The earliest known inhabitants of the area that would become Montgomery County were the Mound Builders, Native American peoples who built large earthen mounds, two of which were constructed in southeastern Franklin Township.
Feder, Kenneth L. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology’’.
Mound | National Association of Home Builders | The Mound railway station | Builders Labourers Federation | Grand Mound, Washington | Flower Mound High School | Builders hardware | Wolseley (builders' merchant) | Wagon Mound National Historic Landmark | Wagon Mound | The Elf Mound | Scales Mound, Illinois | Roosevelt Pipe Organ Builders | Order of the Builders of People's Poland | Orange Mound, Memphis | New San Jose Builders | Mound House, Nevada | Mound City, Kansas | Mound City | Mound Builders | Mound Bottom | Mound Bayou, Mississippi | mound | Monk's Mound | Magnolia Mound Plantation House | Information Builders | Great Mound (Marietta, Ohio) | Female members of the NSW Builders Labourers Federation march on International Women's Day | Coin Street Community Builders | Builders Square |
Edwin Hamilton Davis (1811–1888), American archaeologist who studied the Mound Builders