daughter of Deacon Joshua Goodrich and Clarissa Francis
Charles Stillman chose the name for Brownsville, Texas. He named some of the streets after members of the Stillman Family and after presidents of the USA. Charles Stillman was known as Don Carlos. Charles was a partner in the steamboat firm of King, Kennedy and Co.. Captain King later started King Ranch.
STILLMAN, CHARLES (1810-1875). Charles Stillman, son of
Francis and Harriet (Robbins) Stillman, was born at Wethersfield,
Connecticut, on November 4, 1810. In February 1828 he went by
way of New Orleans to Matamoros. In Mexico he developed a
network of mercantile and industrial enterprises, including cotton
brokerage and real estate firms, silver mines in Nuevo León and
Tamaulipas, merchandise outlets, a shipping company that carried
passengers and goods from the Gulf Coast up the river as far as Rio
Grande City, and an off-loading, warehousing, and transportation
company that carried goods to the Mexican interior as far as
Guadalajara. Stillman and his partner, José Morell, established
retailing outlets and founded one of the first textile factories at
Monterrey. Stillman's Vallecillo mines, between Laredo and
Monterrey, produced more than $4 million in silver and lead during
the 1850s, and he sold their stock on the New York Stock
Exchange.
During the Mexican War Richard King and Mifflin Kenedy joined
Stillman in the transport company hauling American troops up the
river and supplying them. In the aftermath of the Mexican defeat
Stillman purchased massive properties of the Garza grant north and
northwest of Matamoros from the children of the first wife of José
Narciso Cavazos. The sellers, however, had no legal right to make
such a sale, since their father had remarried and the heirs of his
second wife, led by the eldest son, Juan N. Cortina,qv inherited the
land from their father upon his death. The excluded children of the
first wife "sold" not only the family estates but also the ejido or
community property of Matamoros, which was inalienable under
Spanish and Mexican law. Nevertheless, Stillman started a town
company to sell lots for as much as $1,500 each and named the
place Brownsville. By 1850 a population of between 3,000 and
4,000 had concentrated there. Stillman later sold the enormous ranch
property north of Brownsville to his partner Kenedy. The lands to the
west of Brownsville were left to his son, James Stillman. As a result
of land transactions and rising violence, many of the Mexicans fled
south of the river and, led by Cortina, carried out a range war that
continued for twenty-six years. In 1851 Stillman helped bankroll the
attempted invasion of Mexico by José María Carbajal for the
purpose of setting up the Republic of the Sierra Madre, which was to
extend from Matamoros and Tampico inland to Monterrey, Saltillo,
and Nuevo Laredo.
Between 1862 and 1865 Stillman, King, and Kenedy transported
Confederate cotton to Matamoros under contract for payment in
gold. Stillman bought much of the cotton and sent it to his textile
complex at Monterrey, but he sold even more of it in New York
through his mercantile firm, Smith and Dunning. The United States
government was a major purchaser. On one sale at Manhattan
Stillman netted $18,851 on a gross of $21,504. His cotton buyers in
Texas included George W. Brackenridge, and one of his major
suppliers was Thomas William House. By the end of the war
Stillman was one of the richest men in America. He concentrated his
investments in the National City Bank of New York, which his son
James later controlled, and supplied Brackenridge with $200,000 in
the 1870s in order to establish the San Antonio National Bank.
Stillman married Elizabeth Pamela Goodrich of Wethersfield,
Connecticut, on August 17, 1849. He built a notable home in
Brownsville in 1850 and lived in Brownsville and New York City
until 1866, when he moved permanently to New York. He died there
in December 1875.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: LeRoy P. Graf, The Economic History of the
Lower Rio Grande Valley, 1820-1875 (Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard
University, 1942). Tom Lea, The King Ranch (2 vols., Boston:
Little, Brown, 1957). Chauncey Devereux Stillman, Charles
Stillman (New York, 1956). Stillman Papers, Harvard and
Columbia University libraries. John K. Winkler, The First Billion:
The Stillmans and the National City Bank (New York: Vanguard,
1934).
John Mason Hart The Handbook of Texas Online 2002
The early 1850's Charles Stillman Residence pictured above-left in 1956 is in 2003, a Brownsville, Texas Museum
daughter of Deacon Joshua Goodrich and Clarissa Francis
Oct 1850 Federal Census Rio Grande Valley TX
James Jewett Stillman Born: 9 Jun 1850
Place: Brownsville, TX
Died: 15 Mar 1918
Place: New York, NY
Married: Sarah Elizabeth Rumrill
Born: 7 Feb 1853
Place: New York, NY
Died: 28 Nov 1925
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Date Married: 14 Jun 1871
Isabel Goodrich Stillman
Born: 22 Sep 1852
Place: Brownsville, TX
Died: 16 Aug 1894
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Clara Francis Stillman
Born: 20 Mar 1855
Place: Hartford, CT
Died: 15 Apr 1925
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Charles Stillman, Jr.
Born: 22 May 1856
Place: Staten Island, NY
Died: 15 Nov 1933
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Charles Stillman, Jr. was founder of Golden Rule Foundation, New York, NY.
Bessie Gray Stillman
Born: 13 Apr 1860
Place: New York, NY
Died: 22 May 1935
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Edith Raymond Stillman
Born: 7 Aug 1872
Place: Cornwall-on-Hudson, NY
Died: 10 Jun 1874
Place: New York, NY - buried in Woodlawn Cemetary
Pictures are from Charles Stillman 1810 - 1875 printed for Chauncey Devereux Stillman, New York, 1956
Information and data have been obtained from ancestry.com