http://www.texasmonthly.com/the-culture/texas-primer-the-ranch-gate/
Texas Primer: The Ranch Gate
These days it seems every
five-acre ranchette flaunts a gate worthy of the XIT. It used to show you the
way in. Now it warns you to stay out.
July 1983
By Terry Toler
A century ago there was a
reason for the prominent ranch gate. For years before that, the ranch house had
stood alone amid a vast, unfenced range. Since there were no well-defined roads,
the owner built his house to face the prevailing breeze or a scenic vista, or to
take advantage of the best point from which to oversee his livestock. Visitors,
especially strangers, who approached from the open range had to determine the
architectural face of the house as they drew near, lest their intentions become
suspect. When barbed wire had crisscrossed the plains, ranchers began to fence
their property to protect their grass and water and to fend off Indians,
farmers, and squatters. Fencing required more entrances to the ranch, and so the
rancher had to leave makeshift gates along the wire, called gaps, for passage
from pasture to pasture.
Since the house might be miles from the gate and out
of sight, a landowner needed to distinguish the gap leading to ranch
headquarters from those leading to pastures, bunkhouses, corrals, and barns, so
he marked the main gate with handy discards and found objects like broken
wheels, cow skulls, and rocks. The ranch gate became a marker directing the
traveler to the house. The most visible landmark on an otherwise featureless
prairie, it alerted the wayfarer that a friendly face could be found nearby.
As more ranches sprang up and
public roads developed, the ranch entrance became its owner’s trademark.
Displayed on the gate were signs advertising a particular breeding stock; the
name of the ranch, or its shorthand form, the brand; and the date the ranch was
established—the earlier the date, the greater the rancher’s clout.
Texas cattle kings began to
enjoy their royalty, and the entrances to their domains reflected their new
image. Before the big fortunes were made, luxury and ranch life were a
contradiction in terms. A grandiose Arc de Triomphe was a signal to the world
that a rancher had taken nature by the horns and created a haven in the
wilderness.
Most of the gigantic spreads of early Texas, such as
the three-million-acre XIT, have now been broken up into smaller ranches, sold
to (horrors!) farmers, or obliterated by encroaching towns and tract housing.
The kingdoms are gone, yet the modern Texan still yearns to own a ranch. City
folks pay good money to acquire ten scrubby little acres and proudly label it
their ranch. They fence it, name it, whack some bull nettle, and construct an
entrance gate worthy of a five-thousand-acre spread. As they flee the
metropolitan areas of the state, suddenly their ranchettes are dotting every
quarter-mile of the countryside. Whether the ranch gate leads to a mobile home
or a sprawling hacienda, it has become as commonplace on the Texas landscape as
bluebonnets and armadillos.
With the proliferation of the
ranch gate, its original purpose as a landmark has been lost to a suburbanite
lawn-decorating competition of sorts. While the gate to a modern working ranch
may be little more than two cedar king posts flanking a cattle guard, a city
slicker’s pint-size country place—usually sporting a name like Little Bit o’
Texas or Lone Star Retreat—may boast massive rock pillars supporting a
twenty-foot wrought iron arch. Farm implements and wagon wheels painted silver,
cactus, and bottles embedded in rock walls somehow capture a nostalgic
impression of the Old West for the owners.
More lamentable is the loss of
the ranch gate’s signal of welcome. Its funnel-like configuration was
functional; it helped cowboys move cattle through. But it also appeared to be
open arms to the visitor. These “arms” may still extend a welcome, but today
they are more likely bound by chains and padlocks, with signs reading, “Posted.
No Trespassing. Keep Out.”