April, 1863.
1st, 1863.
Anchored at 8.30 P. M., three miles from the mouth of the
Rio Grande, or
Rio Bravo del Norte, which is, I believe, its more correct name, in the midst of about seventy merchant vessels.
2d April, 1863.
The
Texan and I left the
Immortalite, in her cutter, at 10 A. M., and crossed the bar in fine style.
The cutter was steered by
Mr. Johnston, the master, and having a fair wind, we passed in like a flash of lightning, and landed at the miserable village of
Bagdad, on the
Mexican bank of the
Rio Grande.
The bar was luckily in capital order-3 1/2 feet of water, and smooth.
It is often impassable for ten or twelve days together: the depth of water varying from 2 to 5 feet. It is very dangerous, from the heavy surf and under-current; sharks also abound.
Boats are frequently capsized in crossing it, and the
Orlando lost a man on it about a month ago.
Seventy vessels are constantly at anchor outside the bar; their cotton cargoes being brought to them, with very great delays, by two small steamers from
Bagdad.
These steamers draw only 3 feet of water, and realize an enormous profit.
Bagdad consists of a few miserable wooden shanties,
[
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which have sprung into existence since the war began.
For an immense distance endless bales of cotton are to be seen.
Immediately we landed,
McCarthy was greeted by his brother merchants.
He introduced me to
Mr. Ituria, a Mexican, who promised to take me in his buggy to
Brownsville, on the
Texan bank of the river opposite
Matamoros.
McCarthy was to follow in the evening to
Matamoros.
The
Rio Grande is very tortuous and shallow; the distance by river to
Matamoros is sixty-five miles, and it is navigated by steamers, which sometimes perform the trip in twelve hours, but more often take twenty-four, so constantly do they get aground.
The distance from
Bagdad to
Matamoros by land is thirty-five miles; on the
Texan side to
Brownsville, twenty-six miles.
I crossed the river from
Bagdad with
Mr. Ituria, at 11 o'clock; and as I had no pass, I was taken before half-a-dozen Confederate officers, who were seated round a fire contemplating a tin of potatoes.
These officers belonged to
Duffs cavalry (
Duff being my Texan's partner). Their dress consisted simply of flannel shirts, very ancient trousers, jack-boots with enormous spurs, and black felt hats, ornamented with the “lone star of
Texas.”
They looked rough and dirty, but were extremely civil to me.
The captain was rather a boaster, and kept on
[
10]
remarking, “We've given 'em h — ll on the
Mississippi, h — l on the
Sabine” (pronounced Sabeen), “and h — l in various other places.”
He explained to me that he couldn't cross the river to see
McCarthy, as he with some of his men had made a raid over there three weeks ago, and carried away some “renegadoes,” one of whom, named Mongomery, they had
left on the road to
Brownsville; by the smiles of the other officers, I could easily guess that something very disagreeable must have happened to Mongomery.
He introduced me to a skipper who had just run his schooner, laden with cotton, from
Galveston, and who was much elated in consequence.
The cotton had cost 6 cents a pound in
Galveston, and is worth 36 here.
Mr. Ituria and I left for
Brownsville at noon. A buggy is a light gig on four high wheels.
The road is a natural one--the country quite flat, and much covered with mosquite-trees, very like pepper-trees.
Every person we met carried a six-shooter, although it is very seldom necessary to use them.
After we had proceeded about nine miles we met
General Bee, who commands the troops at
Brownsville.
He was travelling to Boca del
Rio in an ambulance,
1 with his quartermaster-general,
Major Russell.
[
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I gave him my letter of introduction to
General Magruder, and told him who I was.
He thereupon descended
from his ambulance, and regaled me with beef and beer in the open.
He is brother to the
General Bee who was killed at Manasas.
We talked politics and fraternized very amicably for more than an hour.
He said the Mongomery affair was against his sanction and he was sorry for it. He said that
Davis, another renegade, would also have been put to death, had it not been for the intercession of his wife.
General Bee had restored
Davis to the Mexicans.
Half an hour after parting company with
General Bee, we came to the spot where Mongomery had been
left; and sure enough, about two hundred yards to the left of the road, we found him.
He had been slightly buried, but his head and arms were above the ground, his arms tied together, the rope still round his neck, but part of it still dangling from quite a small mosquite-tree.
Dogs or wolves had probably scraped the earth from the body, and there was no flesh on the bones.
I obtained this my first experience of
Lynch law within three hours of landing in
America.
I understand that this Mongomery was a man of very bad character, and that, confiding in the neutrality of the
Mexican soil, he was in the habit of calling the
Confederates all sorts of insulting epithets from
[
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the Bagdad bank of the river; and a party of his “renegadoes” had also crossed over and killed some unarmed cotton teamsters, which had roused the fury of the
Confederates.
About three miles beyond this we came to
Colonel Duffs encampment.
He is a fine looking, handsome Scotchman, and received me with much hospitality.
His regiment onsisted of newly raised volunteersa very fine body of young men, who were drilling in squads.
They were dressed in every variety of costume, many of them without coats, but all wore the high black felt hat. Notwithstanding the peculiarity of their attire, there was nothing ridiculous or contemptible in the appearance of these men, who all looked thoroughly like “business.”
Colonel Duff told me that many of the privates owned vast tracts of country, with above a hundred slaves, and were extremely well of. They were all most civil to me.
Their horses were rather raw-boned animals, but hardy and fast.
The saddles they used were nearly like the
Mexican.
Colonel Duff confessed that the Mongomery affair was wrong, but he added that his boys “
meant well.”
We reached
Brownsville at 5.30 P. M., and
Mr. Ituria kindly insisted on my sleeping at his house, instead of going to the crowded hotel.
3d April, 1863 (good Friday).
At 8 A. M. I got a military
[
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pass to cross the
Rio Grande into
Mexico, which I presented to the sentry, who then allowed me to cross in the ferry-boat.
Carriages are not permitted to run on Good Friday in
Mexico, so I had a hot dusty walk of more than a mile into
Matamoros.
Mr. Zorn, the acting British Consul, and
Mr. Behnsen, his partner, invited me to live at the Consulate during my stay at
Matamoros, and I accepted their offer with much gratitude.
I was introduced to
Mr. Colville, a Manchester man; to
Mr. Maloney, one of the principal merchants; to
Mr. Bennet, an Englishman, one of the owners of the
Peterhoff, who seemed rather elated than otherwise when he heard of the capture of his vessel, as he said the case was such a gross one that our government would be obliged to take it up. I was also presented to the gobernador, rather a rough.
After dining with
Mr. Zorn I walked back to the
Rio Grande, which I was allowed to cross on presenting
Mr. Colville's pass to the
Mexican soldiers, and I slept at
Mr. Ituria's again.
Brownsville is a straggling town of about 3,000 inhabitants; most of its houses are wooden ones, and its streets are long, broad, and straight.
There are about 4,000 troops under
General Bee in its immediate vicinity.
Its prosperity was much injured when
Matamoros was declared a free port.
[
14]
After crossing the
Rio Grande, a wide dusty road, about a mile in length, leads to
Matamoros, which is a Mexican city of about 9,000 inhabitants.
Its houses are not much better than those at
Brownsville, and they bear many marks of the numerous revolutions which are continually taking place there.
Even the
British Consulate is riddled with the bullets firedin 1861-2.
The
Mexicans look very much like their Indian forefathers, their faces being extremely dark, and their hair black and straight.
They wear hats with the most enormous brims, and delight in covering their jackets and leather breeches with embroidery.
Some of the women are rather good-looking, but they plaster their heads with grease, and paint their faces too much.
Their dress is rather like the Andalusian.
When I went to the cathedral, I found it crammed with kneeling women; an effigy of our Saviour was being taken down from the cross and put into a golden coffin, the priest haranguing all the time about His sufferings, and all the women howling most dismally as if they were being beaten.
Matamoros is now infested with numbers of Jews, whose industry spoils the trade of the established merchants, to the great rage of the latter.
It suffers much from drought, and there had been no rain to speak of for eleven months.
I am told that it is a common thing in
Mexico for
[
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the diligence to arrive at its destination with the blinds down.
This is a sure sign that the travellers, both male and female, have been stripped by robbers nearly to the skin.
A certain quantity of clothing is then, as a matter of course, thrown in at the window, to enable them to descend.
Mr. Behnsen and
Mr. Maloney told me they had seen this happen several times; and
Mr. Oetling declared that he himself, with three ladies, arrived at the city of
Mexico in this predicament.
4th April, 1863 (Saturday).
I crossed the river at 9 A. M., and got a carriage at the
Mexican side to take my baggage and myself to the Consulate at
Matamoros.
The driver ill-treated his half-starved animals most cruelly.
The
Mexicans are even worse than the Spaniards in this respect.
I called on
Mr. Oetling, the
Prussian Consul, who is one of the richest and most prosperous merchants in
Matamoros, and a very nice fellow.
After dinner We went to a
fandango, or open-air fete.
About 1500 people were gambling, and dancing bad imitations of
European dances.
5th April, 1863 (Sunday).
Mr. Zorn, or Don Pablo as he is called here, Her Majesty's
acting Vice-Consul, is a quaint and most good-natured little man — a Prussian by birth.
He is overwhelmed by the sudden
[
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importance he has acquired from his office, and by the amount of work (for which he gets no pay) entailed by it,--the office of British Consul having been a comparative sinecure before the war.
Mr. Behnsen is head of the firm.
The principal place of business is at
San Luis Potosi,a considerable city in the interior of
Mexico.
All these foreign merchants complain bitterly of the persecutions and extortion they have to endure from the
Government, which are, doubtless, most annoying; but nevertheless they appear to fatten on the
Mexican soil.
I crossed to
Brownsville to see
General Bee, but he had not returned from Boca del
Rio, I dined with
Mr. Oetling.
We were about fourteen at dinner, principally Germans, a very merry party.
Mr. Oetling is supposed to have made a million of dollars for his firm, by bold cotton speculations, since the war.
We all went to the theatre afterwards.
The piece was an attack upon the
French and upon Southern institutions.
6th April, 1863 (Monday).
Mr. Behnsen and
Mr. Colville left for
Bagdad this morning, in a very swell ambulance drawn by four gay mules.
At noon I crossed to
Brownsville, and visited
Captain Lynch, a quartermaster, who broke open a great box, and presented me with a Confederate felt hat to
[
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travel in. He then took me to the garrison, and introduced me to
Colonel Buchel of the 3d Texas regiment, who is by birth a German, but had served in the
French army; and he prepared cocktailsin the most scientific manner.
I returned to
Matamoros at 2.30 P. M.
Captain Hancock and
Mr. Anderson (the paymaster) arrived from
Bagdad in a most miserable vehicle, at 4 P. M. They were a mass of dust, and had been seven hours on the road, after having been very nearly capsized on the bar.
There was a great firing of guns and squibs in the afternoon, in consequence of the news of a total defeat of the
French at
Puebla, with a loss of 8,000 prisoners and 70 pieces of cannon.
Don Pablo, who had innocently hoisted his British flag in honor of
Captain Hancock, was accused by his brother merchants of making a demonstration against the
French.
After dinner we called on
Mr. Maloney, whose house is gorgeously furnished, and who has a pretty wife.
7th April, 1863 (Tuesday).
Mr. Maloney sent us his carriage to conduct
Captain Hancock,
Mr. Anderson, and myself to
Brownsville.
We first called on
Colonels Luckett and
Buchel; the former is a handsome man, a doctor by profession,
[
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well informed and agreeable, but most bitter against the
Yankees.
We sat for an hour and a half talking with these officers and drinking endless cocktails, which were rather good, and required five or six different liquids to make them.
We then adjourned to
General Bee's, with whom we had another long talk, and with whom we discussed more cocktails.
At the
General's we were introduced to a welldressed good-looking Englishman,
Mr.--, who, however, announced to us that he had abjured his nationality until
Great Britain rendered justice to the
South.
2 Two years since, this individual had his house burnt down; and a few days ago, happening to hear that one of the incendiaries was on-the
Mexican bank of the river, boasting of the exploit, he rowed himself across, shot his man, and then rowed back.
I was told afterwards that, notwithstanding the sentiments he had given out before us,
Mr. is a stanch Britisher, always ready to produce his sixshooter at a moment's notice, at any insult to the
Queen or to
England.
We were afterwards presented to--, rather a sinister-looking party, with long yellow hair down to
[
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his shoulders.
This is the man who is supposed to have hanged Mongomery.
We were treated by all the officers with the greatest consideration, and conducted to the place or embarkation with much ceremony.
Colonel Luckett declared I should not leave
Brownsville until
General Magruder arrives.
He is expected every day.
Mr. Maloney afterwards told us that these officers, having given up every thing for their country, were many of them in great poverty.
He doubted whether ----had a second pair of boots in the world; but he added that, to do honor to British officers, they would scour
Brownsville for the materials for cocktails.
At 3 P. M. we dined with
Mr. Maloney, who is one of the principal and most enterprising British merchants at
Matamoros, and enjoyed his hospitality till 9.30.
His wine was good, and he made us drink a good deal of it.
Mr. Oetling was there, and his stories of highway robberies, and of his journeys
en chemise, were most amusing.
At 10 P. P
Mr. Oetling conducted us to the grand fandango given in honor of the reported victory over the
French.
A Mexican fandango resembles a French
ducasse, with the additional excitement of gambling.
It commences at 9.30, and continues till daylight.
The scene is lit up by numerous paper lanterns of various colors.
[
20]
A number of benches are placed so as to form a large quare, in the centre of which the dancing goes on, the men and women gravely smoking all the time.
Outside the benches is the promenade bounded by the gambling-tables and drinking-booths.
On this occasion there must have been thirty or forty gambling-tables, some of the smaller ones presided over by old women, and others by small boys.
Monte is the favorite game, and the smallest
silver coin can be staked, or a handful of doubloons.
Most of these tables were patronized by crowds of all classes intent on gambling, with grave, serious faces under their enormous hats.
They never moved a muscle, whether they won or lost.
Although the number of people at these fandangos is very great, yet the whole affair is conducted with an order and regularity not to be equalled in an assembly of a much higher class in
Europe.
If there ever is a row, it is invariably caused by Texans from
Brownsville.
These turbulent spirits are at once seized and cooled in the calaboose.
8th April, 1863 (Wednesday).
Poor Don Pablo was “taken ill” at breakfast, and was obliged to go to bed. We were all much distressed at his illness, which was brought on by over-anxiety connected with his official duties; and the way he is bothered by
[
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English and “Blue-nose”
3 skippers is enough to try any one.
Mr. Behnsen and
Mr. Colville returned from
Bagdad this afternoon, much disgusted with the attractions of that city.
General Bee's orderly was assaulted in
Matamoros yesterday by a renegado with a six-shooter.
This circumstance prevented the
General from coming to
Matamoros as he had intended.
At 5 P. M.
Captain Hancock and I crossed over to
Brownsville, and were conducted in a very smart ambulance to
General Bee's quarters, and afterwards to see a dress parade of the 3d Texas infantry.
Lieutenant-colonel Buchel is the
working man of the corps, as he is a professional soldier.
The men were well clothed, though great variety existed in their uniforms.
Some companies wore blue, some gray, some had
French kepis, others wide-awakes and
Mexican hats.
They were a fine body of men, and really drilled uncommonly well.
They went through a sort of guard-mounting parade in a most creditable manner.
About a hundred out of a thousand were conscripts.
4
[
22]
After the parade, we adjourned to
Colonel Luckett's to drink prosperity to the 3d regiment.
We afterwards had a very agreeable dinner with
General Bee;
Colonels Luckett and
Buchel dined also.
The latter is a regular soldier of fortune.
He served in the
French and
Turkish armies, as also in the Carlist and the
Mexican wars, and I was told he had been a principal in many affairs of honor; but he is a quiet and unassuming little man, and although a sincere Southerner, is not nearly so violent against the
Yankees as
Luckett.
At 10 P. M.
Captain Hancock and myself went to a ball given by the authorities of the “
Heroica y invicta ciudad de Matamoros” (as they choose to call it), in honor of the
French defeat.
General Bee and
Colonel Luckett also went to this fete, the invitation being the first civility they had received since the violation of the
Mexican soil in the DavisMon-gomery affair.
They were dressed in plain clothes, and carried pistols concealed in case of accidents.
We all drove together from
Brownsville to the Consulate, and entered the ball-room
en masse.
The outside of the municipal hall was lit up with some splendor, and it was graced by a big placard, on which was written the amiable sentiment, “
Muera Napoleon-viva Mejico” Semisuccess-ful squibs and crackers were let off at intervals.
In the square also was a triumphal arch, with an inscription
[
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to the effect that “the effete nations of
Europe might tremble.”
I made great friends with the gobernador and administrador, who endeavored to entice me into dancing, but I excused myself by saying that Europeans were unable to dance in the graceful
Mexican fashion.
Captain Hancock was much horrified when this greasy-faced gobernador (who keeps a small shop) stated his intention of visiting the
Immortalite with six of his friends, and sleeping on board for a night or two.
The dances were a sort of slow valse, and between the dances the girls were planted up against the wall, and not allowed to be spoken to by any one.
They were mostly a plain-headed, badly-painted lot, and ridiculously dressed.
9th April, 1863 (Thursday).
Captain Hancock and
Mr. Anderson left for
Bagdad in
Mr. Behnsen's carriage at noon.
I crossed over to
Brownsville at 11.30, and dined with
Colonels Luckett,
Buchel, and
Duff, at about one o'clock. As we were all colonels, and as every one called the other
colonel tout court, it was difficult to make out which was meant.
They were obliged to confess that
Brownsville was about the rowdiest town of
Texas, which was the most lawless State in the
Confederacy; but they declared they had never seen an inoffensive man subjected to insult
[
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or annoyance, although the shooting-down and stringing — up systems are much in vogue, being almost a necessity in a thinly-populated State, much frequented by desperadoes driven away from more civilized countries.
Colonel Luckett gave me a letter to
General Van Dorn, whom they consider the
beau ideal of a cavalry soldier.
They said from time immemorial the
Yankees had been despised by the Southerners, as a race inferior to themselves in courage and in honorable sentiments.
At 3 P. M.
Colonel Buchel and I rode to
Colonel Duff's camp, distant about thirteen miles. I was given a Mexican saddle, in which one is forced to sit almost in a standing position.
The stirrups are very long, and right underneath you, which throws back the feet.
Duff's regiment is called the Partisan Rangers.
Although a fine lot of men, they don't look well at a foot parade, on account of the small amount of drill they have undergone, and the extreme disorder of their clothing.
They are armed with carbines and six-shooters.
I saw some men come in from a scouting expedition against the Indians, 300 miles off. They told me they were usually in the habit of scalping an Indian when they caught him, and that they never spared one, as they were such an untamable and ferocious
[
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race.
Another habit which they have learned from the Indians is, to squat on their heels in a most peculiar manner.
It has an absurd and extraordinary effect to see a quantity of them so squatting in a row or in a circle.
The regiment had been employed in quelling a counter-revolution of
Unionists in
Texas.
Nothing could exceed the rancor with which they spoke of these renegadoes, as they called them, who were principally Germans.
When I suggested to some of the
Texans that they might as well bury the body of Mongomery a little better, they did not at all agree with me, but said it ought not to have been buried at all, but left hanging as a warning to other evil-doers.
With regard to the contentment of their slaves,
Colonel Duff pointed out a good number they had with them, who had only to cross the river for freedom if they wished it.
Colonel Buchel and I slept in
Colonel Duff's tent, and at night we were
serenaded. The officers and men really sang uncommonly well, and they finished with “God save the
Queen!”
Colonel Duff comes from
Perth.
He was one of the leading characters in the secession of
Texas; and he said his brother was a banker in Dunkeld.
10th April, 1863 (Friday).
We roused up at daylight,
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and soon afterwards
Colonel Duff paraded some of his best men, to show off the
Texan horsemanship, of which they are very proud.
I saw them lasso cattle, and catch them by the tail at full gallop, and throw them by slewing them around.
This is called tailing.
They pick small objects off the ground when at full tilt, and, in their peculiar fashion, are beautiful riders; but they confessed to me they could not ride in an English saddle, and
Colonel Duff told me that they could not jump a fence at all. They were all extremely anxious to hear what I thought of the performance, and their thorough good opinion of themselves was most amusing.
At 9 o'clock
Colonel Buchel and I rode back to
Brownsville; but as we lost our way twice, and were enveloped in clouds of dust, it was not a very satisfactory ride.
Poor
Captain Hancock must be luxuriating at
Bagdad; for with this wind the bar must be impassable to the boldest mariner.
In the evening, a Mr.--, a Texan Unionist, or renegado, gave us his sentiments at the Consulate, and drank a deal of brandy.
He finished, however, by the toast, “Them as wants to fight, let 'em fight-i don't.”
11th April, 1863 (Saturday).
Mr.-- , the Unionist, came to me this morning, and said, in a contrite manner, “I hope, Kernel, that in the fames of brandy
[
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I didn't say any thing offensive last night.”
I assured him that he hadn't. I have now become comparatively accustomed and reconciled to the necessity of shaking hands and drinking brandy with every one.
5
The ambulance returned from
Bagdad to-day.
Captain Hancock had managed to cross the bar in
Mr. Oetling's steamer or lighter, but was very nearly capsized.
I went to a grand supper, given by
Mr. Oetling in honor of
Mr. Hill's departure for the city of
Mexico.
This, it appears, is the custom of the country.
12th April, 1863 (Sunday).
I took an affectionate leave of Don Pablo,
Behnsen,
Oetling & Co., all of whom were in rather weak health on account of last night's supper.
The excellent
Maloney insisted on providing me with preserved meats and brandy for my arduous journey through
Texas.
I feel extremely grateful for the kindness of all these gentlemen, who rendered my stay in
Matamoros very agreeable.
The hotel would have been intolerable.
I crossed to
Brownsville at 3 P. M., where I was hospitably received by my friend
Ituria, who confesses to having made a deal of money lately by cotton speculations.
I attended evening parade, and
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saw
General Bee,
Colonels Luckett,
Buchel,
Duff, and --. The latter (who hanged Mongomery) improves on acquaintance.
General Bee took me for a drive in his ambulance, and introduced me to
Major Leon Smith, who captured the
Harriet Lane.
The latter pressed me most vehemently to wait until
General Magruder's arrival, and he promised, if I did so, that I should be sent to
San Antonio in a first-rate ambulance.
Major Leon Smith is a seafaring man by profession, and was put by
General Magruder in command of one of the small steamers which captured the
Harriet Lane at
Galveston, the crews of the steamers being composed of Texan cavalry soldiers.
He told me that the resistance offered after boarding was feeble; and he declared that, had not the remainder of the Yankee vessels escaped unfairly under flag of truce, they would likewise have been taken.
After the
Harriet Lane had been captured, she was fired into by the other ships; and
Major Smith told me that, his blood being up, he sent the
ex-master of the
Harriet Lane to
Commodore Renshaw, with a message that, unless the firing was stopped, he would
massacREE the captured crew.
After hearing this,
Commodore Renshaw blew up his ship, with himself in her, after having given an order to the remainder,
sauve qui peut.
[
29]
13th April, 1863 (Monday).
I breakfasted with
General Bee, and took leave of all my
Brownsville friends.
McCarthy is to give me four times the value of my gold in Confederate notes.
6
We left
Brownsville for
San Antonio at 11 A. M. Our vehicle was a roomy, but rather overloaded, fourwheel carriage, with a canvas roof, and four mules.
Besides
McCarthy, there was a third passenger, in the shape of a young merchant of the Hebrew persuasion.
Two horses were to join us, to help us through the deep sand.
The country, on leaving
Brownsville, is quite flat, the road, a natural one, sandy and very dusty, and there are many small trees, principally mosquites.
After we had proceeded seven miles, we halted to water the mules.
At 2 P. M. a new character appeared upon the scene, in the shape of an elderly, rough-faced, dirty-looking man, who rode up, mounted on a sorry nag. To my surprise he was addressed by
McCarthy with the title of “
Judge,” and asked what he had done with our other horse.
The
Judge replied that it had already broken down, and had been left behind.
McCarthy informs me that this worthy really is a magistrate or sort of judge in his own district; but he
[
30]
now appears in the capacity of assistant mule-driver, and is to make himself generally useful.
I could not help feeling immensely amused at this specimen of a Texan judge.
We started again about 3 P. M. and soon emerged from the mosquite bushes into an open prairie eight miles long, quite desolate, and producing nothing but a sort of rush; after which we entered a chaparral, or thick covert of mosquite-trees and high prickly-pears.
These border the track, and are covered with bits of cotton torn from the endless trains of cotton wagons.
We met several of these wagons.
Generally there were ten oxen or six mules to a wagon carrying ten bales, but in deep sand, more animals are necessary.
They journey very slowly towards
Brownsville, from places in the interior of
Texas at least five hundred miles distant. Want of water and other causes make the drivers and animals undergo much hardship.
The
Judge rides on in front of us on his “Rosinante,” to encourage the mules.
His back view reminds one in a ludicrous manner of the pictures of
Dr. Syntax.
Mr. Sargent, our portly driver, cheers his animals by the continual repetition of the sentence, “Get up, now, you great long-eared G-d d-d son of a --.”
At 5 P. M. we reached a well, with a farm or ranch close to it. Here we halted for the night.
A cotton train was encamped close to us, and a lugubrious
[
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half-naked teamster informed us that three of his oxen had been stolen last night.
In order to make a fire, we were forced to enter the chaparral for wood, and in doing so, we ran many prickles into our legs, which caused us great annoyance afterwards, as they fester, if not immediately pulled out.
The water at this well was very salt, and made very indifferent coffee.
McCarthy called it the “meanest halting-place we shall have.”
At 8 P. M.
McCarthy spread a bullock-rug on the sand near the carriage, on which we should have slept very comfortably, had it not been for the prickles, the activity of many fleas, and the incursions of wild hogs.
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge, with much presence of mind, had encamped seventy yards off, and left to us the duty of driving away these hogs.
I was twice awoke by one of these unclean animals breathing in my face.
We did about twenty-one miles to-day.
14th April, 1863 (Tuesday).
-When we roused up at 4 A. M. we found our clothes saturated with the heavy dew; also that, notwithstanding our exertions, the hogs had devoured the greatest part of our pet kid, our only fresh meat.
After feeding our mules upon the
Indian corn we had brought with us, and drinking a little more saltwater
[
32]
coffee, the
Judge “hitched in,” and we got under way at 5.30 A. M. The country just the same as yesterday — a dead level of sand, mosquite-trees, and prickly-pears.
At 7.30 A. M. we reached “
Leatham's ranch,” and watered our mules.
As the water was tolerable, we refilled our water-barrels.
I also washed my face, during which operation
Mr. Sargent expressed great astonishment, not unmingled with contempt.
At
Leatham's we met a wealthy Texan speculator and contractor, called
Major or
Judge Hart.
I find that
our Judge is also an M. P., and that, in his capacity as a member of the
Texan legislature, he is entitled to be styled the
Honorable---- .
At 9 A. M. we halted in the middle of a prairie, on which there — was a little grass for the mules, and we prepared to eat. In the midst of our cooking, two deer came up quite close to us, and could easily have been killed with rifles.
We saw quantities of rat-ranches, which are big sort of mole-hills, composed of cow-dung, sticks, and earth, built by the rats.
Mr. Sargent, our conductor, is a very rough customer — a fat, middle-aged man, who never opens his mouth without an oath, strictly American in its character.
He and the
Judge are always snarling at one another, and both are much addicted to liquor.
We live principally on bacon and coffee, but as the
[
33]
water and the bacon are both very salt, this is very inconvenient.
We have, however, got some claret, and plenty of brandy.
During the mid-day halts,
Mr. Sargent is in the habit of cooling himself by removing his trousers (or pants), and, having gorged himself, he lies down and issues his edicts to the
Judge as to the treatment or the mules.
At 2.30 the M. P. hitched in again, and at 2.45 we reached a salt-water arm of the sea called the “
Aroyo del
Colorado,” about eighty yards broad, which we crossed in a ferry-boat.
Half an hour later we “struck water” again, which, being superior to
Leatham's, we filled up.
We are continually passing cotton trains going to
Brownsville, also government wagons with stores for the interior.
Near every well is a small farm or ranch, a miserable little wooden edifice surrounded by a little cultivation.
The natives all speak Spanish, and wear the
Mexican dress.
McCarthy is very proud of his knowledge of the country, in spite of which he is often out in his calculations.
The different tracks are so similar to one another, they are easily mistaken.
At 4.45 P. M. we halted at a much better place than yesterday.
We are obliged to halt where a little grass can be found for our mules.
Soon after we had unpacked for the night, six
[
34]
Texan Rangers, of “
Wood's” regiment, rode up to us. They were very picturesque fellows; tall, thin, and ragged, but quite gentlemanlike in their manners.
We are always to sleep in the open until we arrive at
San Antonio, and I find my Turkish lantern most useful at night.
7
15th April, 1863 (Wednesday).
I slept well last night in spite of the ticks and fleas, and we started at 5.30 P. M. After passing a dead rattlesnake eight feet long, we reached water at 7 A. M.
At 9 A. M. we espied the cavalcade of
General Magruder passing us by a parallel track about half a mile distant.
McCarthy and I jumped out of the carriage, and I ran across the prairie to cut him off, which I just succeeded in doing by borrowing the spare horse of the last man in the train.
I galloped up to the front, and found the
General riding with a lady who was introduced to me as
Mrs. --, an undeniably pretty woman, wife to an officer on
Magruder's staff, and she is naturally the object of intense attention to all the good-looking officers who accompany the
General through this desert.
General Magruder, who commands in
Texas, is a fine soldierlike man, of about fifty-five, with broad
[
35]
shoulders, a florid complexion, and bright eyes.
He wears his whiskers and mustaches in the
English fashion, and he was dressed in the
Confederate gray uniform.
He was kind enough to beg that I would turn back and accompany him in his tour through
Texas.
He had heard of my arrival, and was fully determined I should do this.
He asked after several officers of my regiment whom he had known when he was on the
Canadian frontier.
He is aVirginian, a great talker, and has always been a great ally of English officers.
He insisted that
McCarthy and I should turn and dine with him, promising to provide us with horses to catch up
Mr. Sargent.
After we had agreed to do this, I had a long and agreeable conversation with the
General, who spoke of the Puritans with intense disgust, and of the first importation of them as “
that pestiferous crew of the Mayflower ;” but he is by no means rancorous against individual Yankees.
He spoke very favorably of
McClellan, whom he knew to be a gentleman, clever, and personally brave, though he might lack moral courage to face responsibility.
Magruder had commanded the
Confederate troops at
Yorktown which opposed
McClellan's advance.
He told me the different dodges he had resorted to, to blind and deceive the latter as to his (
Magruder's) strength; and he spoke of the intense relief and amusement with
[
36]
which he had at length seen
McClellan with his magnificent army begin to break ground before miserable earthworks, defended only by 8,000 men.
Hooker was in his regiment, and was “essentially a mean man and a liar.”
Of
Lee and
Longstreet he spoke in terms of the highest admiration.
Magruder was an artilleryman, and has been a good deal in
Europe; and having been much stationed on the
Canadian frontier, he became acquainted with many British officers, particularly those in the 7th Hussars and Guards.
He had gained much credit from his recent successes at
Galveston and
Sabine Pass, in which he had the temerity to attack heavily-armed vessels of war with wretched river steamers manned by Texan cavalrymen.
His principal reason for visiting
Brownsville was to settle about the cotton trade.
He had issued an edict that half the value of cotton exported must be imported in goods for the benefit of the country (government stores). The President had condemned this order as illegal and despotic.
The officers on
Magruder's Staff are a very goodlooking, gentlemanlike set of men. Their names are-
Major Pendleton,
Major Wray,
Captain De Ponte,
Captain Alston,
Captain Turner,
Lieutenant-Colonel McNeil,
Captain Dwyer,
Dr. Benien,
Lieutenant Stanard,
Lieutenant Yancy, and
Major Magruder.
[
37]
The latter is nephew to the
General, and is a particularly good-looking young fellow.
They all live with their chief on an extremely agreeable footing, and form a very pleasant society.
At dinner I was put in the post of honor, which is always fought for with much acrimony-viz., the right of
Mrs.
After dinner we had numerous songs.
Both the
General and his nephew sang; so also did
Captain Alston, whose corpulent frame, however, was too much for the feeble camp-stool, which caused his sudden disappearance in the midst of a song with a loud crash.
Captain Dwyer played the fiddle very well, and an aged and slightly elevated militia general brewed the punch and made several “elegant” speeches.
The latter was a rough-faced old hero, and gloried in the name of
McGuffin.
On these festive occasions
General Magruder wears a red woollen cap, and fills the president's chair with great aptitude.
It was 11.30 before I could tear myself away from this agreeable party; but at length I effected my exit amidst a profusion of kind expressions, and laden with heaps of letters of introduction.
16th April, 1863 (Thursday).
Now our troubles commenced.
Seated in
Mexican saddles, and mounted on raw-boned mustangs, whose energy had been a good deal impaired by a month's steady travelling on bad food,
McCarthy and I left the hospitable messtent
[
38]
about midnight, and started in search of
Mr. Sargent and his vehicle.
We were under the guidance of two Texan Rangers.
About daylight we hove in sight of “Los Animos,” a desolate farm-house, in the neighborhood of which
Mr. Sargent was supposed to be encamped; but nowhere could we find any traces of him.
We had now reached the confines of a dreary region, sixty miles in extent, called “The sands,” in comparison with which the prairie and chaparral were luxurious.
The sand being deep and the wind high, we could not trace the carriage; but we soon acquired a certainty that our perfidious Jehu had decamped, leaving us behind.
We floundered about in the sand, cursing our bad luck, cursing
Mr. Sargent, and even the good
Magruder, as the indirect cause of our wretchedness.
Our situation, indeed, was sufficiently deplorable.
We were without food or water in the midst of a desert: so were our horses, which were nearly done up. Our bones ached from the
Mexican saddles; and, to complete our misery, the two Rangers began to turn restive and talk of returning with the horses.
At this, the climax of our misfortunes, I luckily hit upon a Mexican, who gave us intelligence of our carriage; and with renewed spirits, but very groggy horses, we gave chase.
[
39]
But never did
Mr. Sargent's mules walk at such a pace; and it was 9 A. M. before we overtook them.
My animal had been twice on his head, and
McCarthy was green in the face with fatigue and rage.
Mr. Sargent received us with the greatest affability, and we were sensible enough not to quarrel with him, although
McCarthy had made many allusions as to the advisability of shooting him.
We had been nine and a half hours in the saddle, and were a good deal exhausted.
Our sulky Texan guides were appeased with bacon, coffee, and $5 in coin.
We halted till 2 P. M., and then renewed our struggle through the deep sandy wilderness; but though the services of the
Judge's horse were put into requisition, we couldn't progress faster than two miles an hour.
Mule driving is an art of itself, and
Mr. Sargent is justly considered
a professor at it.
He is always yelling-generally imprecations of a serio-comic character.
He rarely flogs his mules; but when one of them rouses his indignation by extraordinary laziness, he roars out, “Come here,
Judge, with a big club, and give him h-ll.”
While the animal is receiving such discipline as comes up to the
Judge's idea of the infernal regions,
Mr. Sargent generally remarks, “I wish you was Uncle Abe, I'd make you move, you G — d d-n son of a ----.”
His idea of
[
40]
perfect happiness seems to be to have
Messrs. Lincoln and
Seward in the shafts.
Mules travel much better when other mules are in front of them: and another dodge to which
Mr. Sargent continually resorts is, to beat the top of the carriage and kick the foot-board, which makes a noise, and gratifies the mules quite as much as licking them.
Mr. Sargent accounts for his humanity by saying, “It's the worst plan in the world licking niggers or mules, because the more you licks ‘em, the more they wants it.”
We reached or “struck” water at 5.30 P. M. ; but, in spite of its good reputation, it was so salt as to be scarcely drinkable.
A number of cotton wagons, and three carriages belonging to
Mr. Ward, were also encamped with us.
We have only made sixteen miles to-day.
17th April, 1863 (Friday).
Having spent last night in a Mexican saddle, our bullock-rug in the sand appeared to me a most luxurious bed.
We hitched in at 5 A. M., and struck water at 9 A. M., which, though muddy in appearance, was not so bad to drink.
I walked ahead with the
Judge, who, when sober, is a well-informed and sensible man.
Mr.Sargent and I are great friends, and, rough as he is, we get on capitally together.
A Mr. Ward, with three vehicles — a rival of
Mr.
[
41]
Sargent's — is travelling in our company.
He drove his buggy against a tree and knocked its top off, to the intense delight of the latter.
We breakfasted under difficulties.
The wind being high, it drove up the sand in clouds and spoiled our food.
Our travelling companion,
Mr. ---- , is a poor little weakly Israelite, but very inoffensive, although he speaks with a horrible Yankee twang, which
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge are singularly free from.
We went on again at 2 P. M. I had a long talk with a big mulatto slave woman, who was driving one of
Ward's wagons.
She told me she had been raised in
Tennessee, and that three years ago she had been taken from her mistress for a bad debt, to their mutual sorrow.
“Both,” she said, “cried bitterly at parting.”
She doesn't like
San Antonio at all, “too much hanging and murdering for me,” she said.
She had seen a man hanged in the middle of the day, just in front of her door.
Mr. Sargent bought two chickens and some eggs at a ranch, but one of the chickens got up a tree, and was caught and eaten by the
Ward faction.
Our camp to-night looks very pretty by the light of the fires.
18th April, 1863 (Saturday).
At daylight we discovered, to our horror, that three of our mules were absent;
[
42]
but after an hour's search they were brought back in triumph by the
Judge.
This delayed our start till 6.30 A. M.
I walked ahead again with the
Judge, who explained to me that he was a “senator,” or member of the
Upper House of
Texas-“just like your House of Lords,” he said.
He gets $5 a day whilst sitting, and is elected for four years.
8
We struck water at 8.30 A. M., and bought a lamb for a dollar.
We also bought some beef, which in this country is dried in strips by the sun, after being cut off the bullock, and it keeps good for any length of time.
To cook it the strips are thrown for a few minutes on hot embers.
One of our mules was kicked last night.
Mr. Sargent rubbed the wound with brandy, which did it much good.
Soon after leaving this well,
Mr. Sargent discovered that, by following the track of
Mr. Ward's wagons, he had lost the way. He swore dreadfully, and solaced himself with so much gin, that when we arrived at
Sulphur Creek at 12.30, both he and the
Judge were, by their own confession,
quite tight.
We halted, ate some salt meat, and bathed in this creek, which is about forty yards broad and three feet deep.
[
43]
Mr. Sargent's extreme “tightness” caused him to fall asleep on the box when we started again, but the more seasoned
Judge drove the mules.
The signs of getting out of the sands now began to be apparent; and at 5 P. M. we were able to halt at a very decent place with grass, but
no water.
We suffered here for want of water, our stock being very nearly expended.
Mr. Sargent, who was now comparatively sober.
killed the sheep most scientifically at 5.30 P. M.; and at 6.30 we were actually devouring it, and found it very good.
Mr. Sargent cooked it by the simple process of stewing junks of it in a frying-pan, but we had only just enough water to do this.
19th April, 1863 (Sunday).
At 1 A. M. this morning our slumbers on the bullock-rug were disturbed by a sudden and most violent thunder-storm.
McCarthy and I had only just time to rush into the carriage, and hustle our traps underneath it, when the rain began to descend in torrents.
We got inside with the little Jew (who was much alarmed by the thunder); whilst
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge crept underneath.
The rain lasted two hours; and at daylight we were able to refresh ourselves by drinking the water from the puddles, and effect a start.
But fate seemed adverse to our progress.
No
[
44]
sooner had we escaped from the sand than we fell into the mud, which was still worse.
We toiled on till 11.30 A. M., at which hour we reached “
King's Ranch,” which for several days I had heard spoken of as a sort of Elysium, marking as it does the termination of the sands, and the commencement of comparative civilization.
We halted in front of the house, and after cooking and eating, I walked up to the “ranch,” which is a comfortable, well-furnished wooden building.
Mr.King and
Mrs. King had gone to
Brownsville; but we were received by
Mrs. Bee, the wife of the Brownsville general, who had heard I was on the road.
She is a nice lively little woman, a red-hot Southerner, glorying in the facts that she has no Northern relations or friends, and that she is a member of the Church of England.
Mr. King first came to
Texas as a steamboat captain, but now owns an immense tract of country, with 16,000 head of cattle, situated, however, in a wild and almost uninhabited district.
King's Ranch is distant from
Brownsville only 125 miles, and we have been six days in reaching it.
After drying our clothes and our food after the rain of last night, we started again at 2.30 P. M.
We now entered a boundless and most fertile
[
45]
prairie, upon which, as far as the eye could reach, cattle were feeding.
Bulls and cows, horses and mares, came to stare at us as we passed.
They all seemed sleek and in good condition, yet they get nothing but what they can pick up on the prairie.
I saw a man on horseback kill a rabbit with his revolver.
I also saw a scorpion for the first time.
We halted at 5.30 P. M., and had to make our fire principally of cow-dung, as wood is very scarce on this prairie.
We gave up the
Judge's horse at King's Ranch.
The lawgiver now rides on the box with
Mr. Sargent.
20th April, 1863 (Monday).
I slept well last night in spite of the numerous prairie-wolves which surrounded us, making a most dismal noise.
The Jew was ill again, but both
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge were very kind to him; so also was
McCarthy, who declared that a person incapable of protecting himself, and sickly, such as this little Jew, is always sure of kind treatment and compassion, even from the wildest
Texans.
We started at 5 A. M., and had to get through some dreadful mud--
Mr. Sargent in an awful bad humor, and using terrific language.
We were much delayed by this unfortunate rain,
[
46]
which had converted a good road into a quagmire.
We detected a rattlesnake crawling along this morning, but there are not nearly so many of them in this country as there used to be.
We halted at 9 A.
M., and, to make a fire for cooking, we set a rat-ranch alight, which answered very well; but one big rat, annoyed by our proceedings, emerged hastily from his den, and very nearly jumped into the frying-pan.
Two Texan Rangers, belonging to
Taylor's regiment, rode up to us whilst we were at breakfast.
These Rangers all wear the most enormous spurs I ever saw.
We resumed sour journey at 12.30, and reached a creek
9 called “Agua Dulce” at 2 P. M.
McCarthy and I got out before crossing, to forage at some huts close by. We got two dozen eggs and some lard; but, on returning to the road, we found that
Mr. Sargent had pursued his usual plan of leaving us in the lurch.
I luckily was able to get hold of a Mexican boy, and rode across the creek
en croupe.
McCarthy dismounted a negro, and so got over.
We halted at 5 P. M.
After dark
McCarthy crossed the prairie to visit
[
47]
some friends who were encamped half a mile distant.
He lost his way in returning, and wandered about for several hours.
The
Judge, with great presence of mind, kept the fire up, and he found us at last.
The heat from nine to two is pretty severe; but in
Texas there is generally a cool sea-breeze, which Makes it bearable.
21st April, 1863 (Tuesday).
We started at 5 A. M., and reached a hamlet called “
Casa Blanca” at 6.
We procured a kid, some Indian corn, and two fowls in this neighborhood.
We had now quitted the flat country, and entered an undulating or “rolling” country, full of live oaks of very respectable size, and we had also got out of the mud.
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge got drunk again about 8 A. M., which, however, had a beneficial effect upon the speed.
We descended the hills at a terrific pace --or, as
Mr. Sargent expressed it, “
Going like h-ll a-beating tan bark.”
We “nooned it” at a small creek; and after unhitching,
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge had a row with one another, after which
Mr. Sargent killed and cooked the goat, using my knife for these operations.
With all his faults he certainly is a capital butcher, cook, and mule-driver.
He takes great care of his animals, and is careful to inform us that the increased
[
48]
pace we have been going at is not attributable to gin.
He was very complimentary to me, because I acted as assistant cook and butcher.
Mr. Ward's party passed us about 1 P. M. The front wheels of his buggy having now smashed, it is hitched in rear of one of the wagons.
We made a pretty good afternoon's drive through a wood of post oaks, where we saw another rattlesnake, which we tried to shoot.
We halted at
Spring creek at 6.30 P. M.; water rather brackish, and no grass for the mules.
The
Judge gave us some of his experiences as a filibuster.
He declares that a well-cooked polecat is as good to eat as a pig, and that stewed rattlesnake is not so bad as might be supposed.
The
Texans call the Mexicans “greasers,” the latter retort by the name “gringo.”
We are now living luxuriously upon eggs and goat's flesh; and I think we have made about thirtytwo miles to-day.
22d April, 1863 (Wednesday).
We got under weigh at 5 A. M., the mules looking rather mean for want of grass.
At 8 A. M. we reached the
Nueces river, the banks of which are very steep, and are bordered with a beautiful belt of live-oak trees, covered with mustang grapes.
[
49]
On the other side of the
Nueces is “
Oakville,” a miserable settlement, consisting of about twenty wooden huts.
We bought some butter there, and caught up
Ward's wagons.
The women at
Oakville were most anxious to buy snuff.
It appears that the
Texan females are in the habit of dipping snuffwhich means, putting it into their mouths instead of their noses.
They rub it against their teeth with a blunted stick.
We reached grass about 10 A. M., and “nooned it,” the weather being very trying-very sultry, without sun or wind.
We hitched in at 1.15-
Ward's wagons in our front, and a
Frenchman's four-horse team in our rear.
At 4 P. M. we reached the “Weedy,” a creek which, to our sorrow, was perfectly dry. We drove on till 7 P. M., and halted at some good grass.
There being a report of water in the neighborhood,
Mr. Sargent, the
Judge,
Ward, and the Frenchman, started to explore; and when, at length, they did discover a wretched little mud-hole, it appears that a desperate conflict for the water ensued, for the
Judge returned to us a mass of mud, and presenting a very crestfallen appearance.
Shortly after,
Mr. Sargent appeared, in such a bad humor that he declined to cook, to eat, to drink, or do any thing but swear vehemently.
Deprived by this
contretemps of our goat's flesh, we had recourse to an old ham and very stale bread.
[
50]
We met many cotton trains and government wag ons to-day, and I think we have progressed about thirty-four miles.
23d April, 1863 (Thursday).
The wily
Mr. Sargent drove the animals down to the mud-hole in the middle of last night, and so stole a march upon
Ward.
Our goat's flesh having spoiled, had to be thrown away this morning.
We started at 5.30 A. M., and reached “Rocky” at 7.30; but before this two of
Ward's horses had “
caved in,” which completely restored our driver's good humor.
Rocky consists of two huts in the midst of a stony country; and about a mile beyond it we reached a pond, watered our mules, and filled our barrels.
The water was very muddy to look at, but not bad to drink.
The mules were lazy to-day; and
Mr. Sargent was forced to fill his bucket with stones, and pelt the leaders occasionally.
At 8 A. M. we reached an open, undulating prairie, and halted at 10.30.
Mr. Sargent and I killed and cooked the two chickens.
He has done me the honor to call me a “right good companion for the road.”
He also told me that at one time he kept an hotel at
El Paso — a sort of half-way house on the overland route to Californiaand
[
51]
was rapidly making his fortune when the war totally ruined him. This accounts for his animosity to “Uncle Abe.”
10
We hitched in again at 3 P. M., and after pushing through some deepish sand, we halted for the night only twenty-four miles from
San Antonio.
No corn or water, but plenty of grass; our food, also, was now entirely expended.
Mr. Ward struggled up at 8.15, making a desperate effort to keep up with us, and this rivalry between
Sargent and him was of great service.
This was our last night of camping out, and I felt almost sorry for it, for I have enjoyed the journey in spite of the hardships.
The country through which I have passed would be most fertile and productive (at least the last 150 miles), were it not for the great irregularity of the seasons.
Sometimes there is hardly any rain for two and three years together.
24th April, 1863 (Friday).
We made a start at 4.15 A. M., and with the assistance of
McCarthy, we managed to lose our way; but at 6.15 a loud cheer from the box, of “
Hoorraw for h-ll!
who's afraid of fire?”
proclaimed
[
52]
that
Mr. Sargent had come in sight of
Grey's ranch.
After buying some eggs and Indian corn there, we crossed the deep bed of the river
San Antonio.
Its banks are very steep and picturesque.
We halted immediately beyond, to allow the mules to feed for an hour.
A woman was murdered at a ranch close by some time ago, and five bad characters were put to death at
San Antonio by the vigilance committee on suspicion.
We crossed the Selado river at 11, and nooned it in its neighborhood.
Mr. Sargent and the
Judge finished the gin; and the former, being rather drunk, entertained us with a detailed description of his treatment of a refractory negro girl, which, by his own account, must have been very severe.
McCarthy was much disgusted at the story.
11
After bathing in the
Selado,
Mr. Sargent, being determined to beat
Ward, pushed on for
San Antonio; and we drew up before
Menger's hotel at 3 P. M., our mules dead beat-our driver having fulfilled his promise of “making his long-eared horses howl.”
[
53]
Later in the day I walked through the streets with
McCarthy to his store, which is a very large building, but now desolate, every thing having been sold off. He was of course greeted by his numerous friends, and among others I saw a negro come up to him, shake hands, and welcome him back.
I was introduced to
Colonel Duff's brother, who is also a very good-looking man; but he has not thrown off his British nationality and become a “citizen.”
The distance from
Brownsville to
San Antonio is 330 miles, and we have been 11 days and 4 hours
en route.
25th April, 1863 (Saturday).
San Antonio is prettily situated on both banks of the river of the same name.
It should contain about 10,000 inhabitants, and is the largest place in
Texas, except
Galveston.
The houses are well built of stone, and they are generally only one or two stories high.
All have verandas in front.
Before the war
San Antonio was very prosperous, and rapidly increasing in size; but trade is now almost at a complete stand-still.
All the male population under forty are in the military service, and many necessary articles are at famine prices.
Coffee costs $7 a pound.
Menger's hotel is a large and imposing edifice, but
[
54]
its proprietor (a civil German) was on the point of shutting it up for the present.
During the morning I visited
Colonel Bankhead, a tall, gentlemanlike Virginian, who was commanding officer of the troops here.
He told me a great deal about the
Texan history, the
Jesuit missions, and the
Louisiana purchase, &c.; and he alarmed me by doubting whether I should be able to cross the
Mississippi if
Banks had taken
Alexandria.
I also made the acquaintance of
Major Minter, another Virginian, who told me he had served in the 2d cavalry in the old United States army.
The following officers in the Confederate army were in the same regiment-viz.,
General A. S. Johnson (killed at
Shiloh),
General Lee,
General Van Dorn,
General Hardee,
General Kirby Smith, and
General Hood.
12
By the advice of
McCarthy, I sent my portmanteau and some of my heavy things to be sold by auction, as I could not possibly carry them with me.
I took my place by the stage for
Alleyton (
Houston): it cost $40; in old times it was $13.
I dined with
McCarthy and young
Duff at 3 P. M. The latter would not hear of my paying my share of the expenses of the journey from
Brownsville.
Mrs. McCarthy was thrown into a great state of agitation and delight by receiving a letter from her mother,
[
55]
who is in Yankeedom.
Texas is so cut off that she only hears once in many months.
ColonelBankhead and
Mrs. Bankhead called for me in their ambulance at 5 P. M., and they drove me to see the source of the
San Antonio, which is the most beautiful clear spring I ever saw. We also saw the extensive foundations for a tannery now being built by the Confederate government.
The country is very pretty, and is irrigated in an ingenious manner by ditches cut from the river in all directions.
It is thus in a great degree rendered independent of rain.
At
San Antonio spring we were entertained by
a Major Young, a queer little naval officer,--why a major I couldn't discover.
Mrs. Bankhead is a violent Southerner.
She was twice ordered out of
Memphis by the
Federals on account of her husband's principles; but-she says that she was treated with courtesy and kindness by the
Federal General Sherman, who carried out the orders of his government with regret.
None of the
Southern people with whom I have spoken entertain any hopes of a speedy termination of the war. They say it must last all
Lincoln's presidency, and perhaps a good deal longer.
In the neighborhood of
San Antonio, one-third of the population is
German, and many of them were at first by no means loyal to the
Confederate cause.
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They objected much to the conscription, and some even resisted by force of arms; but these were soon settled by
Duff's regiment, and it is said they are now reconciled to the new regime.
My portmanteau, with what was in it — for I gave away part of my things-sold for $323. Its value in
England couldn't have been more than £8 or £9.
The portmanteau itself, which was an old one, fetched $51; a very old pair of butcher boots, $32; five shirts, $42; an old overcoat, $25.
26th April, 1863 (Sunday).
At 11.30 A M.,
McCarthy drove me in his buggy to see the
San Pedro spring, which is inferior in beauty to the
San Antonio spring.
A troop of Texan cavalry was bivouacked there.
We afterwards drove to the “
missions” of
San Jose and
San Juan, six and nine miles from the town.
These were fortified convents for the conversion of the Indians, and were built by the Jesuits about one hundred and seventy years ago. They are now ruins, and the architecture is of the heavy Castilian style, elaborately ornamented.
These missions are very interesting, and there are two more of them, which I did not see.
In the afternoon I saw many negroes and negresses parading about in their Sunday clothes-silks and crinolines-much smarter than their mistresses.
At 5 P. M. I dined with
Colonel Bankhead, who
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gave an entertainment, which in these hard times must have cost a mint of money.
About fourteen of the principal officers were invited; one of them was
Captain Mason (cousin to the
London commissioner), who had served under
Stonewall Jackson in
Virginia.
He said that officer was by no means popular
at first. I spent a very agreeable evening, and heard many anecdotes of the war. One of the officers sang the abolition song, “
John Brown,” together with its parody, “I'm bound to be a soldier in the army of the
South,” a Confederate marching song, and another parody, which is a Yankee marching song, “We'll hang
Jeff Davis on a sour-apple tree.”
Whenever I have dined with Confederate officers, they have nearly always proposed the
Queen's health, and never failed to pass the highest eulogiums upon her majesty.
27th April, 1863 (Monday).
-
Colonel Bankhead has given me letters of introduction to
General Bragg, to
General Leonidas Polk, and several others.
At 2 P. M. I called on
Mrs. Bankhead to say goodby.
She told me that her husband had two brothers in the
Northern service-one in the army and the other in the navy.
The two army brothers were both in the battles of
Shiloh and
Perryville, on opposite sides.
The naval
Bankhead commanded the
Monitor when she sank.
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... introduced me to a German militia general in a beer-house this afternoon.
These two had a slight dispute, as the latter spoke strongly in disapproval of “
secret or night lynching.”
The recent escapade of
Captain Penaloso seems to have been much condemned in
San Antonio.
This individual (formerly a butcher) hanged one of his soldiers a short time ago, on his own responsibility, for desertion and stealing a musket.
This event came off at 12 o'clock noon, in the principal plaza of the city.
The tree has been cut down, to show the feelings of the citizens.
There can be no doubt that the enforcement of the conscription has, as a general rule, been extremely easy throughout the
Confederacy (except among the Germans); but I hear of many persons evading it, by getting into some sort of government employment --such as contractors, agents, or teamsters to the
Rio Grande.
To my extreme regret, I took leave of my fiend
McCarthy this evening, whose hospitality and kindness I shall never forget.
I left
San Antonio by
stage for
Alleyton at 9 P. M. The stage was an old coach, into the interior of which nine persons were crammed on three transverse seats, besides many others on the roof.
I was placed on the centre seat, which was extremely narrow, and I had nothing but a strap to support my back.
An enormously fat German was my
vis-a-vis, and a longlegged
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Confederate officer was in my rear.
Our first team consisted of four mules; we afterwards got horses.
My fellow-travellers were all either military men, r connected with the government.
Only five out of nine chewed tobacco during the light; but they aimed at the windows with great accuracy, and didn't
splash me. The amount of sleep I got, however, was naturally very trifling.
28th April, 1863 (Tuesday).
We crossed the river
Guadalupe at 5 A. M., and got a change of horses.
We got a very fair breakfast at
Seguin, at 7 A. M., which was beginning to be a well-to-do little place when the war dried it up. It commenced to rain at
Seguin, which made the road very woolly, and annoyed the outsiders a good deal.
The conversation turned a good deal upon military subjects, and all agreed that the system of election of officers had proved to be a great mistake.
According to their own accounts, discipline must have been extremely lax at first, but was now improving.
They were most anxious to hear what was thought of their cause in
Europe; and none of them seemed aware of the great sympathy which their gallantry and determination had gained for them in
England in spite of slavery.
We dined at a little wooden hamlet called
Belmont, and changed horses again there.
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The country through which we had been travelling was a good deal cultivated, and there were numerous farms.
I saw cotton-fields for the first time.
We amused ourselves by taking shots with our revolvers at the enormous jack-rabbits which came to stare at the coach.
In the afternoon tobacco-chewing became universal, and the spitting was sometimes a little wild.
It was the custom for the outsiders to sit round the top of the carriage, with their legs dangling over (like mutes on a hearse returning from a funeral). This practice rendered it dangerous to put one's head out of the window, for fear of a back kick from the heels, or of a shower of tobacco-juice from the mouths of the
Southern chivalry on the roof.
In spite of their peculiar habits of hanging, shooting, &c., which seemed to be natural to people living in a wild and thinly-populated country, there was much to like in my fellow-travellers.
They all had a sort of
bonhommie honesty and straightforwardness, a natural courtesy and extreme good-nature, which was very agreeable.
Although they were all very anxious to talk to a European-who, in these blockaded times, is a rara
avis-yet their inquisitiveness was never offensive or disagreeable.
Any doubts as to my personal safety, which may have been roused by my early insight into
Lynch law, were soon completely set at rest; for I soon perceived
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that if any one were to annoy me the remainder would stand by me as a point of honor.
We supped at a little town called
Gonzales at 6 30.
We left it at 8 P. M. in another coach with six horses-big, strong animals.
The roads being all natural ones, were much injured by the rains.
We were all rather disgusted by the bad news we heard at
Gonzales of the continued advance of
Banks, and of the probable fall of
Alexandria.
The squeezing was really quite awful, but I did not suffer so much as the fat or long-legged ones.
They all bore their trials in the most jovial goodhumored manner.
My fat
vis-a-vis (in despair) changed places with me, my two bench-fellows being rather thinner than his, and I benefited much by the change into a back seat.
29th April, 1863 (Wednesday).
Exhausted as I was, I managed to sleep wonderfully well last night.
We breakfasted at a place called
Hallettsville at 7 A. M., and changed carriages again.
Here we took in four more Confederate soldiers as outsiders, and we were now eighteen in all. Nowhere but in this country would such a thing be permitted.
Owing to the great top-weight, the coach swayed
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about like a ship in a heavy sea, and the escapes of a capsize were almost miraculous.
It is said that at the end of a Texan journey the question asked is not, “Have you been upset” but, “How many times have you been upset?”
The value of the negroes working in the fields was constantly appraised by my fellow-travellers; and it appeared that, in
Texas, an able-bodied male fetched $2500, whilst a well-skilled seamstress was worth $3500.
Two of my companions served through the late severe campaign in
New Mexico, but they considered forty-eight hours in a closely-packed stage a greater hardship than any of their military experiences.
We passed many cotton-fields and beautiful Indian corn, but much of the latter had been damaged by the hail.
I was told that one-third of the land formerly devoted to cotton is still sown with that article, the remainder being corn, &c.
13
We also passed through some very pretty country, full of fine post-oak and cotton trees, and we met many
Mexican cotton-teams — some of the wagons with fourteen oxen or twelve mules, which were being cruelly ill-treated by their drivers.
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We crossed several rivers with steep and difficult banks, and dined at a farm-house at 2.30 P. M.
I have already discovered that, directly the bell rings, it is necessary to rush at one's food and bolt it as quickly as possible, without any ceremony or delay, otherwise it all disappears, so rapacious and so voracious are the natives at their meals whilst travelling.
Dinner, on such occasions, in no case lasts more than seven minutes.
We reached
Columbus at 6 P. M., and got rid of half our passengers there.
These Texan towns generally consist of one large plaza, with a well-built court-house on one side and an hotel opposite, the other two sides being filled up with wooden stores.
All their budding prosperity has been completely checked by the war; but every one anticipates a great immigration into
Texas after the peace.
We crossed the
Colorado river, and reached
Alleyton, our destination, at 7 P. M.
This little wooden village has sprung into existence during the last three years, owing to its being the present terminus to the railroad.
It was crammed full of travellers and cotton speculators; but, as an especial favor, the fat
German and I were given a bed
between us. I threw myself on the bed with my clothes on (
bien entendu), and was fast asleep in five minutes. In the same room there were three other beds, each with two occupants.
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The distance from
San Antonio to
Alleyton is 140 miles-time, forty-six hours.
30th April, 1863 (Thursday).
I have to-day acquired my first experience of Texan railroads.
In this country, where every white man is as good as another (by theory), and every white female is by courtesy a lady, there is only one class.
The train from
Alleyton consisted of two long cars, each holding about fifty persons.
Their interior is like the aisle of a church, twelve seats on either side, each for two persons.--The seats are comfortably stuffed, and seemed luxurious after the stage.
Before starting, the engine gives two preliminary snorts, which, with a yell from the official of “
all aboard,” warn the passengers to hold on; for they are closely followed by a tremendousjerk, which sets the cars in motion.
Every passenger is allowed to use his own discretion about breaking his arm, neck, or leg, without interference by the railway officials.
People are continually jumping on and off whilst the train is in motion, and larking from one car to the other.
There is no sort of fence or other obstacle to prevent “humans” or cattle from getting on the line.
We left
Alleyton at 8 A. M., and got a miserable meal at
Richmond at 12.30.
At this little town I was introduced to a seedy-looking man, in rusty black
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clothes and a broken-down “stove-pipe” hat. This was
Judge Stockdale, who will probably be the next governor of
Texas.
He is an agreeable man, and his conversation is far superior to his clothing.
The rival candidate is
General Chambers (I think), who has become very popular by the following sentence in his manifesto:--“I am of opinion that married soldiers should be given the opportunity of embracing their families at least once a year, their places in the ranks being taken by unmarried men. The population must not be allowed to suffer.”
Richmond is on the
Brazos river, which is crossed in a peculiar manner.
A steep inclined plane leads to a low, rickety, trestle bridge, and a similar inclined plane is cut in the opposite bank.
The engine cracks on all steam, and gets sufficient impetus in going down the first incline to shoot across the bridge and up the second incline.
But even in
Texas this method of crossing a river is considered rather unsafe.
After crossing the river in this manner, the rail traverses some very fertile land, part of which forms the estate of the late
Colonel Terry.
There are more than two hundred negroes on the plantation.
Some of the fields were planted with cotton and Indian corn mixed, three rows of the former between two of the latter.
I saw also fields of cotton and sugar mixed.
We changed carriages at
Harrisburg, and I completed my journey to
Houston on a cotton truck.
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The country near
Houston is very pretty, and is studded with white wooden villas, which are raised off the ground on blocks like haystacks.
I reached
Houston at 4.30 P. M., and drove to the
Fannin House hotel.
Houston is a much better place than I expected.
The main street can boast of many well-built brick and iron houses.
It was very full, as it now contained all the refugees from the deserted town of
Galveston.
After an extremely mild supper, I was introduced to
Lieutenant Lee, a wounded hero, who lost his leg at
Shiloh; also to
Colonel Pyron, a distinguished officer, who commands the regiment named after him.
The fat
German,
Mr. Lee, and myself, went to the theatre afterwards.
As a great favor, my British prejudices were respected, and I was allowed a bed to myself; but the four other beds in the room had two occupants each.
A captain, whose acquaintance I had made in the cars, slept in the next bed to me. Directly after we had got into bed a negro came in, who, squatting down between our beds, began to clean our boots.
The
Southerner pointed at the slave, and thus held forth: --“Well, Kernel, I reckon you've got servants in your country, but not of that color.
Now, sir, this is a real genuine
African.
He's as happy as the day's long; and if he was on a sugar plantation he'd be dancing half the night; but if you was to collect
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a thousand of them together, and fire one bomb in amongst them, they'd all run like h — ll.”
The negro grinned, and seemed quite flattered.