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MAGOFFIN,
JAMES WILEY (1799-1868)
James
Wiley Magoffin, pioneering El Paso settler and merchant, was born
in 1799 in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, the son of Beriah and Jane
(McAfee) Magoffin, Sr., and the brother of Beriah Magoffin, Jr.,
who later became governor of Kentucky.
In 1824 or 1825 he sailed from New Orleans on a ship bound
for Tampico, Tamaulipas, but a storm wrecked the vessel in
Matagorda Bay. He and the other passengers were eventually rescued
by a coasting schooner and taken to Matamoros. Magoffin was the
American consul in Saltillo, Coahuila, from 1825 to 1831.
With headquarters in Matamoros he established important
commercial relations between Texas and New Orleans, trading Texas
products, particularly cotton, for finished goods such as
machinery, hardware, furniture, and clothing.
By 1836 he had moved to Chihuahua, where he became a
prominent Santa Fe trader and became involved in copper mining.
"Don Santiago," as he was called, developed a reputation
as a shrewd businessman and a genial host given to entertaining
lavishly. Magoffin
married the widow María Gertrudis Valdez de Frías after settling
in Cuidad Chihuahua. In
late 1841 he led a caravan to St. Louis and returned by way of
Santa Fe with forty wagons of merchandise. South of Santa Fe he
encountered the bedraggled prisoners of the fruitless Texan Santa
Fe expedition. He provided them with coffee and tobacco, and gave
them food and champagne in Chihuahua.
Mexican
officials suspected him of giving guns to the Comanches to keep
them from attacking his wagon trains. In 1844, because of such
suspicions or because of the Mexican government's increasing
restrictions on international trade, the Magoffins moved to
Independence, Missouri. There, Magoffin maintained two wagon
trains on the Santa Fe Trail and established a mule-breeding farm.
After María died in January 1845, Magoffin sent his two sons to
Lexington, Kentucky, where they were educated (the elder of the
two, Joseph Magoffin, later became mayor of El Paso), and placed
two of his daughters in a convent in St. Louis.
In June 1846 he went to Washington, where his friend
Senator Thomas Hart Benton introduced him to President James K.
Polk. Seeking to take advantage of Magoffin's experiences in the
Santa Fe trade, Polk instructed him to join Gen. Stephen W.
Kearny's expedition to conquer Mexico. Magoffin caught up with
Kearny at Bent's Fort in late July and helped negotiate the
peaceful surrender of Santa Fe. He was sent on to Chihuahua to
prepare the way for the advance of Col. Alexander W. Doniphan, but
on September 27, 1846, he and four others were arrested as spies
by the Mexican justice of the peace in Doña Ana, New Mexico, and
sent to El Paso del Norte (present Juárez, Chihuahua). To add to
his misfortunes, the Mexican authorities reported that Apaches at
Brazito had stolen all of Magoffin’s wagons, equipment, and
papers, although they were later recovered. Magoffin spent several
months imprisoned in Chihuahua and then Durango; he was apparently
treated well by his captors, thanks in part to his insistence on
entertaining them lavishly.
After
his release in late June 1847, he returned to Washington and asked
the federal government for $37,780.96 in compensation for his
services and losses during the war, but Secretary of War George W.
Crawford awarded him only $30,000. With this money Magoffin
returned to Independence and organized another wagon train, but on
his arrival at El Paso del Norte he found that the high customs
duties imposed by the Mexican government destroyed any hope of his
turning a profit. At this time he apparently decided simply to
stay where he was, and by June 1849 he had settled on the north
(eastern) bank of the Rio Grande, just across from El Paso del
Norte. There he
quickly became the leading Anglo-American in the area.
He built a large hacienda that became known as
Magoffinsville; sold mules and operated wagon trains, just as he
had in Independence; raised what may have been the first alfalfa
crop in the El Paso area; cultivated the first acreage in the
vicinity of present-day Anthony, on the Texas-New Mexico border.
After he married Dolores Valdez, the sister of his first wife in
August 1850, he reestablished his reputation as a gracious and
generous host. In
1852 Magoffin lent money and supplies to William H. Emory, with
whom he had served in the Mexican War, while Emory organized the
United States-Mexico Boundary Survey. John Russell Bartlett was
among his guests at Magoffinsville.
In
1849 Magoffin led the local merchants in protesting Maj. Jefferson
Van Horne's decision to locate a permanent military post at the
old San Elizario Presidio. At least partially as a result of this
petition, the troops remained at Coon's Rancho until they were
removed to Fort Fillmore, New Mexico, in September 1851. In
January 1854, Fort Bliss was established at Magoffinsville in
buildings leased from Magoffin, who was also the post sutler.
In
August 1852 Magoffin acquired an interest in the salt deposits on
the eastern slope of the San Andres Mountains in New Mexico. In
January 1854, having heard that citizens of Mesilla, New Mexico,
planned to take salt without paying him for it, he convinced the
El Paso sheriff to organize a posse and set out after the
salineros. The twenty-eight-man posse, which included William A.
(Bigfoot) Wallace, encountered the 125 or so New Mexicans near the
Chinos Road, and a battle ensued. The Texans triumphed; thanks
largely to a small howitzer that had perhaps been lent by the
commander of Fort Bliss, and returned with the New Mexicans'
captured oxen. Magoffin and his allies were indicted at Mesilla
for assault, but they were beyond the jurisdiction of the New
Mexico territorial court and never came to trial. Eventually,
however, Magoffin did agree to pay for the oxen, and two years
later the charges against him were formally dropped.
He
was a staunch and vocal supporter of the Confederacy.
In March 1861 he and Simeon Hart were appointed
commissioners to receive the surrender of federal properties at
Fort Bliss. Magoffin also supplied John W. Baylor and Henry H.
Sibleyq on their marches to New Mexico, and in 1862 went with the
Confederate forces to San Antonio. The federal government seized
his properties in the El Paso area.
In
the fall of 1865 Magoffin went to Washington to seek amnesty from
President Andrew Johnson for his activities on behalf of the
Confederacy. He was unsuccessful, but on November 13, 1865,
Governor Andrew J. Hamilton commissioned him to go to El Paso and
organize a militia company and a county government. Magoffin
arrived at Fort Bliss on May 6, 1866, but Capt. David H.
Brotherton refused to allow him to proceed.
He returned to Washington, and this time, with the
intercession of army paymaster Benjamin W. Brice, he was granted
amnesty, and his citizenship was restored.
Magoffin returned to San Antonio, where he died on
September 27, 1868, following a long siege of dropsy.
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