Montague County’s Memory Institution
The Tales ‘N’ Trails Museum is located at 1522 E Highway 82 in Nocona, Texas — a fact worth stating precisely because the museum has sometimes been misidentified in secondary sources as being in Bowie. It is in Nocona, sitting on the highway that runs through the boot-industry town that Enid Justin never left.
The museum is Montague County’s principal heritage institution: the organized, community-supported effort to preserve and interpret the county’s history for residents and visitors. Where a county courthouse preserves the legal record and a library preserves the textual record, a heritage museum preserves the material and narrative record — the physical objects, the oral accounts, the photographs and documents that give history tactile reality.
Tales ‘N’ Trails does this for a county whose historical depth exceeds what the sparseness of its current population might suggest. Montague County has been, in sequence: Comanche and Wichita territory, a Chisholm Trail corridor, a cattle-and-cotton agricultural county, a leather-industry manufacturing center, an oil-field region, and a modern agricultural-and-ranching community with a heritage tourism economy. Each of those phases left artifacts, and the museum holds them.
The Five Interpretive Pillars
The museum’s collection and exhibit structure organizes around five major thematic areas that together cover the range of MoCo’s documented heritage.
Leather Industry
The leather industry pillar is the museum’s most distinctive — and most nationally resonant — interpretive focus. Nocona’s identity as a boot and leather-goods manufacturing town derives from a sequence of decisions by specific people: H.J. Justin’s 1889 relocation from Spanish Fort, Enid Justin’s 1925 founding of Nocona Boot Company after her brothers moved the original enterprise to Fort Worth, and the Storey family’s 1934 trademarking of the Nokona brand for what would become America’s last domestic baseball glove manufacturer.
The museum holds Justin Boots heritage exhibits, Nokona Glove heritage materials, boot and leather artifacts from the working plant, and tools and equipment from the manufacturing operations that employed much of Nocona’s workforce through the 20th century.
The leather industry exhibits at Tales ‘N’ Trails connect to all three major heritage business profiles in the county’s leather cluster: Justin Boot Company, Nocona Boot Company, and Nokona Baseball Glove Company.
The Animatronic Miss Enid
The museum’s most distinctive single feature is the animatronic figure of Enid Justin — “Miss Enid” — that recounts the Nocona Boot Company story in her own recorded voice.
The figure was created from recordings Enid made before her 1990 death, giving the exhibit a quality of immediacy that artifacts and photographs cannot replicate: the actual voice of the person whose story is being told. Visitors encounter a figure that speaks, that describes the 1925 founding in first-person terms, that carries the weight of the decision Enid made when she stayed in Nocona while her brothers took the family business to Fort Worth.
For a museum that exists partly to make the county’s history personally accessible — not just a list of dates and names but a set of human decisions made by people who had other options — the animatronic Miss Enid represents an interpretive achievement. It is also, by most accounts, one of the exhibits visitors remember longest.
Oil and Gas
The oil and gas pillar covers KMA Field heritage — the Burkburnett-Wichita area oilfield whose boundary touched Montague County’s eastern edge and whose boom decades shaped the county’s economic trajectory through the first half of the 20th century. The exhibits include oil-era artifacts, photographs and documents, equipment, and the stories of MoCo oil families who moved between agriculture and the oilfield as prices and opportunities dictated.
Agriculture
The agriculture pillar encompasses the full range of MoCo’s farming and ranching heritage: cattle and farming exhibits, cotton-era artifacts, farming equipment, and the horticultural traditions that gave the county a regional agricultural identity — the apple and peach orchards of the northern hill country, the watermelon fields of the Cross Timbers, the apple-cider and fresh-produce economy that ran alongside the cattle and cotton operations.
Agricultural exhibits at Tales ‘N’ Trails make a case for complexity that is easy to miss in a county whose current economy is largely beef and small-scale row crops: MoCo was, at its mid-20th-century agricultural peak, a genuinely diversified farming county, and the museum preserves evidence of that diversity.
Western Heritage and the Chisholm Trail
The Western heritage pillar covers the Chisholm Trail’s passage through Montague County, the cattle-drive operations that moved longhorns north through the county in the 1870s and early 1880s, and the cowboy culture that accompanied the trail economy. Exhibits include drover-era saddles and gear, cattle-drive artifacts, cowboy clothing and equipment, and documentation of the trail towns — Spanish Fort, Saint Jo, and others — that served as provisioning stops.
This pillar connects Tales ‘N’ Trails interpretively to the Stonewall Saloon Museum in Saint Jo — the trail-era building whose physical survival makes it a complementary site to the museum’s broader collection.
Native American Heritage
The Native American pillar covers the Indigenous peoples of the MoCo region: Wichita-Caddoan, Comanche, and Kiowa peoples whose territory the county overlapped before Anglo settlement. Exhibits include cultural artifacts, documentation of the 1758 Battle of the Twin Villages (the Spanish assault on Taovaya villages near the modern Spanish Fort site), and materials related to the history of Indigenous presence in the county.
This interpretive work involves the structural gap that MoCo’s archival record imposes: the documentary record of Indigenous peoples in the region was produced primarily by colonial and settler observers, and the museum’s representation of that history necessarily reflects those limitations. Phase 2 research consultation with tribal cultural preservation offices could deepen this pillar’s interpretive accuracy.
Location: Nocona, Not Bowie
The museum’s Nocona address deserves a brief note in the context of the county’s geography. Bowie is MoCo’s largest city and its commercial center; Nocona is the county’s second city and the heart of its leather-industry heritage. A museum focused on Montague County’s heritage could plausibly have been sited in either location.
That it is in Nocona — at 1522 E Highway 82, a mile from the town’s commercial center — places it in the geographic context of the leather industry it most distinctively interprets. The former Nokona Glove factory, the original Nocona Boot plant site, and the town’s commercial district that grew around the boot trade are all within a short distance of the museum’s location. The address is not incidental; it puts the institution inside the history it documents.
Operations and Community Role
The museum operates on public access hours with modest or free admission, serves school and group tours, and relies on volunteer staffing alongside paid positions. Its operational model — donations, memberships, grants, and gift shop revenue — is characteristic of community-based heritage institutions of its scale.
School field trips are a significant part of the museum’s educational programming, making it a resource for MoCo students learning county history within a hands-on interpretive environment. The animatronic Miss Enid is a particular draw for school groups; the combination of a speaking figure and a first-person historical narrative holds the attention of audiences who might find conventional exhibit formats less engaging.
The museum’s community role extends beyond its walls. In a county of approximately 19,000 people, a heritage institution that can articulate and transmit the county’s history performs a civic function that goes beyond education alone — it maintains a shared narrative, provides a physical location for community memory, and gives the county’s history a place that residents can point to when they want to explain who they are and where they come from.
Sources
- Tales ‘N’ Trails Museum (talesntrails.org)
- City of Nocona, Texas (ci.nocona.tx.us)
- Wichita Falls Arts and Culture, “Tales ‘N’ Trails Museum” (wichitafallsarts.org)