devil for the
Sabine Pass Times
in 1860,
wrote that:
…Among the
merchants were
C. H.
Alexander,
Craig and
Keith, Otis
McGaffey, Tom
Snow,
Edmondson and
Culmell, and
others. They
all did a big
business. Just
before the war
broke out,
Sabine Pass
was -on a
veritable
boom. People
were flocking
there from all
over Texas.
Many handsome
residences and
large store
buildings were
going up.
Among the
newcomers were
Eddy and
Adams, who
established a
wholesale
house equally
as large as
any in Texas.
John McRae was
another large
concern, and
the general
opinion was
that Sabine
Pass was going
to be THE city
of Texas.133
There were
other
merchants who
owned
businesses for
short periods
during the
late 1850’s.
These included
Sidney J.
Sweet, Abel
Coffin, Jr.,
Julius
Kaufman,
Charles H.
Ruff, Thomas
B. Whiting, R.
F. Green,
Charles
Hotchkiss, and
Wesley Garner.134
Dr.
James D.
Murray and
Jerome
Swinford owned
drug stores
there, and
Renaldo
Hotchkiss and
Joseph Martin
operated
saloons.135
The
Catfish Hotel
and
Restaurant,
located on the
Pass, was
perhaps the
best-known
establishment,
particularly
popular among
mariners.136
With the
outbreak of
war, however,
the town’s
export
commerce,
except
blockade-running,
ceased
abruptly, and
most of the
merchants had
closed their
doors and
moved away by
September,
1862.
All available
evidence
suggests that
the decade of
the 1850’s was
the most
prosperous in
Jefferson
County’s
nineteenth-century
history. At
the precise
moment when
the county’s
economic
forces were
girding to
expand, a
double
calamity, war
and the
dreaded
“yellow jack,”
halted all
progress.
Yellow fever
caused a
hundred deaths
at Beaumont
and Sabine and
the flight of
hundreds of
people from
the county.
The death of
its economy,
the loss of
population,
and the ashes
of defeat
became the
fragile ground
upon which the
Civil War’s
survivors in
Jefferson
County were
forced to
rebuild during
the
Reconstruction
epoch. And an
entire decade
expired before
the county
regained its
antebellum
economic
level.
 |
SIMON
WIESS—Principally
a Jasper
County figure,
Simon Wiess
became the
second
merchant at
Beaumont in
1838 and the
first at Port
Neches in
1839. He lived
at Wiess Bluff
after 1840,
but greatly
influenced the
county’s
history.
|
 |
OTIS McGAFFEY
— A successful
merchant from
1846 until
1878, Otis
McGaffey was
Sabine’s lone
cotton broker
to survive the
John Sealy-J.
H. Hutchings
epoch which
ended in 1854.
He held many
public offices
during his
lifetime.
|
End Notes
1Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County
Schedule IV,
Products of
Agriculture,
Seventh Census
of the United
States, 1850.
2Volume
F, pp.
168-169, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
3In
1829, Stephen
F. Austin’s
colony
contained “one
steam sawmill
and a number
of other mills
and cotton
gins.” By
1830, William
Harris and
Robert Wilson
had erected a
“molino de
vapor” on the
“Rio Buffalo.”
See letters,
Austin to T.
F. Leaming,
May 13, 1829
and Austin to
Ramon Musquiz,
June 14, 1830,
in E. W.
Winkler (ed.),
Manuscript
Letters and
Documents of
Early Texians,
1821-1845 (Austin:
Steck Company,
19371. pp.
83, 93. By
1835, there
were a number
of steam mills
on Buffalo
Bayou,
including one
owned by David
G. Burnet and
Norman Hurd.
In December,
1837, the
Velasco Steam
Sawmill and
Manufacturing
Company
advertised for
10,000 saw
logs to be
delivered at
its mill on
the Brazos
River. See
(Brazoria,
Texas) The
People, April
18, 1838; W.
F. Gray, From
Virginia To
Texas, 1835:
Diary of
Colonel
William Gray (reprint;
Houston:
Fletcher Young
Publishing
Company,
1965), p. 146;
Visit To
Texas: Being
The Journal of
A Traveler
(reprint; Ann
Arbor:
University
Microfilms,
Inc., 1966),
pp. 74-75; A.
W. Williams
and E. C.
Barker, The
Writings of
Sam Houston,
1813-1863 (8
volumes;
Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1970),
II, 103. The
earliest
record however
of a powered
sawmill in
Texas was on
Ayish Bayou in
San Augustine
County. Wyatt
Hariks built a
water-powered
mill there in
1826. By 1842,
only the ruins
of the mill
dam remained.
See (Houston)
Morning
Star, February
1, 1842.
4Volume
D, pp. 40-47,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
5lbid,
p. 47.
6H
P. N. Gamniel
(compiler), The
Laws of Texas,
1822-189 7
(10 volumes
Austin: Gammel
Book Company,
1898), II, p.
13.
7Volume
B, pp.
201-202, 222,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
8“Quarterly
Return” R. C.
Doom to the
Secretary of
the Treasury,
June 30 and
September 30,
1839, Sabine
Bay Customs
Records, File
4-21/10 Texas
State
Archives; ibid.,
“Quarterly
Return,” N. F.
Smith,
Collector,
April 30,
1843.
9(Galveston)
Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, December
3, 1843.
10Florence
Stratton, The
Story of
Beaumont (Houston:
Hercules
Printing
Company,
1925), pp.
133-134.
11Beaumont
Journal, June
12, 1914.
12Stratton,
Story of
Beaumont, pp.
132-133.
13”Annlysis
of the 1850
Census,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
p. 70.
14George
L. Crocket, Two
Centuries in
East Texas: A
History of San
Augustine
County and
Surrounding
Territory (Dallas:
Southwest
Press, 1962),
pp. 111, 114.
15Agreement,
Sweet and Neal
McGaffey,
March 8, 1846,
Volume F, p.
209, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County Texas;
Partnership
Contract and
Indenture,
Sweet and
William M.
Simpson, Deed
Records, San
Augustine
County, Texas,
copies owned
by the writer.
16Volume
F, pp.
166-167, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
17Volume.
F pp. 168-169
Deed Records
Jefferson
County, Texas;
(Nacogdoches)
Times, January
20, 1849.
18Volume
G, pp. 157,
164, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
19Files
87 and 87-A,
Estate of
Sidney A.
Sweet, 1849,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
20Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1850.
21Volume
L, pp.
571-572, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
22Volume
L, pp.
573-574, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860, p. 56,
residence 340;
Thomas A.
Wilson, Some
Early
Southeast
Texas Families
(Houston:
Lone Star
Press, 1965),
pp. 12-13.
23Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1860.
24Sabine
Pass (Texas) News,
February
23, 1899;
(Galveston) Weekly
News, August
14, 1860.
25Sabine
Pass News,
February
23, 1899; “The
First Sawmill
in East Texas
Built at
Sabine,’
Beaumont Enterprise,
January
22, 1928.
26War
of The
Rebellion: A
Compilation of
The Official
Records of The
Union and
Confederate
Navies (Washington
D. C.:
Government
Printing
Office, 1894-1
927), Series
I, Volume XIX,
pp. 222-223.
27Official
Records,
Navies,
Series I,
Volume XIX,
pp. 227-228;
H. N. Conner,
“The Diary of
H. N. Conner,”
unpublished
manuscript, p.
4, copy owned
by Dr. Haskell
Monroe, Texas
A & M
University.
28Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I,
Population p.
62, residences
381, 385;
Schedule II,
Slaves; and
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry;
Volumes L, p.
387, and Q, p.
249, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
29A.
W. Spaight,
“History of
Spaight’s
Texas
Regiment,” as
supplied to
the Adjutant
General’s
office,
January 18,
1881, in A. W.
Spaight
Papers, File
2G276,
University of
Texas library,
Austin, Texas.
30Volume
C, pp. 120,
126, 131, 142,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
31Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, Texas
1860. Schedule
I, Population,
p. 14,
residence 106,
and Schedule
V, Products of
Industry,
Microfilm Reel
No. 46, Texas
State
Archives.
32Volume
P, p. 246,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
33Ibid,
Volume Q,
pp. 352, 404,
545.
34File
45-B, Estate
of C. H.
Alexander,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
35Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
1870 Schedule
I Population
p. 14,
residences
107, 108, and
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
Microfilm Reel
No. 46, Texas
State
Archives.
36Volume
L, p. 8, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
37Ibid,
p. 77; K.
D. Keith,
“Memoirs of
Captain K. D.
Keith,”
unpublished
manuscript,
February,
1896, p. 12.
38Volumes
L, p. 292 and
M, pp. 134,
483, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
39Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1860.
40Stratton,
Story of
Beaumont, p.
134.
41Keith,
“Memoirs of
Captain K. D.
Keith,”
unpublished
manuscript, p.
22.
42Volume
N, pp.
276-277, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
43Ibid,
Volume T,
p. 210.
44(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
December 8,
1857; Volume
B, p. 246,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
45(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
February 20,
1859; Volume
B, pp.
226-229,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
August 1,
1908; H. A.
Perlstine,
“Map of
Beaumont,”
1889,
University of
Texas library,
Austin, Texas.
46Volume
M, p. 113,
Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
47Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I,
Population, p.
51, residence
305; Charles
R. Walker,
“Spaight’s
Battalion, C.
S. A.,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VIII
(November,
1972), p. 36.
48File
139, Estate of
James Long,
1873, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
July 1
and November
4, 1906;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedules V,
Products of
Industry, 1870,
1880, Microfilm
Reels Nos. 46
and 48, Texas
State
Archives; W.
T. Block
(ed.),
“Documents of
The Early
Sawmilling
Epoch,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, IX
(November,
1973), pp. 51,
54-55.
49Beaumont
Journal, April
23, 1905.
50Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1860.
51Volume
M, p. 375,
Deed Records
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
April 23,
1905.
52Volume
P, p. 313 Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
April 23,
1905.
53Volumes
P, pp.
307-310, Q p.
265, and 5,
pp. 191-195,
420-423, Deed
Records
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
April 23,
1905.
54Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1850.
55Ibid,
Orange
County, Texas,
1860.
56Texas
Almanac, 1859
(Galveston:
Richardson and
Company,
1860), p. 150;
Works Progress
Administration,
Inventory
of the County
Archives of
Texas: No.
181, Orange
County (San
Antonio: Texas
Historical
Records
Survey, 1941),
p.7.
57(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
February 22,
1844.
58(Nacogdoches)
Chronicle,
August
16, 1853.
59(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
June 7, 1856.
60(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
May 10, 1859.
61Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule VI,
Social
Statistics,
1850. In the
census
schedules of
1850-1860,
numerous
steamboat
pilots,
captains, and
engineers are
listed as
carpenters.
Census
enumeration
was usually
conducted
between June
and October,
the off-season
for steam
boating.
62Volume
K, p. 94, Deed
Records
Jefferson
County Texas;
William M.
Simpson, “Map
of The Town
Site of Sabine
Pass,” 1847,
copy owned by
the writer;
Perlstine,
“Map of
Beaumont,”
1889,
University of
Texas library.
Sweet’s
shipyard at
Sabine Pass
occupied Block
1, Range 1 of
the town site.
Spartan
sawmill was
located on
Block 1, Range
2. All
steamboats
known to have
been built in
Beaumont were
constructed on
Brake’s Bayou
in the sawmill
district.
63Volume
G, pp.
100-101, and
K, p. 94, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
64Ibid,
Volume G,
pp. 214-2 15.
65Volume
G, p. 199,
Deed Records,
and File 96,
Estate of I.
B. Bailey,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
Jones’
shipyard was
described as
containing
“ways and
grabs for
hauling out
vessels,
storehouse,
wharf,
cistern, and
Fence together
with four
3-fold
purchase
blocks on the
yard, and fall
rope not less
than …
1,000
pounds with
the necessary
anchor chains
and small
blocks, small
cordage,
carpenter
bench, tools
and ship
tools,
crosscut saw,
bellows, and
anvil with all
other
appurtenances.”
See p. 199.
66Volume
K, pp. 94,
434-435,
460-461, Deed
Records, and
B, pp.
188-191,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
File 110,
Estate of W.
L. Hurd 1856
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
“Analysis of
the 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
pp. 115-117,
residences
197, 202, 204.
Census and
deed records
are vague, but
strongly imply
that a
shipbuilding
firm existed
on Block 1,
Range 3, on
the north side
of the Spartan
sawmill. See
Volumes V, p.
217; H, pp.
259-261; and
M, pp. 54-55,
362-363, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
67Admiralty
court lawsuit,
Charles Baxter
Versus Captain
John Pedersen
(for
indebtedness
of schooner Creole
built at
Orange in
January,
1846),
recorded in
(Galveston) Weekly
News, February
11, 1850;
Volume F, p.
161, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
68Volume
A, p. 69,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
69Manuscript
Returns of
Orange County,
Texas,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1860. In 1860,
Baxter was
listed as a
ship carpenter
in the census
and lived at
Grigsby’s
Bluff.
70(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
June 2, 1857
and June 8,
1858.
71Volume
B, pp.
223-234,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
72J.
P. Landers,
“Valentine
Burch,” Texana,
III
(Summer 1965),
p. 109. This
was the second
steamer named
Albert
Gallatin. See
Chapter VII,
footnote 83.
73Beaumont
Enterprise,
January
8, 1933. There
was some
antebellum
shipbuilding
at other
points on the
upper Neches.
In 1853,
Pipkin,
Shipman and
Company of
Bevilport
built the
steamer Tom
Shark. See
(Nacogdoches)
Chronicle,
February
1, 1853. In
1857, the
steamboat T.
J. Smith was
built by Smith
and Force at
Town Bluff.
See
(Galveston) Weekly
News, December
15, 1857.
74Volume
I pp. 101-102,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population
1860 p. 53
residence 323;
File 45-B,
Estate of C.
H. Alexander,
1872, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
75Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1870,
Microfilm Reel
No. 46, Texas
State
Archives.
76“Analysis
of the 1850
Census,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
p. 69.
77Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population p.
66, residences
411, 412, and
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry.
78“Analysis
of the 1850
Census,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII,
pp, 66, 72.
79Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedules I
and V, 1860;
ibid, Orange
County,
Schedule V p.
1. In 1859,
David Harmon
of Orange, who
formerly was a
Jefferson
County
resident,
manufactured
one hundred
Spanish
saddles valued
at $2,000.
80Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860, pp.
45-72,
residences
279, 295, 331,
335, 390, 391,
416, 444.
81Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1880,
Microfilm Reel
No. 48, Texas
State
Archives.
82“Analysis
of the 1850
Census,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII,
pp. 66, 72.
83Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860, pp.
43-69,
residences
269, 295, 301,
311, 400, 420.
84Ibid
pp. 44,
73, residences
273, 444.
85Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
pages
unnumbered,
and Criminal
Docket Books,
1839-1864,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
86Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
87George
W. O’Brien,
“Early Days in
Beaumont,”
Beaumont Enterprise,
April 16,
1905.
88Volume
A, pp,
133-134,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
89John
H. Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas (Austin:
L. E. Daniel,
189?), pp.
473-476;
Beaumont Journal,
February
17 and March
3, 1907; June
12, 1914,
December 15,
1930; Beaumont
Enterprise,
January
13, 1946; W.
T. Block,
“From Cotton
Bales to Black
Gold: A
History of The
Pioneer Wiess
Families of
Southeastern
Texas “
Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VIII
(November,
1972), pp.
43-44.
90Volume
C, pp.
347-349, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
91Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
92Volume
I, p. 1, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
93File
97, Estate of
Sarah Herring,
Probate
Records, and
Original
Probate,
Final,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
94Beaumont
Journal, August
1, 1908.
95Letter,
Winslow and
Czarnikow to
the Treasurer
of Jefferson
County,
October 23
1840, Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851;
Volume b, p.
174, Deed
Records.
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Gifford White
(ed.), The
1840. Census
of the
Republic of
Texas (Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1966),
p. 97.
96Letters
A. Calder to
the Treasurer
of Jefferson
County, March
23, 1841 and
March 24,
1842, and
George A.
Nixon to the
Treasurer of
Jefferson
County,
Beaumont, May
2, 1842,
Record of
Retail
Licenses,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
97John
J. Herring and
Otto Ruff, who
were wed,
respectively,
to Sarah and
‘Lucinda
Calder formed
a realty
partnership in
1854 which
quickly
expanded into
a general
mercantile
firm. Charles
H. Ruff became
the third
partner in the
business in
1861. See Ruff
and Herring
partnership
indenture,
June 1, 1861,
Volume M, p.
536, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
98George
W. and Mary
Hawley were
among the
wealthiest
($81,500) of
antebellum
Jefferson
County’s
citizens. They
settled at
Sabine Pass in
1847, where in
1851, they
purchased a
grocery,
bowling alley,
and drug store
from Dr. Niles
F. Smith.
About 1854,
Dr. Hawley
acquired
considerable
real estate in
and moved to
Beaumont. As
of the 1860
census, Mary
Hawley was
enumerated at
the residence
of her
children at
Sabine. Pass
and possibly
resided there
to manage
their
extensive
business
properties at
Sabine and
Galveston. She
and her
husband died
during the
yellow fever
epidemic at
Beaumont in
1862. See
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I,
pp. 45, 51,
residences
282, 309;
Beaumont Journal,
February
25, 1906;
Volume I, pp.
92-93, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
99Judge
E. A. M. Gray.
See Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County 1860
Schedule I, p.
41, residence
259; Beaumont
Journal, June
6, 1908.
100K.
D. Keith,
“Memoirs of
Captain K. D.
Keith,”
unpublished
manuscript,
February,
1896, p. 12.
101Frederick
L. Olmsted, Journey
through Texas:
a Saddle-Trip
on the
Southern
Frontier
(reprint;
Austin: Von
Boeckman-Jones
Press, 1962),
p. 237.
102Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
103Galveston)
Weekly
News,
September 30,
1856.
104(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
December 2,
1856. As of
December,
1856, the
steamboats Doctor
Massie and
Mary Falvey
were both
upriver on the
Neches River,
buying cotton.
In February,
1856, the
former vessel
sank near Town
Bluff, Tyler
County, and
blocked the
river until
raised,
probably
accounting for
the heavy
wagon-freighting
of cotton to
Beaumont
during the
fall of 1856.
See
(Galveston) Weekly
News, May
27, 1856 and
March 7, 1857.
105(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
December 2,
1856.
106Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
107Olmsted,
Journey
through Texas,
p. 228.
108Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County Texas;
“Entrances and
Clearances,”
October 31,
1843, Sabine
Bay Customs
Records File
4-21/10, Texas
State
Archives.
Warner paid
retail lees
from 1845
until Orange
County was
separated in
1852.
109(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
February 22,
1844.
110Letters,
A. G. and W.
Swain to the
Treasurer
September 4,
1840 and
September 1,
1841, Record
of Retail
Licenses,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
111Robert
E. Crane, “The
History of The
Revenue
Service and
Commerce of
The Republic
of Texas,”
unpublished
dissertation,
The University
of Texas,
1950, p. 283.
112(Orange)
Tribune,
February 22,
1884; Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas, pp.
467-469;
“Analysis of
the 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
105.
113Manuscript
Returns of
Orange County,
1860, Schedule
I, Population,
p. 28,
residence
191;Will and
Testament of
A. Pavell,
1867, Volume
162, p. 378,
Deed Records,
Galveston
County, Texas;
(Galveston) Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, November
23, 1865. As
of 1850,
Thomas Blake
was the only
innkeeper
enumerated at
Green’s Bluff.
Orange’s
innkeepers of
1853 were H.
B. Force and
John M.
Taylor. See
(Nacogdoches)
Chronicle,
August 16,
1853.
114(Galveston)
Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, November
4, 1840 and
April 16,
1842; Volume
D, pp.
154-155, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Crocket, Two
Centuries in
East Texas, p.
219.
115(Galveston)
Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, November
4, 1840; (New
Orleans)
Weekly
Picayune, February
24, 1840;
White (ed.), The
1840 Census, p.
98; Volume D,
pp. 27-31,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
116Volume
F, pp, 171-172
and I, pp.
92-93, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
117Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851, and
Criminal
Indictment No.
11, Republic
of Texas
Versus Niles
F. Smith,
Volume A p.
43, Minute
Book, District
Court,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
“Quarterly
Return of
Exports,”
April 30 and
July 31, 1845,
Sabine Bay
Customs
Records, File
4-21/10, Texas
State
Archives.
118(San
Augustine) Redlander,
November
6, 13, 20 and
December 18,
1845; February
12 and April
2, 9, 1846;
Volume E, p.
372, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
“Abstract of
Imposts,”
January 31,
1845, and
“Quarterly
Return of
Exports,”
April 30,
1845, Sabine
Bay Customs
Records, File
4-21/10, Texas
State
Archives;
(Houston) Morning
Star, April
24, 1845.
119Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851;
“The 1850
Census of
Jefferson
County,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII,
p. 115. See
issues of the
San Augustine
Redlander prior
to 1846 for
the events of
Canfield’s
life. While he
was publisher,
the
influential Redlander
became one
of three
newspapers
unofficially
regarded as
the voice of
the Texas
Republic.
120Volume
I, pp.
160-161, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Crocket, Two
Centuries in
East Texas, pp.
2 45-246.
121(Nacogdoches)
Times,
April 22, 29,
June 3, 17,
24, and July
8, 1848; File
96, Estate of
I. B. Bailey,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
122(Nacogdoches)
Times,
March 17, 24,
1849:
(Nacogdoches)
Chronicle,
August 7,
1852 and
November 8,
185
123(Nacogdoches)
Chronicle,
October
30, 1852 and
December 6,
13, 1853.
After selling
out at Sabine,
Hugh Ochiltree
settled at
Orange in 1854
and eventually
became the
largest
merchant
there.
124Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
125History
of Texas
Together With
A Biographical
History of The
Cities of
Houston and
Galveston (Chicago:
Lewis Printing
Company,
1895), pp.
303-305,
713-714; The
University of
Texas Medical
Branch at
Galveston: A
75-Year
History (Austin:
University of
Texas Press,
1967), p 15.
126(Galveston)
Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, June
2, 1848;
(Galveston) Weekly
News, October
27, 1848;
(Nacogdoches)
Times, July
8, 1848.
127Brown,
Indian Wars
and Pioneers
of Texas, pp.
149, 152.
128(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
March 7, 1857;
Volume B, p.
172, Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Volumes L, p.
194, and M,
pp. 132-133,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
March 4,
1906.
129Keith,
“Memoirs of
Captain K. D.
Keith,”
unpublished
manuscript,
1896, pp.
13-16.
130Ibid.,
p. 15.
131Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County
Schedule I,
1860, pp.
51-62,
residences
306-381, and
Schedule II.
Both Keith and
Captain E. I.
Kellie
estimated
Sabine’s
population as
totaling 5,000
in 1861.
However, the
writer rejects
their figure
as an
exaggeration.
While
conceding that
the town was
booming, there
were neither
businesses nor
industries to
support 5,000
persons nor
enough high
land to house
them. Most of
the land along
the Sabine
Pass is
artificial,
built up from
channel spoil
dredged since
1875.
132(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
September 21,
1858.
133E
I. Kellie,
“Sabine Pass
in Olden
Times,”
Beaumont Enterprise,
April 16,
1905. Kellie
overlooked
Joseph McCarty
and R. F.
Green, the
latter, who
died in 1861,
being one of
Sabine largest
merchants. At
the Civil
War’s end,
only Alexander
and Company
and Keith and
McGaffey
remained.
McRae, Z. W.
Eddy, Samuel
Adams Charles
Culmell, and
others moved
away. Tom Snow
died in 1865,
and H. V. C.
Edmondson was
killed during
the siege of
Vicksburg.
Alexander died
in 1872. Keith
moved away
when he lost
his business
and steamboat
Orleans during
a severe
hurricane in
1871. McGaffey
the last of
antebellum
merchants
closed his
store in 1878
and settled at
Luling. See
Volumes L, p.
194 and M, pp.
132-133, 510,
575-575, Deed
Records, and
C, pp. 76-77,
Personal
Property
Records, and
Files 45-B,
63, 82, and
205, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
134Volume
L, p. 200,
312-314, and
M, pp.
132-133, Deed
Records, and
C, pp. 34-35,
Personal
Property
Records, and
File 82,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860,
residences
309, 330, 335,
338.
135Volume
C, pp. 34-35,
Personal
Property
Records, and
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860,
residences
314, 317, 351.
136(Houston)
Tri-Weekly
Telegraph. November
5, 1862;
Beaumont Journal,
March 4,
1906;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
1860, p. 55,
residence 335;
“Scrappy Kate
Dorman Left
Mark at
Sabine,”
Beaumont Enterprise,
August 18,
1974.
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