A Photographer Documents
Texas Ranch Gates
From A to Z
As he drove thousands of miles across Texas for his job, Kevin B. Stillman stayed alert by looking for ranch gates representing every letter of the alphabet.
Written by: Matt JoyceΒ Β Β Β Β Photos by: Kevin B. Stillman
Over 31 years as a photographer for the Texas Department of Transportation, Kevin B. Stillman drove thousands of miles across the state. Somewhere along the wayβnear Lake Texoma in 1995, to be exactβhe struck upon an idea to help the miles pass: a ranch-gate alphabet game.
βThe Paradise Ranch was the first ranch gate I shot, and I thought, βWouldnβt it be something if I could put together ranch gates for the entire alphabet,ββ says Stillman, who retired in 2019 and lives in Round Rock. βI started to do it on medium-format film because that was my medium of choice at the time, and I really liked the square shape.β
The alphabet game turned out to be a long-term challenge. Stillman says he drove an average of 16,000 miles per year as part of his job of photographing construction sites, conferences, ceremonies, and stories for Texas HighwaysΒβwhatever the department needed. And though he was on the lookout for nearly 25 years, he didnβt wrap up the entire alphabet until 2019.
βI was having fun because I was taking every back road in Texas, looking for ranch gates, but I couldnβt find a V to save my life,β Stillman recalls. βI mustβve spent six months looking for a V. I found a U and a Z, but whoβd a thought a V would be the one I couldnβt find? Then one day I found two on the road [Ranch Road 337] from Camp Wood down to Center Point.β
Stillman says his favorite of the gates adorns the Imhoff Ranch near Plantersville. He passes it frequently on drives to visit his wifeβs family in Conroe. βWeβd always say, I want to call my ranch the βIβm Off Ranch.β When I get my ranch, I donβt want to work no more.β
Stillman, who now runs a beekeeping businessβSweet Ass Honeyβwith his wife, Dodie Stillman, says the ranch gate alphabet game offers a fun way to explore the back roads of Texas, particularly during the pandemic.
βGet out there and find ranch gates and trade them with your friends and collect them and make a game out of it,β Stillman says. βExtra points for wagon wheels, extra points for skulls, extra points for stars.β