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Civil War Trail Starr County John Vale/Noah Cox House

Rio Grande Valley Civil War Trail College of Liberal Arts

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Starr County - Related Links

  • John Vale/Noah Cox House
  • Juan Cortina
  • Mifflin Kenedy Warehouse
  • Old Rio Grande Cemetery
  • Ramirez Hospital
  • Ringgold Barracks
  • Robert E. Lee House
  • Roma Historic District

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RGV- Civil War Program
The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
1201 W. University Dr.
LAMR 1.103
Conference Room LAMR 1.104
Email: chaps@utrgv.edu
Phone: (956) 665-3231

Quick Links

CHAPS RGV Civil War “Cotton Times” Film Discovery Trails Sponsorship Opportunities Blue and Gray on the Border: The Rio Grande Valley Civil War Trail The Civil War on the Rio Grande, 1846–1876

John Vale/Noah Cox House

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The John Vale/Noah Cox House, located in Roma’s Historic District, served as both a home and business location for John Heinrik Vale and Noah Cox, who were deeply embroiled in Civil War activities in Roma. Vale, a Swedish immigrant, had come to America in 1840 seeking adventure. During the Mexican American War, Vale volunteered for Zachary Taylor’s Army of Occupation and was encamped in Camargo. He chose to remain in the region, marrying a woman from Ciudad Mier in Tamaulipas and taking up residence across the Rio Grande in Roma. In 1853 he built a two-story home on the town’s main plaza. Three years later he sold the house to Cox, a representative of the New Orleans firm of Stadeker & Mecklinburger & Cox, who continued to use the house as both a residence and mercantile center. In addition to his mercantile operations during the Civil War, Cox also served in the Confederate Texas Cavalry. For his part, Vale engaged heavily in the lucrative cotton trade that funneled through the city of Roma during the Civil War, doing business with Joseph Kleiber, a key player in Confederate business operations on the Gulf of Mexico.

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La casa John Vale/Noah Cox, ubicada en el distrito histórico de Roma, Texas, sirvió tanto de hogar como de comercio para John Heinrik Vale y Noah Cox, dos personajes profundamente implicados en las actividades relacionadas con la Guerra de Secesión en Roma. Vale, inmigrante sueco que había llegado a Estados Unidos en 1840 en busca de aventura, fue voluntario en el ejército de ocupación de Zacarías Taylor durante la Guerra de Intervención, y estuvo destinado en la localidad de Camargo. Decidió quedarse en la región, contrayendo matrimonio con una mujer de Ciudad Mier, en Tamaulipas, y estableciendo su residencia de este lado del río en Roma. En 1853, construyó una casa de dos pisos en la plaza mayor de la localidad, y tres años después, la vendió a Cox, un representante de la firma con sede en Nueva Orleáns, Stadeker & Mecklinburger & Cox. Éste continuó utilizando la casa como residencia particular y centro de operaciones mercantiles durante la Guerra Civil, en la que sirvió como jinete de la Caballería Confederada de Texas. Por su parte, Vale se involucró con resolución en el lucrativo comercio algodonero, cuyo flujo se concentraba a través de la ciudad de Roma durante esa contienda, asociándose en diversos negocios con Joseph Kleyber, un personaje clave en las operaciones comerciales confederadas en el Golfo de México.

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John Vale
John Vale
Photo Courtesy of the Vale Family
John Vale House
John Vale House
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