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At the time of the archaeological surveys in the 1970s, the Texas Historical Commission named the Kirbee Kiln Site as the largest groundhog kiln that had then been excavated in Texas, and it remains one of the largest ever recorded in the American South. [3] It measured 39 feet (12 m) across and 8 to 10 inches wide and was constructed of brick.
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Montgomery County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, Texas. There are two properties listed on the National Register in the county; another was once listed but has been removed.
Starting about 1988, the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City, then known as the Family History Library, developed a series of "research outlines" [6] to aid volunteer staff at its many FamilySearch Center branches, who offered free research advice to visitors. [7]
Heritage Museum of Montgomery County is a history museum in Conroe, Montgomery County, Texas, a mostly rural county northeast of Houston. The museum includes exhibits on the origin of the current population of the county, including those drawn by the lumber and oil industries. It is located in the Grogan/Cochran home, built in 1924. [1]
The Arnold–Simonton House is a historic house in Montgomery, Texas, United States.Built in 1845 by Epaphras Joseph Arnold, it is the oldest house in Montgomery. [2] It became a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1964 as the Frontier Colonial Home [2] and was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1979; [3] however, it was delisted in 2015.
Last month, a citizen committee in Montgomery County, Texas made the decision to re-classify the children's book, "Colonization and the Wampanoag Story" by Linda Coombs from children's non-fiction ...
The widow Rebecca McIntosh Hawkins married Spire M. Hagerty, who held land and slaves on his Phoenix plantation in Harrison County, Texas. He died in December 1849 in Montgomery County, Alabama. By 1860, Rebecca Hagerty was the richest woman in Texas at the age of 45.
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