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          I have been asked on several occasion why I have 
          put so much time and effort into exposing the many errors in the 
          Montgomery Trading Post myth.  There are three reasons why I have 
          researched, studied and exposed the Montgomery Trading Post myth in so 
          much detail. 
          
            - 
            
            First:  Almost 
            every historian who has written a history of the town or county of 
            Montgomery, Texas, has included the story of the Indian trading post 
            that preceded the town of Montgomery.  Montgomery County historians 
            have considered the story of the Indian trading post very important 
            to the history of the town and the county since they began writing 
            histories.  
   
            - Second:  
            Since 1925, almost every historian has used the Indian trading post 
            to try and explain the source of the name of the town and the county 
            of Montgomery.  A so called Montgomery Trading Post has been offered 
            by these writers since 1925 as the source of the name of the town 
            and/or county. 
 
  
            - 
            
Third and Most 
            Importantly:  With the 
            exception of the basic core truth (i.e. that there was an Indian 
            trading post that preceded the town of Montgomery about a half 
            mile north of the town below the hill on the creek), the Montgomery 
            Trading Post Myth is not true!  There was never a Indian trading 
            post anywhere in the vicinity of the present town of Montgomery, 
            Texas known as the Montgomery Trading Post.  The dates that have 
            been offered are wrong. The alleged founders of the so-called 
            Montgomery Trading Post are all wrong.  In some versions of the 
            Montgomery Trading Post myth, the location of the trading post is 
            also wrong. Most versions of the Montgomery Trading Post myth also 
            have many other details ascribed to them that have absolutely no 
            basis in fact.    
           
             In this section we will 
          look at the origin of the Montgomery Trading Post myth and its 
          evolution over time.  First, we will look at a brief synopsis of the 
          true details of the actual Indian trading post that preceded the 
          founding of the town of Montgomery, Texas.  We will then look at the 
          first documents that began to fictionalize the history of the trading 
          post by substituting erroneous details for the true facts.  Beginning 
          with the oldest documents that mention the trading post, we will watch 
          the trading post's ownership, location, date of founding and other 
          details evolve over about an eighty year period (1925-2008).   
             There was 
          in fact an Indian trading post that preceded the town of Montgomery, 
          Texas.  Founded in 1835, it was located about a half mile north of the 
          present town of Montgomery under the hill on the creek that later 
          became known as Town Creek.  Click here to read 
          the detailed history of 
          
          the Indian trading post that became the town of 
          Montgomery, Texas. 
             In reality the name I 
          have given the Montgomery Trading Post myth is a misnomer. There is 
          not just one Montgomery Trading Post myth.  There are as many 
          different versions of the Montgomery Trading Post myth as there are 
          authors who previously wrote histories about the Indian trading post 
          that preceded the town of Montgomery, Texas.  As we will see, each 
          historian changed the story a little.  Some of these historians 
          changed the story a lot.  
             In reading their 
          histories of the Indian trading post they call the Montgomery Trading 
          Post, it becomes eminently clear that each of these historians either: 
          
            - 
            
did not care to do 
            any historical research,   
            - 
            
assumed that the 
            historical research had already been done,   
            - 
            
assumed that there were 
            no primary sources to be consulted or   
            - 
            
had been told traditions 
            and legends so convincingly that they assumed there was no reason to 
            validate their accuracy.    
           
             As these historians did 
          not look at primary sources with regard to the trading post, they were 
          not confined by the actual facts and could freely speculate as 
          creatively they pleased. 
           The 
          Montgomery Trading Post Myth 
             
          Definition of myth
          (noun) - a fictitious narrative presented as 
          historical but without any basis of fact. 
             Over the last 80 years 
          or so, numerous theories have been postulated regarding the early 
          history of the Town and County of Montgomery, Texas.  Speculation as 
          to the origin of the name of the Town and County of Montgomery, 
          Texas has often been included in these theories.  These theories have 
          evolved and culminated into what this author denominates the 
          "Montgomery Trading Post Myth." 
             According to 
          the Montgomery Trading Post Myth, a trading post known as Montgomery 
          Trading Post was owned and operated by one or more of the following 
          people: Jacob Shannon, Owen Shannon and/or Margaret [Montgomery] 
          Shannon or Andrew Montgomery.  According to the myth, the Montgomery 
          Trading Post was located a half mile north or northeast of the present 
          town of Montgomery on the Owen Shannon League near what is now known 
          as Town Creek OR the Montgomery Trading Post was 
          located a couple of miles west of the present town of Montgomery at 
          the intersection of Loma del Toro and Lower Coushatti Trace.  [Note 
          the various historians cannot even agree on details such as ownership, 
          location and years of operation.]  The "Montgomery Trading Post Myth" 
          further alleges that the lands around the Montgomery Trading Post were 
          known as Montgomery Prairie or Montgomery Settlement and that the Town 
          of Montgomery derived its name from this place and subsequently the 
          County of Montgomery derived its name from the town.  Additionally, 
          there are as many variations in the other details regarding the 
          Montgomery Trading Post myth as there are historians who have written 
          about it. 
             This article will prove 
          the Montgomery Trading Post myth is not true.  All the recent 
          histories of Montgomery County, Texas are wrong. 
          
          The Town of Montgomery and Montgomery County, Texas were NOT 
          named after Jacob Shannon, Owen Shannon, Margaret [Montgomery] 
          Shannon, William Montgomery or Andrew Montgomery!  Furthermore, 
          the town and county of Montgomery were 
          not named after any place known 
          as Montgomery Trading Post, Montgomery Settlement or Montgomery 
          Prairie.  Those places never existed.  
             The evidence will also 
          show that no one named Montgomery or Shannon had anything to do with 
          the founding of the Indian trading post or the town of Montgomery, 
          Texas. The evidence will also show the founder of the town of 
          Montgomery had no reason to name the town after anyone named Shannon 
          or Montgomery.   
              In the Timeline below we 
          will start with the true story of the Indian trading post and work our 
          way forward. 
          
          
          Timeline 
          
          The Truth 
          January 1, 1831 
          - William C. Clark Purchased 
          600 Acres from John 
          Corner  
          September 15, 1835
          - W. W. Shepperd Bought 
          200 acres from William C. Clark 
          W. W. Shepperd Founds 
          Indian Trading Post 
          Shepperd founds Indian 
          Trading Post. 
          July 8, 1837 
          - Town of Montgomery Founded 
          by W. W. Shepperd 
          "Old Town" of 
          Montgomery 
          W. W. Shepperd and his 
          partner J. W. Moody found the town of Montgomery of Montgomery on the 
          200 acres W. W. Shepperd purchased from William C. Clark in 1835. 
          1837 
          - Citizens of Washington County Petition 
          for the Creation of a New County 
           December 
          14, 1837 - Montgomery County is Created 
             County Created. 
          Commissioners appointed to select county seat of Montgomery County.  
          Commissioners select the "old town" of Montgomery as the first county 
          seat of Montgomery County. county business is conducted by county 
          officials including Chief Justice Jesse Grimes and Clerk and Recorder 
          Gwynn Morrison in the "old town" of Montgomery in February of 1838. 
          February 26, 1837 
          - Shepperd Buys 212 Acres  
          from John Corner 
          200 of 212 acres. Tract No. 
          4 = "Town Tract"   
          3 days before first Commissioners court meeting 
          March 1, 1838 
          - First Montgomery County 
          Commissioners Court 
          Meeting 
          The "New Town" of 
          Montgomery 
             On 
          March 1, 1836.  
          Donation. 
          1839 
          - Major John Wyatt Moody Dies in Houston 
          Telegraph and Texas Register. 
          1849 
          - W. W. Shepperd Dies in Montgomery  
          1885 
          - C. B. Stewart Dies in Montgomery  
          July 7, 1922 
          - E. B. Stewart Writes Mrs. Brosig 
          "...entirely ignorant of the 
          organization of  
          the 'principality' of Montgomery..." 
          
          Conclusion 
             W. W. Shepperd 
          founded the Indian trading post.  W. W. Shepperd in partnership with 
          J. W. Moody founded the "old town of Montgomery.  W. W. Shepperd in 
          partnership with J. W. Moody and through his agent, C. B. Stewart 
          founded the "new town" of Montgomery.  These three men who were the 
          only three men intimate with the details of the founding of the 
          trading post and the town all died by 1885. Those who did not know the 
          details of the genesis of the trading post, the town and its name, 
          began to speculate and guess.  Erroneous details began to slip into 
          the history as people began to make up details to fill in the blanks.  
          And the Montgomery Trading Post myth was born. 
           The 
          Myth 
          The Montgomery Trading 
          Post Myth is Born 
           1925
          - Anna Landrum Davis Essay 
          "Old Montgomery" 
             In 1925, Anna Landrum 
          Davis wrote an essay, Old Montgomery, for a Statewide local 
          history contest called the Caldwell Prize.   Influenced by her aunt, 
          Mary Davis, and another woman named Lulu Shannon, Anna Landrum Davis, 
          a senior high school student, would be the first to write a version of 
          the Montgomery Trading Post Myth. 
           Document - Old 
          Montgomery Essay written for Caldwell Prize - Won 5th place. (To 
          read more about it,  do a Google book search: "Anna Landrum Davis 
          Montgomery County Texas". See University of Texas Bulletin, No 2546, 
          Dec 8, 1925 - The Texas History Teachers Bulletin, Volume XIII, Number 
          1, pp 42-47.) 
          Contentions regarding the Trading Post 
          Changes in Montgomery Trading Post myth: 
          
            - Davis substitutes Jacob Shannon for W. 
            W. Shepperd and establishes the Montgomery Trading Post myth. 
 
  
            - Maintained that the trading post or 
            town receive its name from someone named jams Montgomery and his 
            wife, Margaret Montgomery. 
 
           
          May 1, 1938 - 
          Mary Davis History Paper 
          Written for the Senior History Class 
          (See Early History of 
          Montgomery, written by Mary Davis at the request of the Senior 
          History Class.)  
          See, 
          
          Amongst Oldest - Mary Davis 
          )  
             There is a "book" (its 
          really a ring binder) of materials transcribed by Lloyd A. Biskamp in 
          1998.  The Montgomery Historical Society sold these books as a fund 
          raiser back in 1998.  Biskamp had gotten together with Bessie Price 
          Owen and Anna Landrum Davis Weisinger and they let him transcribe many 
          of their "histories" and other documents they had collected over the 
          years regarding Montgomery County history.  These documents included 
          papers and articles written by Mary Davis. 
             On page 1 of the book 
          is the Early History of Montgomery "written by Mary Davis at 
          the request of the Senior History Class," May 1, 1938.  
          On page 5, the copy of the Mary Davis paper that was given to Lloyd A. 
          Biskamp had a note written by Mary Davis to Bessie Price Owen that is 
          incredible.  
             Now keep in mind the 
          1938 Mary Davis history paper will be quoted and relied upon by just 
          about every historian that follows Mary Davis for almost 80 years 
          including W. N. Martin, William Harley Gandy, Robin Montgomery, Harry 
          G. Daves, Jr., Bessie Price Owen,  etc. as well as a number of 
          compiled county histories.  Most of her statements about the trading 
          post will be accepted as fact and later evolve into the of Montgomery 
          Trading Post myths we have today. 
             At the end of the Mary 
          Davis paper, Early History of Montgomery, transcribed by 
          Lloyd A. Biskamp in his 1998 book, Old Montgomery we find 
          this very amazing note from Mary Davis to Bessie Price Owen on page 5: 
          
            "Bessie: I am 
            sending you this to read.  
            It is not a history, 
            and I don't think you will care to copy it. 
            I didn't 
            pretend to write a history, and I don't 
            know who changed this title, when copying it.  
            I just 
            strung along my memories of what my mother and others had told me, 
            interspersed with "scraps" that I thought 16-year-old boys and girls 
            might like. 
            I learned later 
            from Matilda Rankin that the Charles Jones Academy was chartered 
            before 1850.  And Old Dan Tucker was not written until sometime 
            after this period.  I knew that at the time, and I meant to 
            substitute another tune later when I could find one that was popular 
            then. 
            Mrs. Dewey Dikeman 
            has a copy of this, but I am sure you will not lose it.  Keep it 
            until you have read it and copied anything you like. 
            
              
                M D" 
               
             
           
          
          ___________________ 
          Note: 
          This is extremely important!!!  
             The author of 
          one of the single most influential histories in Montgomery County 
          history wrote Bessie Price Owen a note and specifically told her that
          "it is 
          not a history" and that she 
          "didn't 
          pretend to write a history."  Mary 
          Davis then goes on to make it very clear to Bessie Price Owen that she 
          just "strung along my memories of what my mother and others had told 
          me."  Combined with the references to the Charles Jones Academy and 
          Old Dan Tucker, it is obvious that she did no primary research.  The 
          whole thing is based on pure hearsay.  
             And in my 
          research on the Indian trading post, the "old town" of Montgomery and 
          the "new town" of Montgomery, I never ran across Mary Davis' mother, 
          Melissa Landrum, as one of those having anything to do with the 
          organization of the trading post or the town.  In fact it appears that 
          Melissa Landrum was born in 1834.  She was 1 when the trading post was 
          founded by W. W. Shepperd in 1835. Melissa Landrum was 3 when the "old 
          town" of Montgomery was founded in 1837 and she was 4 when the "new 
          town of Montgomery was founded in 1838. When W. W. Shepperd sold his 
          interest in the town to James McCown in 1839, Melissa Landrum was 5.  
             The most 
          influential historian of her time (Mary Davis), just admitted to one 
          of the most influential historians of her time (Bessie Price Owen) 
          that her history paper was not a history. She admitted it had errors, 
          was based entirely on hearsay. She put together a bunch of 
          stories that she thought would interest a class of teenagers. Instead, 
          she influenced every historian and history that came after her. Mary 
          Davis died in 1944. The pen is mightier than the sword. Look at all 
          the trouble Early History of Montgomery has caused. In 
          1938, Mary Davis did not have a clue as to the effect her paper would 
          have. She just thought she was trying to get some teenagers excited 
          about the town's early history. 
             Anna Landrum 
          Davis had relied on her aunt, Mary Davis, when she wrote her paper in 
          1925. In 1949, the Montgomery County Historicade will rely on 
          this 1938 Mary Davis paper almost word for word. In 1950, W. N. Martin 
          will rely on this 1938 Mary Davis paper. In 1952, William Harley Gandy 
          will rely on this 1938 Mary Davis paper. Following the founding of the 
          Montgomery Historical Society in 1955, The Choir Invisible 
          will be published and will not only rely on the 1938 Mary Davis paper, 
          but will quote it word for word in many places throughout the 
          booklet.  
             And we see 
          here in this note from Mary Davis to Bessie Price Owen that Mary Davis 
          herself did not even consider the 1938 paper a history: "It is not a 
          history." "I didn't pretend it was a history..." "I just strung along 
          my memories of what my mother and others told me." 
           1950 
          - W. N. Martin Master's Thesis 
          Sam Houston State 
          Teachers College 
          Master's Thesis 
          1952 
          -
          
          William Harley Gandy Master's Thesis 
          University of Houston 
          Master's Thesis 
          Mid to Late 1950's
          - Montgomery Historical Society 
          Published The Choir Invisible 
           1975 
          - Robin Montgomery Book 
          The History of 
          Montgomery County 
             
          Published in 1975, The History of Montgomery County by Robin 
          Montgomery was the first history of Montgomery County published in 
          book form.  |