HillCountry.ai network · Kerrville

What Is Ingram, Texas?

Ingram is a city on the Guadalupe River, seven miles west of Kerrville on State Highway 27 (also called Junction Highway). It sits at the confluence of Johnson Creek and the Guadalupe, where the river bends south and the terrain tightens into steeper canyon country. Population estimates vary — somewhere between 1,800 and 2,500 people, depending on which census-designated boundaries you use. Ingram incorporated in 1981 and has a mayor and city council, though its governance is minimal and most services are shared with Kerr County.

What It's Known For

Ingram is known for three things: the Hill Country Arts Foundation, Stonehenge II, and Old Ingram Loop. The first is a legitimate arts institution. The second is a folk-art replica of Stonehenge built by a retired engineer. The third is a one-block stretch of galleries and shops in what used to be a rough strip of bars and empty buildings. Together they give Ingram an identity that is distinct from Kerrville — smaller, odder, more artist-driven. Locals also call it "Rock Town," a nickname that dates to the 1932 flood — after the water destroyed much of the original wooden structures, residents rebuilt in local flagstone.

History and Heritage

J.C.W. Ingram bought six acres here in 1879 and opened a store and post office. He was a Methodist circuit rider who preached across the upper Hill Country on horseback, serving communities too small to support a full-time minister. The settlement that took his name grew slowly — a store, a blacksmith, a school. The stagecoach between Kerrville and Junction stopped here to water horses at the creek crossing.

By the 1920s, Ingram had a modest commercial strip along what is now SH 27. The highway brought traffic, and traffic brought gas stations and cafes. The 1932 flood destroyed much of the original wooden construction along the river. Residents rebuilt in the local flagstone that gave Ingram its "Rock Town" nickname — several of those stone buildings still stand along Old Ingram Loop.

The Hill Country Arts Foundation changed the community's trajectory in 1958. A group of local artists and art enthusiasts established the foundation on fifteen acres along the Guadalupe with the explicit goal of bringing performing and visual arts to the rural Hill Country. The organization incorporated as a nonprofit in 1959. The Point Theatre — named for the point of land where it sits at the river's edge — opened as an outdoor amphitheater seating 520 and became a summer tradition. The campus grew to include the Duncan-McAshan Visual Arts Center, multiple studio spaces, a sculpture garden, and the relocated Stonehenge II installation.

Old Ingram Loop, the original main street, was a rough stretch through the 1960s and early 1970s — bars, empty storefronts, the kind of place you drove past. In 1975, a few artists and shopkeepers began renting the cheap space. By the 1990s, the loop had become a gallery district. It remains small — maybe a dozen shops and studios — but it functions as a genuine arts community, not a tourist fabrication.

Stonehenge II

Al Shepperd was a retired engineer living on FM 1340 near Hunt. In 1989, he and his neighbor Doug Hill began building a replica of Stonehenge in Shepperd's field. The structure stands roughly sixty percent the height of the original and covers about ninety percent of its perimeter. Shepperd also built two Easter Island moai replicas nearby. After his death in 1994, the installation faced an uncertain future on private land. The Hill Country Arts Foundation offered to relocate it to their campus, where it would be maintained and publicly accessible. The move happened in 2010. The moai replicas — each about twelve feet tall, cast in concrete — stand nearby.

The structure is made of steel frames covered in plaster and concrete. It is not a precise archaeological reproduction. It is one man's project, built over several years with hand tools and a neighbor's help. Shepperd began the project in his seventies. He had no background in art or archaeology — he was an engineer who liked building things.

The Land and the River

Ingram sits where the Guadalupe valley narrows. Upstream (west), the terrain is steeper, the ranches are larger, and the river runs through deeper cuts. Downstream (east), the valley opens toward Kerrville. Johnson Creek enters from the north. The Ingram Dam, a low-water dam on the Guadalupe, creates a small impoundment that was historically used for swimming and recreation.

This is Flash Flood Alley. The same steep, rocky, shallow-soil terrain that makes the upper Guadalupe scenic also makes it dangerous. The river rises faster than a person can drive out. Low-water crossings go under early. The July 2025 flood killed 119 people in Kerr County. It is the deadliest flood in the county's history by an enormous margin. Know your high ground before dark. Keep a weather radio. Sign up for Kerr County CodeRED alerts. Check USGS gauge 08165500 (Guadalupe at Hunt, upstream) or 08166200 (at Kerrville, downstream) before making plans that depend on the river.

Attractions and Things to Do

NameAddressDescriptionHours/Season
Hill Country Arts Foundation120 Point Theatre Rd15-acre arts campus. Galleries, studios, outdoor theatre, classes. Founded 1958. The July 2025 flood damaged theaters, studios, and equipment; reconstruction is in progress.Check hcaf.com before visiting.
Stonehenge IIHCAF campusAl Shepperd's 1989 replica, relocated from Hunt in 2010. Two Easter Island moai included. Free.Check hcaf.com for current access.
Old Ingram LoopOff SH 27 at Ingram LoopOne-block gallery and shop district. Working artists, antiques, local crafts.Most shops Thu-Sat; some open daily. Hours vary.
T.J. Moore Lumber Co.Old Ingram LoopHistoric lumber building, now gallery/event space.Varies.

Food and Drink

NameAddressWhat It Is
Crider's (nearby in Hunt)TX-39, HuntSee Hunt page. Rodeo and dancehall, Saturday nights Memorial Day through Labor Day.
Ingram restaurantsAlong SH 27A few small restaurants and cafes along the highway. Nothing destination-level; functional.

Practical Information

ItemDetail
Nearest groceryH-E-B in Kerrville (7 miles east)
FuelStations on SH 27
Cell serviceGenerally reliable along SH 27; spotty off the highway
Flood alertsKerr County CodeRED; UGRA RiverHub
Driving time to Kerrville~10 minutes east on SH 27

Where to Stay

Backroads lists properties in the Ingram area — vacation rentals on the river and in the surrounding hills. The Inn of the Hills and chain hotels in Kerrville are seven miles east. There are no hotels in Ingram itself. Vacation rentals along the Guadalupe between Ingram and Hunt are the primary lodging option for visitors who want to be on the river without being in town.

Events

The Hill Country Arts Foundation runs a summer theatre season (typically June through August) at the Point Theatre when the campus is operational — check hcaf.com for current status. Gallery Night on Old Ingram Loop happens periodically — check with individual galleries for dates. HCAF also hosts workshops, art classes, and visiting artist programs throughout the year. There is no single large annual event that defines Ingram the way Wurstfest defines New Braunfels or the Folk Festival defines Kerrville.

Why It Matters

Ingram is not a destination in the conventional sense. It is a place where a few institutions — the Arts Foundation, the gallery loop, the relocated Stonehenge — have given a small city an identity beyond its geography. Most visitors pass through on their way to Hunt or Junction. The ones who stop find something quieter and stranger than what Kerrville offers seven miles east.