- Blas María de la Garza Falcón
Captain Blas María de la Garza Falcón (or Blas María Villarreal de la Garza Falcón) was a Spanish of
Tamaulipas andSouth Texas .Capt. Blas María Villarreal de la Garza Falcón, colonizer of South Texas and Tamaulipas and the first settler of
Nueces County ,Texas , was born in Real de las Salinas,Nuevo León ,Mexico , in 1712 to Gen. Blas de la Garza Falcón, twice governor ofCoahuila , andBeatriz de Villarreal . His five brothers and six sisters spent their childhood at the hacienda Pesquería Chica nearMonterrey . He probably received his education in Monterrey. By 1734 he was a captain at Presidio de San Gregorio de Cerralvo in Nuevo León. OnJanuary 4 ,1731 , Garza Falcón married Catarina Gómez de Castro, daughter of Capt. Antonio Gómez de Castro and Nicolasa Baes de Treviño, at the mining town of Boca de Leones, present-dayVillaldama , Nuevo León. One daughter, María Gertrudis de la Garza Falcón, and two sons, Juan José and José Antonio de la Garza Falcón, were born to this marriage. After the death of Catarina, Garza Falcón married Josefa de los Santos Coy, daughter of Nicolás de los Santos Coy, alcaldeqv of Cerralvo, and Ana María Guerra. No children were born to this marriage.In 1747 José de Escandón, colonizer of Nuevo Santander, chose Garza Falcón to explore the south bank of the
Rio Grande . Garza Falcón led a contingent of fifty men from the presidio of Cerralvo to the mouth of the river. Escandón's plan, as implemented by Garza Falcón, was to establish seven settlements along the river-Revilla,Camargo , Mier, Dolores, Reynosa, Laredo, and Vedoya. OnMarch 5 ,1749 , Garza Falcón arranged for forty families from Nuevo León to settle at Camargo on the banks of the Rio Grande. He founded the villa of Camargo, a presidio for the military squadron, and a mission, San Agustín de Laredo, for the Indians. Escandón named him captain and chief justice of Camargo, the first settlement founded on the Rio Grande. In 1752 Garza Falcón established a ranch, Carnestolendas, now the site ofRio Grande City, Texas , on the north side of the river.After two unsuccessful attempts to settle and colonize land near the Nueces River, Escandón gave the assignment to Garza Falcón. By 1766 Garza Falcón had established a ranching outpost named Santa Petronila five leagues from the Nueces River in what is now Nueces County, Texas. He took his family and employees there and started a ranching enterprise that served as a camp for the Spanish soldiers from Presidio Nuestra Señora de Loreto who explored the vicinity while patrolling in 1767. The ranch, eight miles east of the Nueces River, served as an outpost and way station.
In 1767 Garza Falcón returned to Camargo, where he died and was buried in his private chapel, Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe. After his death the land grants were distributed to the settlers; his family received land extending from the Rio Grande to the Nueces River in South Texas. [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/GG/fga66.html TSHA Online - Texas State Historical Association ] ]
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