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Charles Morgan (businessman)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Morgan
Portrait by Nathaniel Harris Morgan in 1869
Born(1795-04-21)April 21, 1795
DiedMay 8, 1878(1878-05-08) (aged 83)
Resting placeGreen-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Merchant, entrepreneur (shipping), investor
Known for
Spouses
Emily Reeves
(m. 1817; died 1850)
(m. 1851)
Children5

Charles Morgan (April 21, 1795 – May 8, 1878) was an American railroad and shipping magnate. He played a leading role in the development of transportation and commerce in the Southern United States through the mid- to late-19th century.

Morgan started working in New York City at the age of 14. He managed both wholesale and retail businesses before specializing in marine shipping. He invested in sailing vessels as early as 1819, while managing all aspects of the business from his office at the wharf in New York City. He started his first partnership for a packet company in 1831. During the 1830s, he held stakes in companies shipping to Kingston, Jamaica, and Charleston, South Carolina, from New York, and a stake in a company shipping between New Orleans and Galveston, Texas. During this time, he invested more in steamships than sailing ships. The Louisiana–Texas packets became so successful that he gradually withdrew from the Atlantic trade in the late 1830s. Charles Morgan's Steamships primary cargo from Rhode Island to the South were Slaves.

In the 1840s and 1850s, Morgan expanded his shipping business in the Gulf of Mexico, expanding service to Mexico, Florida, and adding stops in Texas. Texas statehood and the Mexican War were boons to his enterprises of shipping mail, troops, and war material. By 1846, he sold his last stake in a sailing vessel. After 1849 and through part of the 1850s, Morgan responded to transportation demand to California driven by the gold rush. He offered passenger service from New York City to San Francisco via Panama. These activities pulled him into business alliances and rivalries with Cornelius Vanderbilt which culminated in Morgan's support of William Walker's filibuster in Nicaragua. Morgan also attempted to damage Vanderbilt's investments and his business positions before they agreed to a truce in 1858. In the late 1850s, a lucrative business developed out of a segment of railroad running between New Orleans and Berwick Bay, Louisiana. The railroad terminated in a desolate part of the state, and Morgan's steamers enabled the railroad to create revenue from an expensive infrastructure investment. In return, the railroad shortened Morgan's Louisiana to Texas route by about 150 miles. In 1855, Morgan incorporated his assets for the first time, co-founding the Southern Steamship Company. With family and other close friends managing the company, Morgan accelerated his investments in steamboats.

During the Civil War, he lost some of his investments to seizures by the North and the South. Most of the steamers seized were corporately owned by the Southern Steamship Company, which led to its liquidation in 1863. Morgan, however, prospered during the war despite these losses. He ran blockade runners for the Confederacy, but his most profitable venture during this period was the Morgan Iron Works. This shop built engines for thirteen ships sold to the Union Navy. At the end of the war, he repurchased some of these steamships at favorable prices.

During Reconstruction, Morgan sold his interest in the Morgan Iron Works. He also took advantage of the buyer's market for steamships and expanded his fleet. He resumed his Gulf packet service between New Orleans and Texas, and between New Orleans and Mobile, Alabama. In 1869, he acquired his first railroad. Two more railroad acquisitions followed in the 1870s. He died on May 8, 1878, at his home in New York City. Just prior to his death, he incorporated Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship Company and distributed his shares to several family members.

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Transcription

(ANNOUNCER OFF CAMERA) TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR 150 IS BROUGHT TO YOU IN PART BY TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMISSION, AND TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA. (VAN WEST) YOU FIND THE RIVERS YOU FIND THE RAILROADS YOU FIND WHERE MOST OF THE BATTLES IN TENNESSEE TOOK PLACE. (BRIAN MCKNIGHT) ULTIMATELY, WHOEVER CONTROLS THE RIVERS AND THE RAILS PARTICULARLY IN TENNESSEE WINS THE WAR. (NARRATOR) AS A MILITARY STRATEGY, IT IS STRAIGHTFORWARD AND SIMPLE. BUT CONTROLLING THE RIVERS AND RAILS IN THE CIVIL WAR GOES OUTSIDE THE LINES OF BATTLES TO BRING MALICE AND MISERY TO ORDINARY PEOPLE WHO JUST WANT TO LIVE IN PEACE. (WAYNE MOORE) CIVILIANS SUFFERED INORDINATELY FROM THE WAR BECAUSE OF THE OCCUPATION OF HOSTILE TROOPS. (NARRATOR) A POTTER FEELS FORCED INTO MAKING A PATRIOTIC CHOICE THAT BRANDS HIM A TRAITOR... THE DREAMS OF A TEENAGE GIRL IN A RIVER TOWN ARE DISRUPTED BY INVASION AND LOSS. THE CHALLENGE ALSO MAKES MEN INTO HEROES... LIKE THE VOLUNTEERS WHOSE RISKY RIDE ON THE RAILS LEADS TO A MEDAL OF HONOR, BUT ALSO AN ENGAGEMENT WITH THE EXECUTIONER. IT STILL COMES DOWN TO ONE THING. (FRED PROUTY) THE RIVERS IN TENNESSEE HAVE BEEN COMPARED TO DAGGERS PLUNGING INTO THE HEART OF THE SOUTH... AND THAT'S WHAT THEY WERE. IT WAS AN OPEN ARTERY INTO THE VERY EXISTENCE OF THE CONFEDERACY. (NARRATOR) IT IS THE GOOD OLD DAYS OF THE SOUTH, AND TENNESSEE IS RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF IT. THREE GREAT RIVERS CARVE THEIR WAY THROUGH THE STATE AS STEAMBOATS CARRY COTTON, CORN, CATTLE, IRON AND COPPER UP AND DOWN THE RIVER. (VAN WEST) TENNESSEEE PROSPERED AS IT NEVER HAD BEFORE IN THE TEN YEARS BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR. (NARRATOR) PLANTATION OWNERS NEED MORE WORKERS TO MEET THE GROWING DEMAND FOR THEIR PRODUCTS. (FRED PROUTY) THE SLAVE POPULATION WAS ACTUALLY OUTGROWING THE STATE WHITE POPULATION AT THE TIME. (NARRATOR) AND BUSINESSMEN LIKE SAMUEL DOLD MORGAN RIDE THE WAVE OF A BOOMING ECONOMY. MORGAN OWNS A DRY GOODS STORE IN DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE AND RUNS TWO THRIVING COTTON MILLS. (RUTH WARNER) HE WAS SO WELL LIKED BY HIS PEERS IN THE COMMUNITY THAT THEY BEGAN TO CALL HIM THE MERCHANT PRINCE OF NASHVILLE. (NARRATOR) MORGAN HAD BEEN APPOINTED BY THE LEGISLATURE AS PRESIDENT OF A CITIZENS COMMITTEE IN CHARGE OF BUILDING THE NEW TENNESSEE STATE CAPITOL. (RUTH WARNER) HE HAD A VISION FOR THE STATE CAPITOL TO BE THIS OUTSTANDING GREEK REVIVAL MONUMENT YOU KNOW ON THE HILL THE HIGHEST POINT IN NASHVILLE. (NARRATOR) NOW, IN THE BOOM OF THE 1850S, SAM MORGAN WRITES THE CHARTER FOR THE VERY FIRST SUCCESSFUL RAILWAY SYSTEM IN THE STATE. FROM THE DOCK TO THE DEPOT, SAMUEL MORGAN AND OTHER MERCHANTS CAN NOW SHIP GOODS FASTER, FURTHER AND CHEAPER. (DR. CARROLL VAN WEST) CERTAINLY, IF NASHVILLE IS THE CENTER OF THIS GREAT RAILROAD NETWORK THAT IS STARTING TO BIND TOGETHER THE EAST AND THE WEST AND THE NORTH AND THE SOUTH ANYONE SMART ENOUGH TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THAT AND CREATE WHOLESALE BUSINESSES WOULD PROFIT IMMENSELY. AND SAM MORGAN WAS ONE OF THOSE. [CANNON FIRING] BOOM! (NARRATOR) BUT NOTHING CAN BE THE SAME AFTER THE HISTORIC ATTACK ON FT. SUMTER BY THE CONFEDERATE ARMY, APRIL 12, 1861. SAMUEL MORGAN'S OLDEST SON, ST. CLAIR MACINTOSH MORGAN, IS BELIEVED BY SOME TO HAVE FIRED THE FIRST SHOT. A YOUNGER SON AND NAMESAKE OF HIS FATHER, SAM MORGAN, JOINS THE KENTUCKY CAVALRY TO SERVE WITH HIS COUSIN, THE SOON TO BE LEGENDARY BRIGADIER GENERAL JOHN HUNT MORGAN. THE CONFEDERATE HERO WILL AGGRAVATE THE UNION ARMY BY ATTACKING THE VERY RAILROADS THAT HELPED MAKE HIS UNCLE SUCCESSFUL. AND SAMUEL MORGAN HIMSELF STARTS A BRAND NEW BUSINESS THAT ONCE AGAIN RELIES ON THE RIVERS AND RAILS. (RUTH WARNER) HE MANUFACTURED PERCUSSION CAPS IN SOUTH NASHVILLE WHICH WERE USED AT THE BATTLE OF MANASSUS. (NARRATOR) SO, THOSE SAME RIVERS AND RAILS THAT HAD TRANSPORTED PROSPERITY TO TENNESSEE AND THE SOUTH WILL NOW BECOME LIFELINES FOR MOVING MEN, AMMUNITION AND SUPPLIES TO A WAR THAT SPLITS THE NATION. (BRIAN MCKNIGHT) WE DON'T THINK VERY MUCH ABOUT IT TODAY BECAUSE WE CAN DROP PARATROOPERS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD BUT BACK THEN YOU HAD TO TRANSPORT 30, 40, 50 THOUSAND MEN PER SIDE AND YOU DIDN'T DO THAT BY PUTTING THEM ON A TRAIL AND GETTING THEM TO WALK IN A SPECIFIC DIRECTION. YOU HAD TO PUT THEM ON RAIL CARS OR YOU HAD TO PUT THEM ON BOATS, AND YOU HAD TO GET THEM TO THE FIELD. (NARRATOR) IN THE ROCKY REGION OF EAST TENNESSEE WHERE COTTON IS NOT KING, PEOPLE LIKE CHRISTOPHER ALEXANDER HAUN FIND OTHER WAYS TO MAKE A LIVING. (DON BIBLE) HE WENT BY THE INITIALS C.A. OR ALEX. MOST PEOPLE CALLED HIM ALEX. HE WAS PROBABLY, IF NOT THE FINEST POTTER THAT TENNESSEE EVER PRODUCED, HE WAS ONE OF THE FINEST. (NARRATOR) IN 1861, ALEX HAUN, A FATHER OF FIVE CHILDREN, WORKS AND LIVES IN A COMMUNITY CALLED POTTERSTOWN, WHICH IS OCCUPIED BY THE CONFEDERATE ARMY. LIKE MOST OF HIS NEIGHBORS, HE IS A SUPPORTER OF PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE UNION CAUSE. (DON BIBLE) THEY FELT THAT THE UNION HAD BEEN CREATED BY THEIR FOREFATHERS AND THEY, THEY DIDN'T WANT TO SEE IT DISSOLVED. (NARRATOR) WILLIAM CARTER, A FORMER MINISTER, COMES UP WITH AN IDEA TO BURN RAILROAD BRIDGES ACROSS EAST TENNESSEE TO SLOW THE MOVEMENT OF SOUTHERN SOLDIERS. GENERAL GEORGE THOMAS HELPS ARRANGE A RENDEZVOUS RENDEZVOUS IN WASHINGTON WITH THE PRESIDENT HIMSELF. (DON BIBLE) THEY HAD A MEETING UP THERE AND LINCOLN APPROVED THE PLAN AND PROMISED THEM THAT FEDERAL FORCES WOULD INVADE AS SOON AS THE BRIDGES WERE BURNED. (NARRATOR) AMONG THE SECRET CONSPIRATORS ON THAT EARLY MORNING, NOVEMBER EIGHTH, 1861, IS ALEX HAUN. HE IS JOINED BY A NEIGHBOR, JACOB HARMON AND HIS TWO SONS, HENRY AND TOM. A POTTERS ASSISTANT, 21-YEAR-OLD JACOB HINSHAW, AND HENRY FRY, A SHOEMAKER, ARE ALSO A PART OF THE PLOT. (DON BIBLE) IT WAS A COLD NIGHT AND THE SEVEN CONFEDERATE BRIDGE GUARDS WERE IN A TENT. AND THEY HAD GUNS ON THEM BEFORE THE MEN EVEN KNEW THEY WERE THERE. (BRIDGE BURNERS) GET ON OUT OF THERE WE'LL SHOOT YOU WHERE YOU LAY! PUT YOUR HANDS UP! PUT YOUR HANDS UP! GET ON OUT OF THERE! (DON BIBLE) THEY HAD THEM OUTSIDE AND ALL THE TIME THE BRIDGE WAS BEING SET ON FIRE... ...THE STORY IS THAT THERE WAS A DISCUSSION. I SAY WE KILL EM... (DON BIBLE) SOME OF THEM WANTED TO KILL THEM ON THE SPOT SO THERE WOULD BE NO WITNESSES, OTHERS SAID NO... NO, WE CAN'T DO THAT. IT'S ONE THING TO KILL A MAN IN A FIELD OF FIRE. BUT THESE MEN ARE UNARMED. WE CAN'T KILL THEM IN COLD BLOOD. (DON BIBLE) THAT POSITION FINALLY PREVAILED WITH THE STIPULATION THAT THE MEN WOULD TAKE AN OATH THAT THEY WOULDN'T REVEAL ANYTHING THAT THEY SAW OR HEARD THAT NIGHT OTHER THAN THAT THE BRIDGE WAS BURNED. (NARRATOR) THE CONFEDERACY RESPONDS TO THE BRIDGE BURNING RAPIDLY AND RUTHLESSLY. ALEX HAUN IS ARRESTED THE VERY NEXT AFTERNOON ALONG WITH JACOB HARMON AND HIS SONS. CONFEDERATE WAR SECRETARY JUDAH P. BENJAMIN OFFERS NO MERCY. ALL SUCH AS CAN BE IDENTIFIED IN HAVING BEEN ENGAGED IN BRIDGE-BURNING ARE TO BE TRIED SUMMARILY BY DRUM-HEAD COURT MARTIAL, AND, IF FOUND GUILTY, EXECUTED ON THE SPOT BY HANGING IN THE VICINITY OF THE BURNED BRIDGES. (BRIAN MCKNIGHT) THE CONFEDERACY WAS TERRIFIED OF WHAT THE WAR MIGHT BECOME IF EAST TENNESSEE UNIONISTS BECAME TOO BOLD. (NARRATOR) JACOB HINSHAW AND HENRY FRY GO ON THE RUN BUT ARE CAPTURED WITHIN A FEW DAYS. AFTER A QUICK CONVICTION, THE TWO MEN ARE HANGED FROM AN OAK TREE NEAR THE GREENVILLE RAILROAD DEPOT. ALEX HAUN AND THE HARMONS ARE LIKEWISE FOUND GUILTY. HAUN IS PUBLICLY HANGED FROM A GALLOWS ON DECEMBER 10TH. HE LEAVES A LETTER FOR HIS PREGNANT WIFE... I HAVE THE PROMISE THAT MY BODY WILL BE SENT HOME TO YOU. OH LIVE FOR HEAVEN, OH MY BOSOM FRIEND AND CHILDREN. LIVE FOR HEAVEN, I PRAY. MY TIME IS ALMOST OUT, DEAR FRIENDS, FAREWELL TO THIS WORLD...FAREWELL TO EARTH AND EARTHLY TROUBLES. (NARRATOR) JACOB HARMON AND HIS SON HENRY ARE HANGED JUST A FEW DAYS LATER. (DON BIBLE) HENRY HARMON WAS PUT ON THE GALLOWS FIRST AND THE ROPE BROKE. AND HIS HALF LIFELESS BODY FELL TO THE GROUND AND THEY HAD TO HANG HIM AGAIN AND, OF COURSE, HIS FATHER SAW ALL OF THAT. (NARRATOR) LINCOLN'S ARMY HAS BEEN A NO-SHOW. (DON BIBLE) SOMEBODY, WITHOUT LINCOLN'S KNOWLEDGE, DECIDED THAT THE ARMY WAS TOO STRONG IN THE KNOXVILLE AREA FOR THEM TO INVADE EAST TENNESSEE AND THEY GOT HERE TWO YEARS LATER AFTER THE FIVE MEN WERE HANGED AND THEIR FAMILIES HAD BEEN TAKEN OF BASICALLY EVERYTHING THAT THEY HAD AND RUN OUT OF THEIR HOMES AND SO FORTH. (NARRATOR) THE RAILROAD BRIDGES ARE QUICKLY REPAIRED. BUT THE UNION ARMY IS MOVING TROOPS THROUGHOUT KENTUCKY, AND THE CONFEDERACY HAS MORE THAN 300 MILES OF TENNESSEE BORDER TO PROTECT. THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER OFFERS THE FEDERALS A HIGHWAY TO MEMPHIS. SO, SOUTHERN GENERAL ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON PUTS UP A ROADBLOCK. (FRED PROUTY) THE COLUMBUS FORTIFICATIONS ON THE HIGH BLUFFS IN COLUMBUS, KENTUCKY WERE THE GIBRALTAR OF THE CONFEDERATE FORTIFICATION IN TENNESSEE, OR THAT'S WHAT THEY HAD PLANNED THEM FOR. (NARRATOR) UNION GENERAL ULYSSES S. GRANT USES CONFUSING MILITARY TACTICS TO CONVINCE HIS ENEMIES HE PLANS AN ATTACK ON COLUMBUS TO ACCESS THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER. BUT THEN HE MAKES AN UNEXPECTED MOVE THAT WILL DRIVE HIS ARMY AND THE NAVY STRAIGHT INTO THE SOUL OF MIDDLE TENNESSEE. (FRED PROUTY) HE WENT UP RIVER TO PADUCAH, CAME DOWN ON THE TENNESSEE... SENT TROOPS DOWN ON THE TENNESSEE AND THE CUMBERLAND RIVERS WHICH WERE PARALLEL TO EACH OTHER AND ATTACKED FT. HENRY... AND THEN FT. DONELSON. (BRIAN MCKNIGHT) IF YOU TAKE FT. HENRY AND YOU MOVE SOUTH WHICH IS ACTUALLY UP THE TENNESSEE RIVER YOU WILL EVENTUALLY END UP IN MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA BEFORE REENTERING TENNESSEE AT CHATTANOOGA. IF YOU FOLLOW IT EVEN FURTHER UPSTREAM, YOU WILL GO THROUGH EAST TENNESSEE EVEN INTO VIRGINIA SO THAT'S HOW IMPORTANT THE TENNESSEE RIVER WAS. IF YOU ENTER THE CUMBERLAND AT FT. DONELSON IT WILL TAKE YOU INTO DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE. (NARRATOR) FT. HENRY IS ALREADY FLOODED BY THE RISING RIVER AND FALLS QUICKLY. UP NEXT IS FT. DONELSON, WHERE THE FEDERALS ATTACK WITH BOTH GROUND TROOPS AND GUNBOATS IN A VICIOUS FIVE-DAY ENCOUNTER. IT IS HERE WHERE U.S. GRANT EARNS THE NICKNAME "UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER." (WAYNE MOORE) I THINK THE ABILITY OF PEOPLE LIKE ULYSSES GRANT TO RECOGNIZE EARLY ON IN THE WAR THE IMPORTANCE OF THE RIVERS IN SECURING THE MID-SOUTH IS REALLY THE CRUCIAL BREAKTHROUGH STRATEGICALLY. (NARRATOR) AMONG THE MANY CONFEDERATES TAKEN PRISONER AT DONELSON ARE ST. CLAIR MORGAN AND ANOTHER YOUNG SOLDIER NAMED ROBERT HASKINS OF CLARKSVILLE, WHERE UNION FORCES ARE HEADED NEXT. ROBERT'S LITTLE SISTER MARTHA IS A WELL-EDUCATED SOUTHERN TEENAGER KNOWN AS NANNIE TO HER FAMILY AND FRIENDS. HER DIARY DESCRIBES THE IMMEDIATE IMPACT OF WAR IN A RIVER TOWN. THE CITIZENS WERE RUNNING. THERE WERE ALREADY TWO HOSPITALS HERE WHICH WERE FILLED WITH THE SICK. AND THEY, POOR FELLOWS, THEY WERE CRAWLING OUT FROM ALL OVER THE PLACE. WALKING, GOING ON HORSEBACK AND WAGONS... (MINOA UFFELMAN) THE VERY FIRST ENTRY THAT NANNIE WRITES IS ABOUT HOW PANICKED EVERYONE WAS, THEY WERE CAUGHT OFF GUARD, THAT THEY THOUGHT FORT DEFIANCE MIGHT PROTECT THEM AND THEN WHEN FORT HENRY AND FORT DONELSON FELL AND THE UNION TROOPS CAME IN,PEOPLE WERE PANICKED. INDEED THEY WENT ANY WAY TO GET OUT OF REACH OF THE YANKEES FOR IT WAS NOT KNOWN AT WHAT MOMENT THAT THE VANDALS WOULD BE HERE. (WAYNE MOORE) THAT TYPE OF WARFARE LEADS TO AN ENORMOUS EFFORT BY THE ARMIES TO, TO KEEP THE CIVILIAN POPULATION UNDER CONTROL. AND THEY DO IT WITH THESE HUGE BUREAUCRACIES, PROVOST MARSHAL, THEY ARE MAKING CITIZENS TAKE LOYALTY OATHS, THEY'RE PUNISHING THEM FOR TREASONABLE ACTIVITIES, THEY ARE CONFISCATING THEIR PROPERTY IF THEY FIND OUT THEY ARE SUPPORTING THE CONFEDERACY. THESE ARE VERY REAL BURDENS DAMAGES AND LOSSES THAT PEOPLE SUFFERED. THIS IS WHY MOST TENNESSEANS GO TO FIGHT FOR THE CONFEDERACY, NOT NECESSARILY BECAUSE THEY ARE PRO-SLAVERY BUT BECAUSE THE UNION ARMY INVADES TENNESSEE AND DOES SO BY THE RIVERS. (NARRATOR) NANNIE HASKINS GETS WORD THAT HER BROTHER ROBERT HAS DIED IN A PRISON CAMP. AND IT IS NO SURPRISE THAT AT 16 YEARS OLD SHE CAN'T STAND THE SIGHT OF A YANKEE. THOSE HATEFUL GUN BOATS! THEY LOOK LIKE THEY ARE FROM THE LOWER REGIONS. NOW, THIS IS THE SECOND NIGHT THAT FOUR OF THEM HAVE BEEN ANCHORED IN THE RIVER OPPOSITE OUR HOUSE. I KNOW THEY ARE FRIGHTENED; THEY HAVE PLACED THEIR GUNBOATS SO THAT IF AN ATTACK IS MADE, THEY CAN SHELL THE TOWN. POOR COWARDS, I CAN JUST TURN MY HEAD NOW AND SEE THEM CRAWLING ABOUT THE BOATS LIKE SO MANY SNAKES. (NARRATOR) BUT THE FEDERAL INVASION OF TENNESSEE IS JUST BEGINNING. GRANT NOW HAS NASHVILLE IN HIS SIGHTS. AND THE PANIC IN CLARKSVILLE PALES IN COMPARISON WITH THE ONE IN THE STATE CAPITAL, SUNDAY MORNING FEB. 16, 1862... (VAN WEST) IMAGINE HOW YOU WOULD FEEL, YOU THOUGHT YOU WERE SAFE AT HOME MAYBE GOING TO CHURCH, PLANNING ON A SUNDAY DAY AND SUDDENLY YOU HEAR... "THE YANKEES ARE COMING"... (VAN WEST) AND THEY'RE COMING IN FORCE. DON'T PANIC. YOU NEED TO GO TO YOUR HOMES. (VAN WEST) PEOPLE PANICKED. HURRY, THE YANKEES ARE COMING. (VAN WEST) THEY WONDERED WHAT WOULD HAPPEN TO THEIR TOWN AND THEY DIDN'T THINK ABOUT IT LONG. THEY STARTED TO PACK AND LEAVE... THOUSANDS OF NASHVILLE CITIZENS HEADING OUT OF TOWN AWAY FROM THE ARMIES. (NARRATOR) ANNIE SEHON QUICKLY SENDS A MESSAGE TO HER SISTER... BELIEVING IT MAY BE HER LAST. WE ARE IN HOURLY EXPECTATION OF HEARING THE APPROACH OF THE NORTHERN ARMY... BUT MAY GOD PROTECT US AND IF WE NEVER MEET ON EARTH MAY WE MEET AT LAST IN HEAVEN. (NARRATOR) BUT NOT EVERYONE IS FRIGHTENED. THE ARRIVAL OF UNION TROOPS IN THE CITY BRINGS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR SLAVES TO BE FREE. AS THEY WATCH IN DISBELIEF... THEIR MASTERS RUN AWAY. (VAN WEST) IMAGINE HOW IT WAS FOR THEM TO SEE THAT. THEY HAD NEVER SEEN THAT IN THEIR LIFE THESE WERE DOMINATING DOMINEERING FIGURES AND SUDDENLY THEY ARE FLEEING. (NARRATOR) BY THE TIME YANKEE GUNBOATS ROLL IN ON THE CUMBERLAND RIVER, THERE IS NO ONE THERE TO FIGHT THEM, AND NASHVILLE BECOMES THE FIRST MAJOR TRANSPORTATION CENTER TO FALL. RATHER THAN MAKE A STAND, CONFEDERATE GENERAL ALBERT SYDNEY JOHNSTON GATHERS HIS TROOPS TO ABANDON THE CITY. (VAN WEST) THEY WEREN'T THOSE PROUD YOUNG MEN IN UNIFORMS THAT HAD BEEN SENT OFF TO THE WAR A FEW MONTHS BEFORE. THEY WERE GUYS RUNNING FOR SHELTER, RUNNING FOR COVER, MOVING SOUTH...I THINK SO MANY CITIZENS NEVER THOUGHT THAT NASHVILLE WOULD FALL WITHOUT A DETERMINED STAND TO PROTECT THE CITY... BUT IT DID. (NARRATOR) CONFEDERATE GENERAL ALBERT SYDNEY JOHNSTON HAS TAKEN HIS TROOPS OUT OF NASHVILLE TO TRY AND PROTECT ANOTHER IMPORTANT RAILROAD JUNCTION FARTHER SOUTH. GENERAL GRANT IS CLOSE BEHIND, MOVING HIS MEN WEST BY TRANSPORT BOAT ON THE TENNESSEE RIVER TO PITTSBURGH LANDING. THE TWO SIDES MEET APRIL SIXTH, 1862, IN A FIELD SURROUNDING SHILOH CHURCH. IT IS THE WORST BATTLE IN THE WAR SO FAR AS MASSES OF MEN DIE, BRINGING THE RECOGNITION THIS WILL BE A LONG AND BRUTAL WAR. (VAN WEST) PEOPLE OFTEN ASK WHY DID THEY FIGHT FOR JUST A CHURCH. WELL, THEY WEREN'T FIGHTING FOR SHILOH CHURCH EVEN THOUGH THAT'S THE NAME OF THE BATTLE. THEY WERE FIGHTING TO PROTECT THE CORINTH RAILROAD JUNCTION WHERE LINES FROM THE NORTH PRIMARILY THE MOBILE AND OHIO RAILROAD CONNECTED WITH THE MEMPHIS AND CHARLESTON RAILROAD. THIS WAS A CRUCIAL JUNCTION AND ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON WANTED TO PROTECT IT AT ALL COSTS. (NARRATOR) IT LOOKS AS IF THE CONFEDERATE GENERAL JOHNSTON MIGHT SUCCEED AFTER THE FIRST DAY OF FIGHTING. BUT UNION REINFORCEMENTS SEND THE CONFEDERATES BACKTRACKING TO CORINTH, WHERE THE UNION WILL SOON TAKE CONTROL OF THE RAILROAD JUNCTION. LESS THAN A WEEK AFTER SHILOH COMES A DRAMATIC EVENT THAT IS FAMOUSLY KNOWN AS THE GREAT LOCOMOTIVE CHASE. A BRAVE BAND OF YANKEE VOLUNTEERS HIJACKS THE GENERAL, WHICH TODAY IS ON DISPLAY AT THE SOUTHERN MUSEUM OF CIVIL WAR AND LOCOMOTIVE HISTORY IN KENNESAW, GEORGIA. THE STORY STARTS WITH JAMES ANDREWS, A HOUSE PAINTER AND MUSIC TEACHER, WHO IS NOW AN UNDERCOVER AGENT. (MELINDA SENN) HE WAS SMUGGLING QUININE TO THE CONFEDERATE FORCES. AND WHILE HE WAS BEHIND CONFEDERATE LINES HE WAS GATHERING INFORMATION TO TRADE BACK THE OTHER WAY. SO SOME PEOPLE CONSIDERED HIM A DOUBLE AGENT. (NARRATOR) ANDREWS' RAIDERS ARE POSING AS PASSENGERS AND TAKE CONTROL OF THE LOCOMOTIVE WHILE THE CREW IS HAVING BREAKFAST AT A HOTEL IN BIG SHANTY, GEORGIA. THEIR PLAN IS TO SABOTAGE TRACKS AND TUNNELS THAT HAVE BEEN PROVIDING EASY TRANSPORT OF CONFEDERATE TROOPS AND SUPPLIES BETWEEN ATLANTA AND CHATTANOOGA. (MELINDA SENN) THE MEN FIND A SMALL SAW AND THEY USE THAT SAW TO CUT THE TELEGRAPH WIRE. ACCOUNTS ALSO SAY TOWARD THE END OF THE CHASE THEY ARE AFFIXING THE TELEGRAPH WIRE TO THE REAR BOXCAR AND PULLING THE WIRE AS THE TRAIN CONTINUES TO HEAD UP NORTH. (NARRATOR) THE RAIDERS CHUG NORTH TO MEET UP WITH THE ADVANCING TROOPS OF GENERAL ORMSBY MITCHELL, WHO HOPES TO CAPTURE CHATTANOOGA. BUT THAT'S NOT WHAT HAPPENS. (JIM OGDEN) ANDREWS IS DELAYED AT KINGSTON, GEORGIA WAITING FOR A SOUTHBOUND TRAIN AND THIS ALLOWED A VERY TENACIOUS CONDUCTOR WILLIAM FULLER TO MAKE UP GROUND, FIRST ON FOOT, AND THEN WITH A PUSH CAR, AND THEN WITH A SMALL YARD LOCOMOTIVE AND THEN WITH A LARGER LOCOMOTIVE. (MELINDA SENN) AFTER APPROXIMATELY 90 MILES, THE UNION RAIDERS FIND THEMSELVES VERY LOW ON FUEL. THEY HAVE NO OTHER OPTION BUT ABANDON THE GENERAL AND TO MAKE FOR THE WOODS. (NARRATOR) EVERY ONE OF THEM IS CAUGHT. NINETEEN OF THE RAIDERS WILL BECOME THE FIRST IN HISTORY TO RECEIVE THE MEDAL OF HONOR. AS A CIVILIAN, ANDREWS IS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR THE COMMENDATION. BUT HE IS AMONG EIGHT OF THEM WHO ARE HANGED. BACK IN WEST TENNESSEE, THE UNION INVASION CONTINUES AS UNION FORCES AND NAVY GUNBOATS ARE JOINED BY A FLEET OF STEAMBOATS CONVERTED INTO RAMMING SHIPS BY COLONEL CHARLES ELLET JR. (MARY VIRGINIA ELLET CABELL) THEY CARRIED NO GUNS; THEY WERE IN MY FATHER'S OPINION AND WORDS: "MERE SUBSTITUTES FOR RAMS. ALMOST CERTAIN IN AN ENCOUNTER WITH A POWERFUL AND COURAGEOUS ADVERSARY TO GO TO THE BOTTOM BUT STRONG ENOUGH TO CARRY WITH THEM TO THE BOTTOM ANY ADVERSARY THEY MIGHT ENGAGE. (NARRATOR) ELLET'S FLEET IS A FAMILY AFFAIR, WITH TWO BROTHERS COMMANDING SHIPS AND HIS SON SERVING AS A MEDICAL CADET. ELLET HAS THE CONFIDENCE OF SECRETARY OF WAR EDWIN STANTON, AND ANSWERS ONLY TO HIM. THE TEST COMES JUNE SIXTH, 1862, IN THE BATTLE OF MEMPHIS. (MARY VIRGINIA ELLET CABELL) HE INSTANTLY ORDERED HIS THREE LARGEST RAMS TO FOLLOW HIM AND LED THE WAY ON THE QUEEN OF THE WEST, RUNNING DOWN AT FULL SPEED. THE QUEEN CRASHED INTO THE FOREMOST BOAT, CUTTING HER ALMOST IN TWO AND SINKING HER. (FRED PROUTY) THE BATTLE OF MEMPHIS ON THE RIVER WAS NOT MUCH OF A BATTLE. THE FEDERAL FLEET HAD REALLY WELL MANNED, WELL-ARMED VESSELS. THE SOUTH HAD EIGHT SMALLER BOATS, SEVEN OF WHICH WERE SUNK. (MARY VIRGINIA ELLET CABELL) MY BROTHER, ACCOMPANIED BY THREE MEN OF MY FATHER'S COMMAND, REMOVED THE REBEL FLAG FROM THE POST OFFICE IN MEMPHIS AND HOISTED THE UNITED STATES FLAG THERE MORE THAN TWO HOURS BEFORE THE CITY WAS FORMALLY SURRENDERED. (NARRATOR) BUT IN THE COURSE OF BATTLE, CHARLES ELLET JR. TAKES A BULLET FIRED FROM AN ENEMY SHIP. AND THE BATTLE OF MEMPHIS WOULD BE NOT ONLY HIS FIRST, BUT ALSO HIS LAST. (VAN WEST) THEN MEMPHIS BECAME THE BASE FOR EVERYTHING DOWN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER. MEMPHIS WAS AN IMPORTANT LOGISTICAL BASE IT WAS THE HEADQUARTERS BASE AND THEN IT BECAME THE BASE FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN FREEDOM... BECAUSE THE HUGE CONTRABAND CAMPS THAT OPENED UP THERE FOR ESCAPED SLAVES COMING TO THE UNION LINES FOR PROTECTION. (NARRATOR) AND NOW, THE RIVERS AND RAILS OF BOTH MIDDLE AND WEST TENNESSEE ARE UNDER THE CONTROL OF FEDERAL FORCES, WHILE EAST TENNESSEE REMAINS A CONFEDERATE STRONGHOLD. THE NICKNAME FOR CHATTANOOGA SAYS IT ALL. IT'S BEEN CALLED THE CHOO CHOO FOR YEARS...A CITY WHERE TRAINS RUN IN EVERY DIRECTION... JUST AS THEY DID AT THE TIME OF THE CIVIL WAR. (JIM OGDEN) HOW DO YOU GET A UNION ARMY FROM THE NORTH TO CENTRAL GEORGIA AND CENTRAL ALABAMA BUT THROUGH THE GATEWAY TO THE DEEP SOUTH. AND THAT IS CHATTANOOGA. AND IN 1863 THE FOCUS WOULD BE ON THIS GATEWAY CITY. (NARRATOR) IT WILL TAKE A SERIES OF FOUR BATTLES ENGAGING MORE THAN 150,000 MEN FOR THE UNION TO TAKE CONTROL OF CHATTANOOGA. (JIM OGDEN) WITH THE CONFEDERATE DEFEAT ON LOOK OUT MOUNTAIN AND MISSIONARY RIDGE IN NOVEMBER OF 1863, THE CONFEDERATES LOSE ANY HOPE OF ANY LONGER KEEPING THE DOORWAY, GATEWAY, PASSAGEWAY, TO THEIR MILITARY INDUSTRIAL HEARTLAND CLOSED AND BARRED SHUT. (NARRATOR) THEN COMES THE BATTLE OF CHICKAMAUGA... EVEN MORE DISASTROUS THAN SHILOH. (OGDEN) IN THE END, IT IS ONE OF THE MOST COSTLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE CIVIL WAR. IN THE BATTLE OF CHICKAMAUGA ITSELF, 28 PERCENT OF THE TROOPS ENGAGED HAVE BECOME CASUALTIES. IT'S THE SECOND BLOODIEST BATTLE OF THE WAR. (NARRATOR) ST. CLAIR MORGAN HAD OBTAINED FREEDOM FROM PRISON AFTER HIS CAPTURE AT FT. DONELSON. HE IS AMONG THE DEAD AT CHICKAMAUGA. (OGDEN) SIMPLY BY LOOKING AT THE CASUALTIES YOU CAN SEE ANOTHER WAY TO JUDGE JUST HOW IMPORTANT CHATTANOOGA WAS IN THIS STORY OF OUR NATION'S CIVIL WAR AND THE STRUGGLE HERE FOR CONTROL OF THIS IMPORTANT TRANSPORTATION CENTER, THIS RIVER AND RAIL TOWN. (VAN WEST) THE FALL OF CHATTANOOGA FUNDAMENTALLY CHANGED THE CIVIL WAR. THE UNION ARMY CONTROLLED ALL OF TENNESSEE. IF THEY CONTROLLED TENNESSEE THAT MEANT THAT THEY CONTROLLED ALL OF THOSE TRANSPORTATION LINKS TO THE NORTH AND TO THE SOUTH. SO THEY WERE TOTALLY POISED, READY TO MOVE ON ATLANTA. ATLANTA FALLS AND SHERMAN IS READY FOR HIS MARCH TO THE SEA. SO, THE FALL OF CHATTANOOGA CHANGED THE COURSE OF THE WAR IN FUNDAMENTAL WAYS THAT MEANT THE DEATH KNELL OF THE CONFEDERACY WAS ALMOST UPON US. (NARRATOR) CONFEDERATE GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE SURRENDERS ON APRIL NINTH OF 1865. THE WAR WILL OFFICIALLY BE OVER IN AUGUST...BUT THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WON'T LIVE TO SEE IT. ABRAHAM LINCOLN IS ASSASSINATED APRIL 14TH, 1865. HIS BODY IS TAKEN FROM WASHINGTON TO HIS HOME IN SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS... BY TRAIN OF COURSE. THE RAILS AND RIVERS WILL GO BACK TO THEIR PEACEFUL PURPOSE OF PROVIDING TRANSPORTATION AND COMMERCE. BUT THE WAR IS NOT FINISHED WITH THEM YET. TWO WEEKS AFTER LINCOLN'S MURDER, HOMEWARD BOUND UNION SOLDIERS PACK THEIR WAY ON TO A CROWDED STEAMBOAT. (ACTOR AS EDWARD F. HEDRICK) WHEN WE BOARDED THE SULTANA AT VICKSBURG, WE WERE A JOLLY CROWD. TWO THOUSAND OF US HAD JUST BEEN RELEASED FROM A SOUTHERN PRISON. WE WERE SO HAPPY. (WAYNE MOORE) PROBABLY BECAUSE OF SOMEBODY'S GREED, THEY OVERLOADED THE SHIP. THERE WERE THOUSANDS OF MEN, EVERY AVAILABLE INCH OF DECK SPACE WAS COVERED, YOU CAN SEE FROM THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE SULTANA IN PORT AT MEMPHIS BEFORE IT LEFT THAT IT WAS JUST COVERED WITH MEN. MANY OF THEM WERE WOUNDED OR EMACIATED FROM THEIR STAY IN PRISON WAR CAMP. (NARRATOR) AS THE SULTANA FLOATS PAST MEMPHIS... A LEAKING BOILER EXPLODES. (ACTOR AS LOUIS SCHIRMEYER) I FOUND MYSELF BEING HURLED UPWARD THROUGH THE AIR. I MUST HAVE GONE UP 20 OR 25 FEET. IN FALLING I STRUCK THE SHATTERED PILOT HOUSE. MY FACE WAS CUT AND BLEEDING... (ACTOR AS EDWARD F. HEDRICK) THE PASSENGERS WERE SHOUTING AND SCREAMING AND JUMPING INTO THE RIVER ON ALL SIDES. (WAYNE MOORE) THE LOSS OF LIFE WAS HUGE, IT WAS 15-HUNDRED PLUS MEN DIED IN THAT EXPLOSION OR DROWNED IN THE RIVER AFTERWARDS AS THE BOAT SANK. (NARRATOR) IT IS THE WORST MARITIME DISASTER IN THE NATION'S HISTORY... AND WILL NOT BE SURPASSED EVEN BY THE SINKING OF THE TITANIC. THE SULTANA IS A SAD, BUT IRONIC EVENT IN WHICH RIVERS AND RAILS FIRST CARRIED ECONOMIC PROSPERITY... THEN GRIEF AND SUFFERING THROUGHOUT THE STATE. (VAN WEST) TENNESSEE WAS THE GATEWAY TO THE CONFEDERACY. OF COURSE MANY BATTLES WERE FOUGHT IN VIRGINIA; THEY WERE TRYING TO TAKE THE CAPITOL OF RICHMOND AND KILL THE CONFEDERACY AT ITS HEART. BUT IN MANY WAYS TENNESSEE WAS THE SOUL OF THE CONFEDERACY BECAUSE THROUGH IT RAN THE ARTERIES THAT KEPT THE WHOLE BODY ALIVE. (NARRATOR) WHEN THE WAR IS OVER, SO MANY YOUNG MEN HAVE BEEN KILLED THAT NANNIE HASKINS... THE CLARKSVILLE TEENAGER WITH DREAMS FOR HER FUTURE... CHOOSES TO MARRY A WIDOWER TWENTY YEARS OLDER WITH FOUR CHILDREN. TOGETHER, THEY HAVE SIX MORE. THE WHOLE FAMILY IS NOW BURIED IN A CLARKSVILLE CEMETERY. BY ORDER OF A CONFEDERATE GENERAL, BRIDGE BURNERS JACOB AND HENRY HARMON ARE BURIED OUTSIDE THE FAMILY CEMETERY IN POTTERSTOWN AFTER THEIR EXECUTION. (DON BIBLE) HE TOLD THE FAMILY, "I DON'T WANT THEM BURIED IN THE CEMETERY WITH DECENT PEOPLE, BURY THEM OUTSIDE THE CEMETERY." THERE WAS A RAIL FENCE AROUND THE CEMETERY AT THE TIME AND THEY WERE BURIED OUTSIDE. AND LATER ON, THE CEMETERY WAS ENLARGED TO TAKE IN THE GRAVES. AS YOU CAN SEE NOW, IT GOES JUST A LITTLE PAST THE GRAVES. (NARRATOR) NASHVILLE BUSINESSMAN SAMUEL DOLD MORGAN'S SUCCESS USING THE RIVERS AND RAILS IS OVERSHADOWED BY GRIEF FOR HIS TWO SONS. THE MEMORY OF MORGAN AND HIS FAMILY IS PRESERVED IN THE SOUTH WING OF THE STATE CAPITAL BUILDING WHERE HE IS BURIED. (RUTH WARNER) MY GRANDMOTHER WAS GIVEN A ROSE SHE WAS A LITTLE GIRL AND SHE DROPPED THE ROSE IN HIS TOMB BEFORE IT WAS SEALED. SHE WAS BORN IN 1872 AND HERE WAS THIS MAN WHO WASHER GREAT GRANDFATHER AND SHE TOLD ME THAT STORY AND THAT'S REMARKABLE HOW THIS KIND OF CONNECTION TO HISTORY CONTINUES DOWN THE GENERATIONS. (NARRATOR) THE LATEST GENERATIONS IN TENNESSEE STILL RELY ON THE CONVERGENCE OF WATER AND STEEL FOR PROSPERITY... AND FOR THE CONTINUING PROGRESS OF OUR BIGGEST CITIES. BUT THERE'S ALSO ANOTHER RELEVANT ROLE FOR RIVERS AND RAILS... AS A REMINDER OF OUR HISTORY. (WAYNE MOORE) YOU HAD THIS COLOSSAL MILITARY STRUGGLE THAT KILLED ALMOST 700,000 AMERICANS BUT BESIDES THE PEOPLE THAT IT KILLED YOU HAD THREE TIMES THAT MANY WHO WERE MAIMED AND WOUNDED, YOU HAD A LOSS OF A WHOLE GENERATION OF YOUNG MEN AND IT PROFOUNDLY AFFECTED EVERYBODY IN THIS PART OF THE COUNTRY - IN TENNESSEE, IT WAS FOUGHT IN THEIR BACKYARDS, THEY SUFFERED DIRECTLY FROM THE WAR. (ANNOUNCER OFF CAMERA) TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR 150 IS BROUGHT TO YOU IN PART BY TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMISSION, AND TENNESSEE CIVIL WAR NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA.

Family life

Charles Morgan was born April 21, 1795, to George and Betsy Morgan. His native town was then known as Killingworth, Connecticut, but is now known as Clinton.[1] Charles had a younger sister named Wealthy Ann (b. September 6, 1798) and older brothers, Elias (b. September 26, 1790) and John (b. December 3, 1791).[2]

George Morgan was a successful farmer, and Charles had a comfortable upbringing in a rural area. However, a changing economy induced Charles to follow his brothers who had moved to New York City in 1809. He married Emily Reeves in 1817, several years after establishing himself as a merchant, and they had five children together: Emily Ann (1818), Frances Eliza (1823), Charles W. (1825), Henry R. (1827), and Maria Louise (1832).[2] They remained married until Emily's death in 1850.[3]

Morgan's daughter Frances Eliza married George W. Quintard in either 1843 or early in 1844. Like her father, Quintard grew up in Connecticut and left his hometown as a teenager seeking opportunity in New York City. Concurrent with his marriage, Quintard opened a shop, combining a grocery and ship chandlery. In 1847, he joined the marine engineering firm of T. F. Secor & Co., in which Charles Morgan was a partner, and in 1850, Quintard and Morgan purchased the firm outright and renamed it the Morgan Iron Works. Morgan's eldest daughter Emily Ann married Israel C. Harris of New Orleans. In December 1847, Harris founded a partnership with Charles Morgan's youngest son Henry, and the firm of Harris & Morgan assumed agency for all of Morgan's ships.[4] In 1853, Maria Louise Morgan married Charles A. Whitney, a shipping agent.[3] Out of Morgan's family, his sons-in-laws assumed the most active roles in his transportation businesses.[4] His eldest son, Charles W., eschewed the shipping business and opened his own grocery in 1849.[4] His youngest son, Henry Morgan, married Laura Mallard of New Orleans in 1854.[3]

On June 24, 1851, Morgan married his second wife, Mary Jane Sexton,[1] who taught math and French in New York. Charles and Mary Jane Morgan commissioned the construction of a large mansion at 7 East 26th Street, where they resided from 1852 until their deaths.[3]

Early career

Charles Morgan left home for New York City at age fourteen to work for a merchant, but he later started his own import business.[1] His arrival in the city and coming of age coincided with the growing importance of New York as a port. He conducted business as both a grocer and a chandler, but his early business activities included importer and exporter, retailer and wholesaler, and shipping merchant.[5]

Morgan owned stakes in eighteen sailing packet ships and fifteen sailing tramp vessels between 1819 and 1846.[6] In addition to equity shares, he acted as ship's husband for seven vessels of The Ship Line, and for thirteen sailing vessels in which he had owned shares. His duties as husband included bookkeeping, dispatching, maintenance, and outfitter. In 1831, Morgan partnered with Benjamin Aymars to establish the first packet service from New York to Kingston, Jamaica. He also served as line master, who was responsible for coordination of all ships within the shipping line.[7]

Shipping companies

Advertisement for the Columbia, 1838

New York and Charleston Steam Packet Company

Advertisement for the New York, 1842

The New York and Charleston Steam Packet Company was formed in June 1834 by Charles Morgan, James P. Allaire, and John Haggerty. Allaire owned an iron foundry which counted Robert Fulton among its clients, and he acquired Fulton's shop after his death and combined it with his existing foundry. He had the side-wheeler David Brown built and dispatched it to run between New York and Charleston, South Carolina, in November 1833. The firm acquired the William Gibbons the same year, and by March 1, 1834, both steamers were making weekly runs.[8]

At this time, sailing vessels still dominated ocean navigation, including the coastal trade, but Morgan and his brother-in-law John Haggerty joined with Allaire to develop coastal steam packets, focusing on the route between New York and Charleston. Morgan was the operations manager of the New York–Charleston line, as well as the Jamaica packet line.[8] By June 1835, he was dispatching two steamers per week to Charleston, David Brown and the newly acquired Columbia. The packet company had won the bid for the United States Mail contract, worth $7,200 annually, and its ships were earning more than $1,000 per trip in profits.[9]

However, the risks faced by ocean-going steamers threatened the company. William Gibbons sank in October 1836, which caused a loss of public confidence in addition to the direct financial loss. Some of the investors sold David Brown and then abandoned the company, leaving Morgan, Allaire, and Haggerty as the sole partners and Columbia as their only ship. Yet the partnership built new steamers of the line which they christened Home and New York, and they accomplished this despite the Panic of 1837. They also supplemented their packet revenue with contracts to carry mail along their line, and contracts to carry military troops to Florida.[9]

Another lost ship threatened the New York and Charleston Steam Packet Company. Home started its last voyage—and only its third overall—on October 7, 1837. Home had cost nearly $90,000 to build and included a cabin with luxury amenities to accommodate as many as 120 first-class passengers. She ran aground while departing New York Harbor, but continued to the ocean without any apparent damage. However, a storm with rough seas battered the ship near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina; she started taking on water and her engine failed, and her sails were not able to drive and control the ship. The storm pushed Home toward the shore and ran it aground, and 99 people died trying to reach land.[10]

Gulf coast packets

In 1837, Morgan started running steamboat service between New Orleans and Galveston, Texas, which was the first packet boat service running between these cities on a regular schedule.[1] However, this had not been Morgan's first foray in shipping in the Gulf of Mexico. The previous year, the New York and Charleston Steam Packet Company deployed the steamship David Brown to sail a route from New Orleans to Key West, Florida, and Havana, Cuba. The Home catastrophe forced a reorganization of the partnership, with the new company shifting its emphasis to the Gulf trade, and Columbia sailed out of the port of New Orleans for Galveston on November 18, 1837, about five weeks after the Home wreck.[11]

Map showing the course of the Chagres River (1861)

Allaire and several investors divested themselves from the New York and Charleston Steam Packet Company, leaving Morgan and John Haggerty as the sole partners: thus the Morgan Line was born and Columbia was its first ship, committed to the New Orleans–Galveston route. During this era, New Orleans was the main port for Gulf traffic, and the newly formed Republic of Texas attracted many immigrants and demand for trade goods. On June 8, 1838, the owners of Columbia and the owners of the steamship Cuba formed a cartel known as the New Orleans and Texas Line, which included coordination of rates and scheduling of shipping between New Orleans and Galveston. The New Orleans and Texas Line dominated transportation in the two cities after the last half of 1838.[12]

Gulf trade experienced seasonal cycles. June marked the beginning of the slack season, which lasted throughout the summer and part of the fall, and business picked up again in early October. Morgan would remove some of his ships from service during slack times and send them to New York for refitting and repairs. He continued to maintain New York City as his residence and the main location for shipbuilding and repair, even though his main shipping market was located on the Gulf coast.[13] He sold the last of his sailing vessels in 1846, while he increased his investment in T. F. Secor & Company, a builder of marine steam engines.[14]

Mexican War

During the Mexican War, Morgan accepted various contracts to move U.S. troops, deploying New York and Galveston for military transport, and collecting nearly $80,000 (~$2.34 million in 2022) in less than six months in 1846. This compromised packet service, including its contract for carrying the U.S. mail. Morgan had won a contract to transport mail for the Republic of Texas, which he continued after Texas received statehood and the U.S. Mail Service took over in 1846.[15]

Pre-1860 map of Central America with inset of Nicaragua.

Morgan lost the New York in a hurricane in September 1846,[16] and he required a larger steamship fleet to meet the demands of passenger service, civilian trade, mail service, and military transportation. He acquired five steamers in 1847, the first of which was the New Orleans, launched from New York on January 12, 1847. He paid $120,000 for the 869-ton steamship new, but it produced only $33,000 in revenue for moving troops. He sold it five months after its launch for $125,000. The other 1847 steamer purchases were for steamships already in use. Palmetto was built in 1846, and most of its interest sold to Morgan in March 1847. Captain Jeremiah Smith commanded the 533-ton steamer and spent about three months on charters for the United States Army. Afterward, Palmetto entered packet service for New Orleans and Galveston. Captain Smith maintained a small interest in Palmetto and became an investment partner with Morgan in the 249-ton steamship Yacht, a much smaller vessel better suited for navigating the sandbars of the Texas coast. Portland was a steamer built in 1835 which originally served the coast of Maine; she was brought into the Morgan fleet late in 1847 and assigned to move military troops and equipment out of New Orleans. The fifth and last acquisition in 1847 was Globe, which was placed immediately into packet service.[15]

After the war, Morgan obtained the charter business for taking troops home. Later, he deployed his steamers to expanded packet service. Service in Texas expanded to Indianola, Port Lavaca, and Brazos St. Iago. The last of these ports facilitated outbound shipments of precious metals, hides, and wool. Starting in 1850, the Morgan earned $15,000 annually for carrying mail in and out of Brazos St. Iago, and $12,000 for the mail route from New Orleans to Galveston and Indianola.[17]

Gold rush

Panama

William Walker's map of Nicaragua

After the discovery of gold in California in January 1848, news emanated to the eastern United States in the last quarter of that year. With financial capital and the means of production still concentrated near the Eastern seaboard, there was demand for transportation to carry people and supplies to the Pacific coast. In January 1849, no fewer than 90 marine vessels departed eastern ports bound for California.[18] Through mid-April 1849, the port of New York dispatched 226 California-bound vessels carrying a total of about 20,000 people.[19]

The shortest wholly oceanic route from New York was over 14,000 nautical miles, and even a few hundred miles longer from New Orleans. Yet this distance from New York could be reduced to less than 5,000 miles with a multi-modal short-cut across the Isthmus of Panama.[18] The Royal Steam Packet Company, one of three companies operating across Central American just prior to the gold rush, ran a route from London to Panama, then overland to the Pacific. Two companies, the U.S. Mail Steamship Company and the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, serviced US government contracts using a similar transport corridor. The heightened transportation demand made these enterprises highly lucrative in 1849. At the same time, demand outstripped supply in early 1849, especially on the Atlantic side, and Charles Morgan first entered this market as a major shareholder of Crescent City, which his agent J. Howard & Son dispatched to Chagres, Panama, from New York. Morgan acquired the newly built Empire City, adding to the Panama service, with the two ships forming the Empire City Line. Morgan and John T. Howard increased their investment in westbound transportation throughout 1849 and 1850, first buying the screw-steamer Sarah Sands, then four more ships of the line, three of which sailed the Pacific side from Panama to San Francisco.[20]

A business collaboration between Morgan and Cornelius Vanderbilt was spurred by a disabled ship. By accident, the two men departed New York on Morgan's Crescent City on December 14, 1849. Both were travelling in order to investigate the transportation business in Central America. A failing engine caused the steamer to limp into Charleston for repairs. Each man improvised transportation toward the Gulf of Mexico. Vanderbilt chartered a ship for Havana and carried with him eight other passengers after observing that Morgan chartered a ship for himself and several other passengers, sealing the deal by buying the ship's cargo of lumber.[21]

Nicaragua

Advertisement from the Weekly Telegraph (Houston), February 27, 1856.

Morgan and Howard operated three steamers from the Pacific side of Panama in 1850, compared to four operated by U.S. Mail Steamship Company. Pacific Mail Steamship Company added four ships to its Pacific fleet for a total of seven, creating a competitive market for passengers in 1850. Morgan withdrew from the competition for the trade across Panama late in 1850, though he did not withdraw from the trade across the isthmus. Seeking to shorten the trip from New York to the west coast, he probed crossings several hundred miles west through a water and land route via Nicaragua. This led initially to a business alliance between Morgan and Vanderbilt, who had previously secured comprehensive right-of-way charters with the Nicaraguan government. On August 27, 1849, American Atlantic and Pacific Ship-Canal Company gained a concession for exclusive rights to construct a canal to the Pacific. In exchange for this and additional concessions, Nicaragua received cash, a right to stock in the canal, and annual cash payments. Under a separate deal, Vanderbilt also gained the right-of-way through Nicaragua using any means of transportation, which would remain in effect even if his company did not complete the canal.[22] However, this second deal was signed after a civil war split Nicaragua into rival governments. The agreement was negotiated between Joseph L. White and the conservative faction which ruled out of the city of Granada, and conveyed the rights to construct a canal to the Vanderbilt-controlled Accessory Transit Company. The parties signed on August 14, 1851.[23]

Bond of the Accessory Transit Company (of Nicaragua), issued 30. November 1855, signed by Charles Morgan

Vanderbilt began operating routes from New York to San Francisco on his New and Independent Line. Morgan placed his own ships into service of Vanderbilt's company, running his Empire City Line steamers from New York, as well as Mexico from New Orleans, all of which put in at the port of San Juan del Norte.[24] In September 1852, Vanderbilt resigned as president of the company and divested most of his interests the following December. He retained a commission as the company's agent and a percentage of the company's business across Nicaragua. Morgan was part of a short-lived alliance with Vanderbilt as late as February 1853. Accessory Transit Company reported net revenue in excess of $535,000 (~$14.9 million in 2022) in its semi-annual report at the end of 1853; however, this report failed to account for stock dilution, accounts payable to the government of Nicaragua, and the debt settlements to Vanderbilt. In the same year, Morgan deposed Vanderbilt as the agent of the line while the Commodore was vacationing. An anti-Vanderbilt faction seized the control of the board, and they appointed Morgan president of the Accessory Transit Company.[25]

Advertisement for Southern Steamship Company, 1860.

The New York Times reported decades later in its obituary of Vanderbilt that he penned the following missive directed at his enemies, "You have undertaken to cheat me. I won’t sue you for the law is too slow. I’ll ruin you." According to two historians, this is at best apocryphal.[26][27] In the fall of 1853, Vanderbilt entered the Atlantic–Pacific trade to compete with his former partners. He formed the Independent Opposition Line with North Star sailing the New York–Nicaragua leg, and partnered with Edward Mills and his two steamers to run on the Nicaragua–San Francisco leg. The Independent Opposition Line offered aggressively priced fares, triggering a three-way price war between Vanderbilt, Morgan's Accessory Transit Company, and the U.S. Pacific Mail Lines. Vanderbilt's low fares damaged his competitors. After less than a year, the Morgan-led Accessory Transit Company and the U.S. Pacific Mail Lines agreed to pay over $1 million to Vanderbilt, in return for Vanderbilt leaving the market. This payment included a total of $800,000 for his two ships on the Pacific side and $40,000 per month in cash for a non-compete agreement. With Vanderbilt out of the field, the remaining carriers were able to restore their rates.[28]

Morgan and C. K. Garrison participated in a scheme devised by Edmund Randolph to support the filibuster of William Walker in Nicaragua. Randolph and Walker were old friends. Walker readily accepted Randolph's plan to invalidate the old transit concessions to Accessory Transit Company so that the new transit concession would eventually convey to a new company headed by Garrison and Morgan.[29] They divested of their Accessory Transit Company stock, while Morgan even took short positions. Patricio Rivas of the Liberal-faction assumed the title of Provisional President of Nicaragua, under the supervision of Walker.[30] Vanderbilt and two other investors accumulated enough Accessory Transit Company stock to gain a majority of its shares, recapturing control of the company and causing losses on Morgan's short positions. With Vanderbilt back in control as an investor, Morgan resigned his directorship on December 21, 1855. Yet Morgan responded to this financial and professional loss by doubling down. In the first part of 1856, Morgan went on another short selling binge, matched each time by Vanderbilt and his allies. Morgan failed in weakening the price of Vanderbilt's stock and suffered great financial losses on the process.[31] By 1858, Morgan withdrew from running steamers on the Pacific and from transit in Nicaragua. At the same time, Vanderbilt sold his fleet of Gulf packets to Morgan, ending the feud between Morgan and the Commodore.[32]

Southern Steamship Company

Morgan incorporated the Southern Steamship Company on March 14, 1855. Chartered in Louisiana, it opened some of his Gulf shipping interests to outside investors. Morgan was a minority shareholder, controlling only 500 of 4,000 shares. However, two of the members of the board were Morgan's New Orleans agents, Israel Harris (his son-in-law) and Henry R. Morgan (his son). Their partnership, Harris & Morgan, was also the largest shareholder, controlling 890 of 4,000 shares, so the triumvirate of Charles Morgan, Henry Morgan, and Israel Harris controlled 1,390 of 4,000 shares. A third board member, Cornelius B. Payne, was a junior partner of Harris & Morgan and owned 250 shares of stock in the Southern Steamship Company. The fourth board member was a close friend of Charles Morgan, a New Orleans grocer, E.J. Hart. Morgan completed his requirements to capitalize the corporation at $400,000 (~$10.2 million in 2022) by transferring several assets on June 10, 1856. The assets received by the Southern Steamship Company were four steamships, the New Orleans–Galveston–Indianola mail contract, eight enslaved persons, and sundry equipment. Through incorporation, Morgan attracted new investors while still maintaining a large portfolio of assets apart from the Southern Steamship Company. Incorporation also represented a partial withdrawal from management of Morgan's interests and a new role as a passive investor.[33]

Morgan Iron Works

On October 1, 1856, the Southern Steamship Company secured a mail contract serving Brashear, Louisiana and Galveston. Brashear was located at the western terminus of the New Orleans, Opelousas and Great Western Railroad (NOO&GW), navigable from Berwick's Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. The NOO&GW was planned to span from New Orleans to the Pacific Coast, but higher than expected construction costs prevented the company from building beyond this swampy, inaccessible, and sparsely populated area of Louisiana. After fending off a serious challenge from Cornelius Vanderbilt, the Southern Steamship Company forged a mutual freight agreement with the NOO&GW. The eastern terminal of the NOO&GW was located in Algiers, Louisiana, directly across the Mississippi River from New Orleans. Freight delivered to the railroad at Algiers avoided New Orleans taxes and wharfage fees. In addition, transferring western-bound freight to the railroad eliminated both navigating the Mississippi River and shortened the western route to Galveston by about 160 miles (260 kilometres).[34]

Morgan himself had negotiated the complex freight deal between the Southern Steamship Company and NOO&GW. Southern Steamship agreed to transport freight for the railroad from its Brashear terminal to Galveston (via Sabine Pass, Texas), and to Indianola, Texas (via Galveston). The Southern Steamship Company received a percentage of NOO&GW's freight receipts based on a multiple-tiered formula. NOO&GW also agreed to move freight for the Southern Steamship Company at a discount, and provide its ships with a wharf at Brashear. The steamship service not only carried mail and other freight, but carried over 16,000 passengers from Brashear to Texas in 1859, and over 28,000 passengers in 1860.[34]

American Civil War

USS Onondaga in the James River

Morgan was a lifetime resident of the northeast. He grew up in Connecticut and maintained a primary residence in New York City his entire adult life. However, he was "a more-than-casual slaveholder,"[35] acquiring no fewer than thirty-three enslaved persons through the start of the American Civil War. In a very early action of the Civil War, one of Morgan's steamships, the General Rusk, transported Texas troops. The State of Texas adopted its ordinance of secession on February 4, 1861, and appointed E.B. Nichols as its Commissioner and Financial Representative on February 7. Nichols had already been serving Morgan as his shipping agent in Galveston. He booked Morgan's General Rusk to transport troops for $500 per day. Shortly after, this Texas force captured the United States Army Base at Brazos St. Iago. Yet, Morgan used the same steamer to transport the fleeing Union troops from Brazos St. Iago to Key West, Florida.[36]

Advertisement for Morgan Line, May 11, 1878

Morgan kept his fleet in the Gulf ports, even after the attack on Fort Sumter. Louisiana Governor Thomas O. Moore mandated a seizure of three ships from the Southern Steamship Company, viewing Charles Morgan as a northerner and a threat to the Confederacy. While Morgan never sided with the Confederacy, Israel Harris did. The ships were allowed to travel on a limited basis, but with many inspections at the ports of New Orleans and Galveston. At Galveston, the ranking officer, Sidney Sherman, seized two of Morgan's vessels. Nichols interceded on Morgan's behalf, and Sherman agreed to allow the Morgan steamers passage off Texas waters. However, he did keep the General Rusk for the Confederate fleet. With the United States mail service discontinued and the effective Union blockade of southern ports, Morgan's steamship empire was idled. The Southern Steamship Company, which had entered the Civil War with twelve steamships, sold two of them, and lost the other ten when General Mansfield Lovell expropriated them on behalf of the Confederacy on January 16, 1862. The company was left without a fleet and without compensation for its seized assets, thus it folded in 1863.[37]

Despite the losses borne by the Southern Steamship Company, Morgan continued to operate other ventures by doing business with both the Union and the Confederacy. Morgan placed orders with Harlan and Hollingsworth for five large steamers between 1862 and 1864. These ships were frequently booked on charters for the Union during the war. Morgan also profited from his ownership of the Morgan Iron Works, which was producing engines from its shops in New York City for commercial enterprises in the United States and abroad. Beyond civilian production, the Morgan Iron Works built engines and other marine equipment for thirteen ships in the Union Naval fleet. In one case, they built a warship from scratch: USS Onondaga. These naval contracts accrued over $2 million in revenue to the Morgan Iron Works. For the Confederates, Morgan ran the Frances to evade Union blockades between Havana and the southern ports.[38]

Reconstruction

Sale of Morgan Iron Works

After the Civil War, demand for steamships flagged and the federal government placed some of their vessels on the market. Morgan had already anticipated the buyer's' market for steamships as early as the fall of 1865. In 1867, Quintard and Morgan sold their interests in the Morgan Iron Works to John Roach for $450,000 (~$7.79 million in 2022). Morgan bought four steamers from the U.S. Navy. Morgan had sold two of these to the Navy during the war: Austin and William G. Hewes. In another case of making money on both ends, Morgan sold three steamships to the federal government for $495,000, then repurchased them a year later for $225,000. Included in this expansion of his fleet, he ordered eight new ships from Harlan and Hollingsworth between 1865 and 1867.[39]

Quintard proposed a new investment idea to Morgan in 1867. This resulted in the formation of the New York and Charleston Steamship Company (not to be confused with the New York and Charleston Packet Company). The new company started by acquiring Manhattan from Morgan's youngest son-in-law, Charles A. Whitney. Next they purchased two large steamers, Champion (1,452 tons) and Charleston (1,517), and chartered the steamer James Adger.[39]

Morgan forged a rate deal with the Pontchartrain Railroad on April 17, 1866. He received 75 percent of the revenue for their freight traveling on his steamships between New Orleans and Mobile, Alabama. At first, Morgan faced open competition from other carriers on the route, but in 1868, he paid $250,000 (~$4.6 million in 2022) in exchange for being the exclusive carrier. However, after 1870, Morgan competed for business with a railroad running between the two cities.[40]

On May 3, 1866, Morgan signed a new contract with the NOO&GW railroad. This deal contained many of the provisions of the eight-year contract they implemented before the war. Morgan received a percentage of the freight receipts based on multiple-tiers, received a fifty percent discount moving his supplies on the railroad, and the railroad would provide wharfage at the western terminus at Brashear. As before, Morgan's steamship transported freight from the western terminus of the railroad at Brashear to the Texas ports of Galveston and Indianola.[39]

Advertisement for International & Great Northern Railroad, May 11, 1878

In the late-1860s, Morgan's steamships carried much of the eastbound freight for a growing coastal Texas cattle industry. He offered new service in 1867 to Rockport, Texas, hauling outbound hides and beef products. The new port on Aransas Bay exported over 2 million pounds of hides and over 1.7 million pounds of wool by 1869. The port of Indianola served the area around Matagorda Bay, where five meatpacking facilities were located by 1870. Indianola exported cattle, hides, wool, cotton, and processed meat.[41]

There was a major managerial re-alignment in 1867. Preceded by the departure of George Quintard and Henry Morgan, both of whom pursued new paths as independent financiers, his agent in New Orleans, Israel C. Harris, retired on April 1 before dying on Christmas Eve. Morgan hired a new agency for the Crescent City, headed by another one of his son-in-laws, Charles A. Whitney. Whitney & Company's other partner was another Morgan associate by the name of Alexander C. Hutchinson. Morgan granted them total authority over the Morgan Line, which operated between Louisiana and Texas.[42]

Railroad ownership

To this point, Morgan had invested in the first-tier mortgage bonds of the NOO&GW, but had not yet held equity in any railroads. The NOO&GW had fallen behind in its coupon payments. The Illinois Central Railroad, a large bondholder, filed suit on June 10, 1868. The following year, William S. Pike approached Morgan to join a group of 26 NOO&GW bondholders to force a court-ordered sale of the railroad. Morgan refused to join the suit, and Pike dropped the plan. Several months later, in September 1868, Morgan offered a complex counter-proposal to act as an operator and lessee of the NOO&GW. Morgan agreed to buy all of the NOO&GW's debt, while taking responsibility for two-thirds of the debt for building the railroad to Sabine Pass, Texas. In Pike's opinion, the bondholders would be offering as much as a fifty percent discount on their assets, thus he declined the offer. Morgan predicted a bankruptcy in the NOO&GW's near future. Shortly later, Morgan retained Miles Taylor as legal counsel, who filed a series of legal actions against the railroad. One of these suits competed against an earlier lawsuit filed in federal court by the Illinois Central Railroad, which was attempting to force the NOO&GW into liquidation. This was inimical to Morgan's financial interests since he was a major bondholder, and Taylor's suit asked for a court-ordered sale of the railroad. The Illinois Central's suit was dismissed in Federal District Court, and Morgan won his suit, sending the NOO&GW into an auction at the New Orleans Custom House. Through an agent, Morgan purchased the NOO&GW on May 25, 1869, for $2,050,000 (~$40.2 million in 2022).[43]

Morgan, for his more than $2 million, owned the entire NOO&GW. He renamed it Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad. At the time of purchase, the assets included a terminal each at Algiers and Brashear, and eighty miles of single-track in between. The Algiers terminal included forty acres with 370-feet of frontage on the Mississippi River, directly across from New Orleans. It was highly modernized for its time, incorporating innovative cargo-handling equipment such as Link Belt steel conveyor belt "Endless Freight Conveyors".[44] The Brashear terminal included coal yards, warehouses, and wharves, with 330-feet of frontage on the Atchafalaya River. Along its track, the NOO&GW had built many miles of trestles over the watery right-of-way, and also maintained depots and rolling stock.[45]

Morgan purchased a large share of equity of the San Antonio and Mexican Gulf Railroad (SA&MG) on May 25, 1870. His steamers had long served the Texas port of Indianola, and he met the competition of railroad transport to Indianola by his own railroad investment. Morgan, and the other owner, Henry S. McComb, renamed the company the Gulf, Western Texas, and Pacific Railroad. Morgan acquired McComb's interest in the railroad in May 1872.[46]

With steamboat service from New Orleans to Mobile, Alabama, discontinued, the Louisiana–Texas service accounted for most of Morgan's marine business. High taxes and fees increased the costs for doing business in New Orleans. The city's access to the Mississippi River was less important in light of Morgan's Texas and Louisiana Railroad. After the dredging of the Atchafalya River in 1872, Morgan moved all of his Louisiana steamboat operations from New Orleans to Brashear, relying on the ferry from New Orleans to Algiers, and his railroad from Algiers to Brashear to convey his westbound passengers and freight. He also shifted investments from wharfage at Lake Ponchartain and in New Orleans to expanded facilities in Brashear. By around 1875, Morgan's payroll included about 800 workers in Brashear, with the wharf spanning over 2,600 feet. In February 1876, the town's name was changed to Morgan City.[47]

By the 1870s, the Southern Steamship Company had expanded its geographical reach through new assets and alliances. For example, a Morgan agent in 1873 was able to sell a single ticket for passage between New Orleans and San Antonio, Texas, which employed several modes of transportation. Starting on rail from Algiers, Louisiana, the journey included coastal steamboat passage combining two packets, another rail segment, and finally the passenger reached San Antonio via stagecoach.[48]

Meanwhile, in Texas, Morgan started withdrawing from Galveston as a port. The Galveston Wharf Company no longer gave his ships favored treatment. In addition, the only railroad from that city—the Galveston, Houston and Henderson—could not run any of its rolling stock north of Houston. Morgan also adapted to the progress of the railroad networks. First, in 1873, he changed his freight tariffs from rates by container volumes to rates per hundred pounds of weight. Second, he had started a plan to bypass Galveston as a logistics center in favor of Houston.[49] Around the same time, he also forwarded his passengers and freight through the Houston Direct Navigation Company, which transferred between coastal steamers to Buffalo Bayou packets in Galveston Bay, thus avoiding the port of Galveston, along with its regulations and fees. Houston Direct Navigation Company ran its steamers from Galveston Bay to the wharf at Houston. Later he bought enough stock in the company to become its largest shareholder, further aligning his interests with Houston and against Galveston.[48]

On July 1, 1874, Morgan forged an agreement with the Ship Channel Company (Houston) to improve navigation of Buffalo Bayou. Morgan agreed to dredge to a depth of nine feet and at least 120-feet in width in exchange for company stock. Less than two years later, he completed a channel through Galveston Bay to an existing channel through the Red Fish Bar, and the final segment terminated about six miles east of Houston, at a place he named Clinton, Texas. He next commissioned the construction of a short line railroad of just over seven miles to network his wharves at Clinton with two Houston railroads: the Houston and Texas Central and the International and Great Northern. When this line started operation on September 11, 1876, Morgan gained access to most of Texas and no longer needed Galveston within his transportation network. Next, he engineered a takeover of the Houston and Texas Central, ousting the all-Texas management, and installing himself as a director with Charles A. Whitney as president.[49]

Death and legacy

Tomb, Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn

Morgan died on May 9, 1878, at his home in New York City after an extended illness as a consequence of Bright's disease.[50] He is interred at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.[51]

Morgan's incorporation of the eponymous Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship Company (ML&TRSC) facilitated a division of his estate, delegated to the administration of Charles A. Whitney. In April 1878, just a few weeks prior to his death, Morgan conveyed shares of the company to Mary Jane Sexton Morgan, Maria Louis Morgan Whitney, Frances Eliza Morgan Quintard, Charles A. Whitney, George W. Quintard, and Richard Jessup Morgan (a grandson). Whitney was the president of the company; Alexander C. Hutchinson was the vice-president. Both held proxies from the Morgan family shareholders to manage the company.[50]

The ML&TRSC continued to expand westward, reaching Lafayette by 1879. The company continued to operate under the goals that he established, and it was finally acquired by Southern Pacific Railroad in 1883.[51] The railroad company persisted through 1885. Ultimately the development of the railroads severely diminished the role of coastal steamships; however, the railroad part of the enterprise remained valuable. Collis P. Huntington and Jay Gould emerged as dominant railroad developers in the region. Though Texas law prohibited interstate railroads, Huntington leased Texas railroads to bring them into the Southern Pacific Railroad system. Some of these included segments of the ML&TRSC in Texas and Louisiana.[52]

Morgan's legacy is preserved with the 1876 renaming of Brashear to Morgan City, Louisiana, and in the Morgan School, a high school in Clinton, Connecticut, for which Morgan donated land and capital.[53][54]

References

  1. ^ a b c d James P. Baughman (June 15, 2010). "MORGAN, CHARLES". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  2. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 5–8.
  3. ^ a b c d Baughman (1968), pp. 111–112.
  4. ^ a b c Baughman (1968), pp. 53–56.
  5. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 8–9.
  6. ^ Baughman (1968), p. 9.
  7. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 9–11, 249.
  8. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 12–15.
  9. ^ a b Baughman (1968), 15–17.
  10. ^ Baughman (1968), 17–18.
  11. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 19–21.
  12. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 23–25.
  13. ^ Baughman (1968), p. 31.
  14. ^ Baughman (1968), p. 39.
  15. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 40, 43–47.
  16. ^ Jack B. Irion and David A. Ball. "The New York and the Josephine: Two Steamships of the Charles Morgan Line" (PDF). Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Retrieved June 26, 2018.
  17. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 49–52.
  18. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 59–61.
  19. ^ Stiles (2009), p. 173.
  20. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 61–63.
  21. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 67–68.
  22. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 63–66.
  23. ^ Stiles (2009), 204–205.
  24. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 69.
  25. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 72–74.
  26. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 74–75.
  27. ^ Stiles (2009), pp. 237–238.
  28. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 75–76.
  29. ^ Stiles (2009), pp. 274–276.
  30. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 79–80.
  31. ^ Stiles (2009), pp. 278–281.
  32. ^ Baughman (1968), p. 83.
  33. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 94–96.
  34. ^ a b Baughman (1968), 97–103.
  35. ^ Baughman (1968), p. 113.
  36. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 113–117.
  37. ^ Baughman (1968), 117–120.
  38. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 121–122.
  39. ^ a b c Baughman (1968), pp. 124–128.
  40. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 130–131.
  41. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 128–130.
  42. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 131–133.
  43. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 148–154.
  44. ^ Hubbell, Dan (April 23, 2018). "Morgan Line Brought Numerous Innovations In Cargo Handling". Waterways Journal. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  45. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 155–156.
  46. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 187–189.
  47. ^ Baughman (1968), pp. 174–177.
  48. ^ a b Andrew W. Hall (2012). "Morgan Moves In". The Galveston–Houston Packet: Steamboats on Buffalo Bayou. Charleston, SC: The History Press.
  49. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 198–205.
  50. ^ a b Baughman (1968), pp. 210–211.
  51. ^ a b George C. Werner (March 20, 2017). "Houston and Texas Central Railway". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved November 20, 2017.
  52. ^ Baughman (1968), 212–231.
  53. ^ "A Shipping and Railroad Magnate Remembers His Connecticut Roots". Connecticut History. April 26, 2014. Retrieved November 26, 2017.
  54. ^ Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism. "Brothers of the Sacred Heart Historical Marker".

Bibliography

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