Blog Archives

And there was light

The gentleman who was mowing the lawn across the street from the church was mightly interested in what I was doing. I guess they don’t get too many photographers wandering around town.

Anyway, I ducked out of his view, down a sidewalk, and was rewarded with the sight of the sun cutting through the old pressed glass windows.

First United Methodist Church
Santa Anna, Texas
photographed 2.17.2020

death was the…

I was counting on my Photoshop skills to help me ascertain what this marker was trying to tell me. But those skills totally let me down, and now we will never know how the sentence ended.

My apologies.

Pontotoc, Texas
photographed 2.16.2020

I am the way

On a day when my only plan was to drive around and look at stuff, a road sign that said “cemetery” with an arrow pointing down a dirt road was a siren call. Why, yes, I believe I will drive down and see what sort of cemetery Pontotoc might have!

And that’s how I found out that, in addition to headstones and stuff, there was a stone Bible verse right there on the way in.

Pontotoc, Texas
photographed 2.16.2020

Half-stopped

And here, in a single image, you can see the entirety of downtown Rochelle, Texas. And a little more than half of a stop sign. It was my kind of place.

Rochelle, Texas
photographed 2.16.2020

Regency

When I travel around Texas I use an atlas called the Roads of Texas; it’s got highly detailed maps that are marked with churches and cemeteries and the tiniest of towns. I used it often on my recent trip to Central Texas.

But the way I found this place didn’t really have anything to do with the Big Book o’ Maps, other than to give me a general idea that if I went north from San Saba for a few miles, there’d be a farm road where I could make a left turn. And sure enough, there was the road…but even better, there was a sign that said “Regency Bridge” with an arrow pointing the way I was thinking of turning.

Which is what led me to learn that Regency Bridge, which dates from the 1930s, is one of the last remaining suspension bridges in the state. The pertinent items from the bridge’s Wikipedia page are:

  • Youths gathered there in the 1940s to picnic, dance, and sing.
  • Local teenagers accidentally set the wood surface on fire on December 29, 2003, burning a hole in some planks and causing $20,000 in damage.
  • Regency Bridge
    near Regency,Texas
    photographed 2.16.2020