Santa Fe sits in northwestern Maury County — a community where the Santa Fe Unit School is the center of life, family farms measure in generations, and your fence is infrastructure, not decoration.
Santa Fe sits in northwestern Maury County, a community of just under 2,000 residents spread across the farmland between Columbia and Williamsport along Highway 50. This is a place where the Santa Fe Unit School — K-12, around 600 students — is the center of community life, where family farms measure in generations rather than years, and where your neighbors still check on you after a storm.
Middle TN Fence & Gate serves Santa Fe with the understanding that fencing out here is infrastructure, not decoration. Your fence keeps livestock in, marks the property line your grandfather set, and gives your yard the privacy that a hundred-acre farm used to provide before the houses went up along the highway. We build every fence to last, because in Santa Fe, you are not replacing it next year.
Highway 50 connects Santa Fe to Columbia in about 15 minutes, providing access to the county seat’s shopping, medical facilities, and government services. The TWRA-managed Williamsport fishing lakes — four scenic lakes totaling 164 acres — sit to the west, drawing anglers and hunters from across the region. The properties along and off Highway 50 range from modest residential lots to working farms of 100 acres or more.

Santa Fe’s family farms run cattle, keep horses, and work the hay fields that define Maury County’s agricultural backbone. Our farm fencing is built for this — high-tensile wire for long perimeter runs across open pasture, woven wire for cross-fencing and areas with mixed livestock, and board fence for horse paddocks and road frontage. Every post is pressure-treated and set deep in concrete.

Newer homes and updated farmhouses along Highway 50 and the connecting county roads need yard fencing that gives families privacy without fighting the rural landscape. Our cedar and treated pine privacy fences create a finished backyard on properties where the house lot is carved from larger acreage.

Split rail is the fence that fits Santa Fe. It lines driveways, borders yards, and runs along property edges without looking out of place against the hayfields and hardwood tree lines. Our cedar split rail installations age into the landscape rather than standing apart from it.

For homeowners who want a permanent fence around their yard with no annual maintenance, vinyl delivers. It holds up through the temperature swings and humidity of Maury County’s climate without warping, cracking, or needing any finish work.
We grew up around agricultural fencing. We know how to brace a corner post for a half-mile wire run, how to cross a creek bottom without losing tension, and how to build a gate a cattle trailer can use daily.
Santa Fe fencing projects are measured in hundreds and thousands of feet. Our farm pricing reflects that scale, with material costs that drop per foot as your project grows.
The clay and loam soil northwest of Columbia shifts with the seasons. We set every post with the expectation that the ground will move, using depth and footing methods that keep your fence straight.
Santa Fe does not need a sales pitch. You need a price, a timeline, and a fence that shows up when we said it would. That is exactly what we deliver.
Santa Fe is unincorporated and most fences do not require a permit. Maury County enforces setbacks from road rights-of-way, which we verify during your free estimate. Agricultural fencing on private land is not subject to permitting.
High-tensile wire is the most cost-effective and durable option for cattle on Santa Fe’s larger properties. We install five-strand configurations with properly braced corner and end posts that maintain tension over long runs.
Farm fencing ranges from $5 to $15 per linear foot for wire configurations, and $15 to $35 for board fence. Residential wood privacy runs $25 to $45 per foot. Larger projects benefit from volume pricing. Free estimates available.
Yes. Many Santa Fe properties have decades-old fencing that needs replacement. We remove old posts, wire, and debris as part of the project, and install new fencing on the existing line or a corrected alignment.
A quarter-mile perimeter fence typically takes three to five days. Larger projects with multiple pasture divisions, creek crossings, or heavy brush clearing may take one to two weeks.