Railroad history
Montgomery's Old Railroad Marker Explains a Lot
The railroad marker on SH 149 is a small stop beside a busy road. It explains why old Montgomery once looked out toward crops, timber, riders, and trade. Farm goods were hard to move, so local business leaders formed the Central and Montgomery Railroad in 1877.
By 1880, the line ran 25 miles from Montgomery to the Houston and Texas Central Railroad at Navasota. The depot near the marker site was not just a freight stop. It was often a social center, the kind of place where news, freight, trips, and daily gossip all came in on the same tracks.
The story kept going after the county seat moved to Conroe in 1889. A small jail was moved to the rail yard for people waiting on transport. Passenger service lasted until 1951. The line later became part of the Beaumont-Somerville Branch of the Santa Fe. One marker carries crop wagons, timber, jail transfers, travel days, and the old town's public porch all at once.
Source to confirm: Texas Historical Commission Atlas - The Railroad in Montgomery