Henry Kinney
Henry Lawrence Kinney was born in Pennsylvania, US on June 3, 1814. In 1838 Kinney moved to Texas and settled near where Brownsville, Texas is today. He served in both houses of the Texas Legislature.[1] He was killed in a gunfight in Mexico on March 3, 1862.[2]
Corpus Christi
By 1841 Kinney began trading and ranching near where Corpus Christi, Texas is today on a site known as the Old Indian Trading Grounds. He was elected as a senator to the Ninth Texas Congress and served as a delegate to the Convention of 1845.
At the beginning of the Mexican-American War he was on General James Pinckney Henderson's campaign staff, campaigning in Northern Mexico. At the end of the war he returned to the area and continued trading. Kinney established Corpus Christi as Kinney's Rancho and also established Nuecestown, which is now a ghost town within the city limits of Corpus Christi.[3] Kinney County was named for Henry Kinney.
Nicaragua Filibuster
In 1854, largely financed by New York backers, Kinney purchased millions of acres of land in Nicaragua under dubious legal circumstances, with the intent to start a colony. This practice, known as filibustering, was popular before the U.S. Civil War, both as a means of carrying out the nation's so-called manifest destiny and, in some cases, as a tactic to expand U.S. territory where slavery was permitted. Also fueling popular support for American filibusters was Britain's domination of the eastern coast of Central America—the Miskito or "Mosquito" Coast. In February 1855, however, Kinney was warned that his proposed colony might violate the U.S. Neutrality Act. In April 1855, he and his fellow filibuster Joseph W. Fabens were arrested in New York and their vessel blockaded by the U.S. Navy at its East River wharf. Released on bail, Kinney slipped out of New York and traveled to Nicaragua.[4]
On Aug. 17, Kinney wrote to a friend: "I am at last on Central American soil with 100 men and more. This is a beautiful place and is to be the principal of the world. My force will be augmented in three weeks to 2,000 men, when I shall move up country. I have a larger space to act in than I had at Corpus Christi and the result of my undertakings in Central America can hardly be imagined."
Kinney's followers elected him governor. By his own authority, he could raise armies and establish martial law. He appointed a Cabinet, flew his own Mosquito flag, and established a newspaper called The Central American.[5] With a handful of followers he launched a failed revolt against the Nicaraguan government and the regime of fellow American William Walker, a more successful filibuster who, after supporting the Democrats against the Legitimists in Nicaragua's civil war, took power himself.[6] Opposed by both the U.S. and Nicaraguan governments, as well as shipping tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt, Kinney soon gave up his dream. In February 1856, Walker—now head of state—annexed all of the Mosquito Coast, including Kinney's domain, for Nicaragua.[7]
Seminole War
Kinney began using the title "Colonel" that he claimed to have earned during the Seminole War in Florida, but there is no evidence that he took part in that conflict.[8] He may have been inspired by "Colonel" Walker, who progressed to "General" when his accession to power made him commander-in-chief of Nicaragua's armed forces.
References
- ↑ http://www.ccmuseumedres.com/tour.php?action=details&record=120
- ↑ http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fki29
- ↑ http://www.texasescapes.com/TexasGulfCoastTowns/Nuecestown-Texas.htm
- ↑ http://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/record.php?id=708221502
- ↑ http://www.caller.com/news/2011/aug/03/henry-kinneys-mosquito-coast-empire-lasted-16/
- ↑ worldcat.org op cit
- ↑ James T. Wall, Manifest Destiny Denied, University Press of America, 1981
- ↑ http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fki29