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More than just a dentist

San Marcos dentist is a much-beloved Renaissance man
Wednesday, December 27, 2023

This is the second in a multi-part series this week featuring our staff’s favorite stories from the year. We hope you enjoy this look back on 2023.

Dr. Gene Milligan is a BISM: Born in San Marcos in 1952, he graduated from San Marcos High School, attended pre-med for dentistry at what was then Southwest Texas State, and after graduating from dental school in San Antonio, he came right back home. Milligan opened his dental practice at the age of 24, and he’s kept at it for 46 years.

“Southwest Texas and Texas State have always had a good pre-med, pre-dental department,” Milligan said. “Dentistry has been a real good fit for me. I enjoy making things and helping people. And the joke is, I’ll keep practicing until I get it right.”

Humor included, this philosophy seems to be the guiding principle of Dr. Milligan’s life. Not only is Milligan an accomplished and respected dentist, he is also a musician, a gardener and a builder.

“We’re hand people,” Milligan said. “We make things with our hands. A whole bunch of dentists play musical instruments, or they build things, or they have a little shop in the back, or do gardening, or rebuild carburetors.”

Dr. Milligan does all of this and more. He and his wife, fellow musician and Renaissance woman Virginia Davis, play in a band called O’Malarkey. “We’re an Irish band,” Milligan said. “My sweetie plays fiddle, and I play whatever’s lying around.” To be sure, this is a modest response, because “whatever’s lying around” includes guitar, mandolin,

trumpet and harmonica. O’Malarkey plays local renaissance festivals and has a standing gig at Sean Patrick’s, San Marcos’ own Irish pub. Additionally, they have an open music session every first and third Wednesday of the month at Wake the Dead, where they welcome local musicians to find out what Irish music is all about.

“It’s kind of a niche musical form,” Milligan said. “Irish have a real knack for melody. Some of these songs are 200 to 250 years old. We enjoy playing.”

When Dr. Milligan isn’t practicing dentistry or playing music, he and Davis spend time enjoying life on their farm in Martindale, where they tend two vegetable gardens, a fruit orchard, and where they raise long-eared Nubian goats. Their farmhouse, which they designed and had built to be off grid, utilizes rainwater collection as well as solar and wind power for efficient heating and cooling.

“I was fortunate to have some really good friends who were craftsmen, not just carpenters, and we built a really tight house,” Milligan said. “We never have problems with bugs crawling in. We have a wood stove. When we had that big snow storm two years ago, we had lights and fans. We made a big pot of chili beans. We were hunky dory.”

In many of the statements Milligan makes about his life, he leads with that same gratitude. “I was fortunate,” he said, or, when referring to his 23 years with Davis, “I am very lucky to have her in my life…”

One can tell Dr. Milligan knows how sweet his life truly is. “I’m so blessed,” he said of his staff members, Dee Dee Dixon and Linda Rodriguez, both of whom have been working with him for going on three decades. “The staff here is the best staff I’ve ever had. These ladies are crackerjack.”

He also notes with gratitude how his formative years in San Marcos have shaped him and contributed to the person he is today. “It was a wonderful place to grow up,” Milligan said. “We had the river all to ourselves. San Marcos had three stop lights. Wimberley didn’t have any. There were people in the 50s still coming in with their horse and buggy on Saturday to do their shopping. It was a different time.”

Milligan recalled attending the very first Just For Fun Parade, where he dressed like a 1950s dentist complete with a white smock and drill. “When you live here all your life, you do stuff like that.”

For now, Milligan is content to continue serving his patients for as long as he’s able. “We have a pretty laid-back approach,” he said. “It’s really rewarding to be able to help people. We don’t try to do a 30 minute procedure in 20 minutes. I know a lot of offices do that. You just have to say, ‘I need this much time to do a quality job.’”

Milligan’s patients appreciate his dedication to quality, which is why he has so many of them continue to return.

“At this point in the practice, patients are pretty much extended family,” he said. “They bring us cookies at Christmas. We get invited to quinceaneras and weddings. They all know I’m raising goats…I’m a happy camper. You don’t get that anywhere else.”

Editor’s note: Today’s feature on Dr. Gene Milligan was inspired after his dental office expressed concerns that he was being confused for Ronald Milligan, whose obituary ran in the Daily Record on Jan. 1. We offer condolences to the family of Ronald Milligan.

Why ‘More Than Just a Dentist’ is Dalton Sweat’s Favorite Story of 2023 The story we ran about Dr. Gene Milligan, a long-time San Marcos dentist, may not be my absolute favorite of the year, but I really want to share the story behind how it came to fruition before those memories drift off into the ether. I’ve actually known Dr. Milligan for much of my life, though I don’t know that he would realize it. I grew up in Wimberley, and my uncle was a musician in the band the Volunteer Fire Ants. As it happens in small towns, musicians tend to run in the same circles, and even though Dr. Milligan is known for his day job, he moonlights as a musician. Currently, he plays in the Irish/Celtic band O’Malarkey. I was likely one of the kids he remembers running around the camp fire on jam nights at Cawley’s at the Junction. Early this year, we had a bit of a unique happen stance. Ronald Gene Milligan, 80, of San Marcos, passed away on December 27, 2022. His obituary ran, as many do, without a photo. The version published in the paper was scant on details, and to the unknowing reader, it would be perfectly normal for a person to assume that this individual was, in fact, the Gene Milligan that has worked as a dentist in San Marcos for nearly 50 years. The problem was, it wasn’t. With all due respect to Ronald Gene Milligan and his family, the misunderstanding became an obvious issue. We at the Daily Record got a call from Dr. Milligan’s office that people were sending condolences, but he was alive and well. We obviously wanted to clarify this misunderstanding between two people with remarkably similar names. So, we elected to do a full-length feature story on San Marcos’ longest-tenured dental practitioner (at least I think he is.) Dr. Milligan has been a part of our community for so long. He and his wife are such interesting people that it made for a great story and one that was long over due. I love when we have the opportunity to tell the stories of the people who make up our community, this one just came with a unique twist. Now that you know the rest of the story, I hope you enjoy reading the feature written by our esteemed Features Editor Celeste Cook on San Marcos’ own Irishband-playing, tooth-decay-fighting Dr. Gene Milligan.

San Marcos Record

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P.O. Box 1109, San Marcos, TX 78666