English surname for one who lived near town gates or worked as a gatekeeper.
Gates is an English surname-turned-given-name with origins in the Middle Ages, derived from the Old English word "gæt" or the Old Norse "gat," both meaning a gate, gap, or path. It was typically an occupational or topographical surname given to someone who lived near a town gate or managed one — in medieval English towns the gate was a point of commerce, control, and civic identity. The name thus carries a quietly architectural sense of threshold and passage.
As a surname, Gates entered the global imagination most powerfully through William Henry Gates III — Bill Gates — the co-founder of Microsoft and one of the defining technological figures of the late twentieth century. His name became synonymous with the personal computing revolution and later with large-scale philanthropy through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. In an earlier American context, the surname appears in history through Horatio Gates, the Continental Army general who achieved a decisive victory at the Battle of Saratoga in 1777, a turning point of the Revolutionary War.
The novelist Henry Louis Gates Jr. has made it a name associated with African-American literary scholarship and genealogy. As a first name, Gates is rare and unconventional — the province of parents drawn to strong, monosyllabic surnames worn as given names in the tradition of Brooks, Miles, or Wells.
It has a certain architectural confidence: one syllable, hard consonants, an image of a threshold. In contemporary naming culture where surname-first-names have become fashionable, Gates occupies a distinctive niche — historically grounded, subtly powerful, and unmistakably unusual.