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The	
  Village	
  Cow:	
  Life	
  at	
  Home	
  in	
  Hanover	
  before	
  Big	
  Dairy	
  Productions	
  
	
  
Researched	
  and	
  written	
  by	
  Emily	
  Hauser,	
  
Exhibit	
  and	
  Collections	
  Intern,	
  Hanover	
  Historical	
  Society,	
  2014	
  
	
  
Dairy	
  farming	
  in	
  America	
  has	
  a	
  long	
  history	
  that	
  dates	
  back	
  to	
  the	
  early	
  
1600s	
  when	
  people	
  brought	
  cattle	
  overseas	
  from	
  Europe.	
  However,	
  it	
  wasn’t	
  until	
  
the	
  1800s	
  that	
  farmers	
  began	
  to	
  breed	
  cattle	
  specifically	
  for	
  milk	
  production.	
  While	
  
dairy	
  farming	
  started	
  out	
  as	
  small	
  operations	
  in	
  the	
  home,	
  it	
  slowly	
  grew	
  into	
  the	
  
booming	
  milk	
  and	
  dairy	
  industry	
  that	
  we	
  know	
  today.	
  Around	
  the	
  turn	
  of	
  the	
  
century	
  it	
  became	
  necessary	
  to	
  mass-­‐produce	
  milk	
  due	
  to	
  increased	
  
industrialization	
  and	
  the	
  influx	
  of	
  people	
  moving	
  away	
  from	
  the	
  country	
  and	
  into	
  
urban	
  settings2.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Mehring Milking Machine
An early milking machine in Maryland, 1908
USDA Bureau of Dairy Industry Records.
Special Collections, National Agricultural Library
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
"New Milking Machine."
Popular Mechanics Aug. 1907: 868. Google Books. Web.
	
  
Although	
  the	
  mass	
  production	
  of	
  milk	
  began	
  in	
  the	
  early	
  1900s,	
  the	
  shift	
  from	
  
small	
  dairy	
  farms	
  to	
  large	
  dairy	
  productions	
  took	
  many	
  years.	
  Some	
  of	
  our	
  very	
  own	
  
residents	
  of	
  Hanover	
  grew	
  up	
  in	
  town	
  from	
  the	
  1930s	
  to	
  the	
  1950s.	
  They	
  recall	
  
Hanover	
  at	
  this	
  time	
  to	
  be	
  quite	
  rural.	
  It	
  is	
  remembered	
  as	
  a	
  time	
  when	
  children	
  
were	
  brought	
  up	
  on	
  raw	
  milk	
  from	
  the	
  neighbor’s	
  cattle	
  and	
  would	
  run	
  and	
  play	
  in	
  
the	
  open	
  pastures	
  that	
  once	
  made	
  up	
  the	
  town	
  of	
  Hanover.	
  “It	
  was	
  the	
  happiest	
  time	
  
of	
  our	
  lives,”	
  said	
  Hanover	
  resident	
  Beverly	
  Hayes	
  “We	
  never	
  wondered	
  what	
  to	
  do	
  
or	
  where	
  to	
  go,	
  we	
  never	
  said	
  ‘I’m	
  bored.’”	
  
Between	
  the	
  1930s	
  and	
  the	
  1950s,	
  the	
  village	
  of	
  North	
  Hanover	
  was	
  known	
  
for	
  its	
  dairy	
  farms.	
  The	
  three	
  largest	
  farms	
  in	
  the	
  area	
  were	
  John	
  Brooks’	
  Farm,	
  
Charles	
  Bray’s	
  Farm,	
  and	
  Ben	
  Ford’s	
  farm.	
  These	
  three	
  farms	
  were	
  very	
  close	
  to	
  one	
  
another,	
  around	
  the	
  intersection	
  of	
  Webster	
  Street	
  and	
  Main	
  Street	
  in	
  North	
  
Hanover.	
  While	
  North	
  Hanover	
  was	
  known	
  for	
  its	
  cow	
  farms,	
  South	
  Hanover	
  and	
  
Hanover	
  Center	
  were	
  known	
  for	
  their	
  horse	
  farms.	
  Long-­‐time	
  North	
  Hanover	
  
resident	
  Roger	
  Leslie	
  remembers	
  this	
  well.	
  As	
  a	
  child,	
  he	
  and	
  his	
  friends	
  would	
  get	
  
into	
  fights	
  with	
  children	
  from	
  South	
  Hanover.	
  Not	
  your	
  typical	
  skirmish	
  between	
  
neighborhood	
  kids,	
  the	
  boys	
  from	
  North	
  Hanover	
  would	
  throw	
  cow	
  flops	
  at	
  the	
  boys	
  
from	
  South	
  Hanover,	
  while	
  the	
  South	
  Hanover	
  boys	
  peppered	
  the	
  North	
  Hanover	
  
boys	
  with	
  horse	
  buns.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
  	
  
	
  
A Map of North Hanover
Hanover Historical Society
Apart	
  from	
  engaging	
  in	
  neighborhood	
  fights,	
  Leslie	
  spent	
  much	
  of	
  his	
  
childhood	
  around	
  Ben	
  Ford’s	
  farm.	
  Ford’s	
  farm	
  was	
  the	
  largest	
  of	
  the	
  farms	
  in	
  North	
  
Hanover,	
  and	
  much	
  of	
  the	
  milk	
  produced	
  there	
  was	
  sent	
  up	
  to	
  Boston.	
  The	
  farm	
  
housed	
  nearly	
  200	
  milking	
  cattle,	
  all	
  of	
  which	
  were	
  kept	
  in	
  the	
  pasture	
  near	
  Webster	
  
Street.	
  When	
  it	
  was	
  time	
  for	
  milking,	
  all	
  of	
  the	
  cattle	
  would	
  gather	
  around	
  the	
  edge	
  
of	
  the	
  fence.	
  “They	
  had	
  one	
  cow	
  with	
  a	
  leather	
  collar	
  and	
  the	
  bell	
  attached,”	
  said	
  
Leslie	
  “One	
  cow	
  was	
  the	
  leader,	
  and	
  when	
  they	
  wanted	
  the	
  cows	
  to	
  cross	
  the	
  street	
  
to	
  milk,	
  they	
  would	
  ring	
  the	
  bell	
  and	
  say	
  “Come	
  Boss!	
  Come	
  Boss!”	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
The Cows
I woke up early in the morn,
Before the sun proclaimed the dawn,
And listening heard the well known call,
That’s heard so oft from spring to fall,
Come boss, come boss.
And then I heard the tramp of feet.
From field through lane they come to meet
The one who ties them in each stall,
And who had just sent out the call,
Come boss, come boss.
They found some grain was there to greet,
And green feed too for them to eat.
As they were milked the pails to fill,
Quite oft that voice kept calling still,
Come boss, come boss.
When all the milk was taken, they
Were sprayed to keep the flies away,
Theyere started down the lane again
And I can hear him calling then,
Go on, go on.
After the milking hour at night,
They wander out to get a bite,
And then lie down their cud to chew,
Waiting the morning call anew,
Come boss, come boss
	
  
“The Cows”
Circa 1900
Poems of John F. Brooks
Hanover Historical Society
	
  
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
To	
  care	
  for	
  the	
  cattle,	
  there	
  were	
  15	
  to	
  20	
  men	
  that	
  worked	
  on	
  Ford’s	
  farm.	
  
Many	
  of	
  the	
  men	
  came	
  down	
  from	
  Boston	
  to	
  work.	
  Leslie	
  describes	
  the	
  men	
  as	
  
“tough	
  guys”	
  who	
  seemed	
  to	
  enjoy	
  playing	
  with	
  Leslie	
  when	
  he	
  entered	
  the	
  barn	
  
around	
  milking	
  time.	
  “They	
  would	
  take	
  the	
  cow’s	
  udder	
  and	
  squirt	
  it	
  right	
  in	
  my	
  
face,”	
  he	
  recalls.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Leslie	
  is	
  not	
  the	
  only	
  one	
  who	
  remembers	
  the	
  workers	
  at	
  Ford’s	
  farm.	
  Kenton	
  
Greene	
  and	
  his	
  wife	
  Janet	
  Briggs	
  Greene	
  remember	
  a	
  man	
  named	
  “Jerry	
  Ben	
  Ford”	
  
who	
  was	
  named	
  after	
  Ben	
  Ford	
  because	
  no	
  one	
  seemed	
  to	
  know	
  his	
  last	
  name.	
  The	
  
Greenes	
  describe	
  him	
  as	
  a	
  tall	
  and	
  skinny	
  man	
  in	
  his	
  fifties,	
  who	
  was	
  completely	
  
Cow Bell
Circa 1900
Donated by Fred Phillips
Treasurer of Lot Phillips & CO in the early 1900s
Hanover Historical Society
	
  
	
  
Tom Ford with a worker and young Guernsey
Ford’s Farm, Circa 1940
Charlie Gleason Scrapbooks
Hanover Historical Society
	
  
harmless.	
  	
  Jerry	
  Ben	
  Ford	
  would	
  run	
  the	
  till	
  cart	
  (or	
  manure	
  wagon)	
  up	
  and	
  down	
  
Webster	
  Street.	
  A	
  9-­‐year-­‐old	
  Roger	
  Leslie	
  remembers	
  Webster	
  Street	
  covered	
  with	
  
cow	
  flops	
  after	
  Jerry	
  Ben	
  Ford	
  had	
  driven	
  by	
  with	
  his	
  wagon.	
  	
  
Another	
  Hanover	
  resident,	
  Mary	
  Sides,	
  grew	
  up	
  in	
  North	
  Hanover	
  next	
  door	
  
to	
  the	
  Bray’s	
  farm.	
  As	
  a	
  young	
  girl,	
  she	
  remembers	
  running	
  across	
  the	
  street	
  to	
  the	
  
farm	
  to	
  bring	
  milk	
  home	
  for	
  her	
  family.	
  “Everyone	
  knew	
  everyone!”	
  She	
  said,	
  “You	
  
didn’t	
  misbehave!	
  Your	
  father	
  would	
  know	
  before	
  you	
  got	
  home!”	
  Sides	
  recalls	
  that	
  
the	
  farm	
  workers	
  were	
  very	
  patient	
  with	
  the	
  children,	
  even	
  when	
  they	
  would	
  hang	
  
onto	
  the	
  back	
  of	
  the	
  hay	
  wagon	
  to	
  get	
  a	
  ride	
  with	
  their	
  roller	
  skates.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Although	
  North	
  Hanover	
  was	
  littered	
  with	
  dairy	
  farms,	
  everyone	
  in	
  the	
  area	
  
worked	
  together	
  to	
  support	
  one	
  another.	
  “[The	
  farms]	
  weren’t	
  competitors	
  really,	
  
	
  
Bray	
  Farm	
  Ad	
  
Hanover	
  Directories	
  
Early	
  1900s	
  
Hanover	
  Historical	
  Society	
  
just	
  farmers	
  trying	
  to	
  make	
  a	
  living”	
  said	
  Sides.	
  Mary	
  Sides	
  spent	
  much	
  of	
  her	
  
childhood	
  playing	
  in	
  the	
  cow	
  barn.	
  She	
  remembers	
  that	
  the	
  cattle	
  on	
  Bray’s	
  farm	
  
were	
  kept	
  on	
  the	
  street	
  level	
  of	
  the	
  barn	
  and	
  the	
  hay	
  was	
  kept	
  in	
  the	
  upper	
  level,	
  
while	
  Brooks’	
  barn	
  had	
  three	
  levels.	
  The	
  cows	
  were	
  kept	
  in	
  the	
  lower	
  level,	
  barrels	
  
of	
  grain	
  were	
  kept	
  in	
  the	
  middle	
  level,	
  and	
  the	
  hay	
  was	
  kept	
  at	
  the	
  top	
  level.	
  Barns	
  
such	
  as	
  these	
  became	
  a	
  second	
  home	
  to	
  many	
  children	
  all	
  over	
  Hanover.	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Peter	
  Gluckler	
  moved	
  to	
  Hanover	
  when	
  he	
  was	
  2-­‐years	
  old	
  after	
  his	
  
grandfather	
  purchased	
  property	
  on	
  Broadway.	
  Growing	
  up,	
  Gluckler	
  was	
  friends	
  
with	
  a	
  young	
  boy	
  named	
  Lee	
  Marden,	
  whose	
  father	
  had	
  purchased	
  Sylvester	
  Farm	
  
along	
  Washington	
  Street	
  in	
  1949.	
  Gluckler,	
  like	
  many	
  children	
  in	
  Hanover	
  at	
  the	
  
time,	
  had	
  his	
  fair	
  share	
  of	
  memorable	
  experiences	
  in	
  the	
  cow	
  barn.	
  Upon	
  jumping	
  off	
  
	
  
Twin	
  steers	
  “Pete”	
  and	
  “Repete”	
  	
  
Sylvester	
  Farm,	
  Circa	
  1946	
  
Charlie	
  Gleason	
  Scrapbooks	
  
Hanover	
  Historical	
  Society	
  
	
  
of	
  a	
  tractor	
  parked	
  in	
  the	
  barn,	
  he	
  fell	
  through	
  the	
  trap	
  door	
  in	
  the	
  floor	
  to	
  the	
  
manure	
  pit,	
  where	
  he	
  landed	
  safely	
  in	
  several	
  feet	
  of	
  manure.	
  After	
  roaring	
  with	
  
laughter,	
  Lee	
  Marden	
  and	
  company	
  were	
  able	
  to	
  pull	
  Gluckler	
  out	
  of	
  the	
  pit	
  with	
  a	
  
rope	
  they	
  had	
  attached	
  to	
  the	
  tractor.	
  Looking	
  back	
  on	
  the	
  incident,	
  Gluckler	
  is	
  
relieved	
  that	
  he	
  was	
  not	
  hurt.	
  	
  
In	
  the	
  early	
  1940s,	
  when	
  many	
  young	
  Hanover	
  residents	
  spent	
  time	
  playing	
  
in	
  the	
  cow	
  barn,	
  Lorine	
  Bergeron	
  was	
  working	
  hard	
  on	
  Elmwood	
  Farm.	
  Mr.	
  and	
  Mrs.	
  
George	
  W.	
  Mitton	
  owned	
  Elmwood	
  Farm	
  at	
  this	
  time,	
  land	
  previously	
  owned	
  by	
  
Michael	
  Sylvester.	
  The	
  farm	
  was	
  located	
  where	
  Cardinal	
  Cushing	
  School	
  is	
  located	
  
today.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Bergeron	
  worked	
  along	
  side	
  four	
  other	
  employees,	
  Herbert	
  Casey,	
  Caroline	
  
Lea,	
  and	
  the	
  Foreman,	
  Ed	
  Sykes.	
  He	
  spent	
  his	
  time	
  at	
  work	
  mowing	
  the	
  hay	
  fields,	
  
	
  
Elmwood	
  Farm	
  Ad	
  
Hanover	
  Directories	
  
Circa	
  1940	
  
Hanover	
  Historical	
  Society	
  
cleaning	
  the	
  barns,	
  milking	
  the	
  cows,	
  and	
  delivering	
  the	
  milk.	
  Bergeron	
  milked	
  50	
  
Guernsey	
  cows	
  twice	
  a	
  day,	
  and	
  sold	
  the	
  milk	
  all	
  across	
  the	
  town	
  of	
  Hanover.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Pasteurization	
  became	
  routine	
  in	
  the	
  United	
  States	
  in	
  the	
  1920s,	
  and	
  was	
  
widespread	
  by	
  the	
  1950s3.	
  Many	
  Hanover	
  residents	
  growing	
  up	
  at	
  this	
  time	
  
remember	
  drinking	
  raw	
  milk	
  at	
  home,	
  and	
  Bergeron	
  recalls	
  that	
  Elmwood	
  Farm	
  
sold	
  pasteurized	
  milk,	
  but	
  also	
  had	
  raw	
  milk	
  available	
  for	
  purchase.	
  	
  
With	
  the	
  enactment	
  of	
  the	
  Meat	
  Inspection	
  Act	
  of	
  1890,	
  the	
  US	
  Department	
  of	
  
Agriculture	
  also	
  began	
  inspection	
  of	
  dairy	
  industries	
  to	
  ensure	
  sanitation	
  and	
  
hygiene.	
  Inspection	
  officials	
  observed	
  the	
  health	
  of	
  the	
  herd,	
  the	
  cleanliness	
  of	
  the	
  
cattle	
  and	
  employees,	
  as	
  well	
  as	
  the	
  cleanliness	
  of	
  the	
  milking	
  tools	
  and	
  the	
  handling	
  
of	
  the	
  milk2.	
  
	
  
Cows in pasture on Mitton (Elmwood) Farm
Circa 1946
Charlie Gleason Scrapbooks
Hanover Historical Society
	
  
In	
  the	
  beginning	
  of	
  the	
  20th	
  Century,	
  Dr.	
  Charles	
  E.	
  North	
  was	
  the	
  first	
  to	
  
encourage	
  dairy	
  farms	
  to	
  pasteurize	
  their	
  milk.	
  North	
  was	
  a	
  both	
  an	
  agricultural	
  
scientist	
  and	
  a	
  public	
  health	
  officer.	
  He	
  developed	
  a	
  6-­‐step	
  system	
  that	
  he	
  believed	
  
any	
  dairy	
  farm	
  could	
  implement	
  to	
  ensure	
  sanitation:	
  	
  
1) Healthy	
  cows	
  
2) Careful	
  grooming	
  of	
  cows	
  
3) Clean	
  hands	
  and	
  clothing	
  
4) Clean,	
  dust-­‐free	
  barns	
  
5) Thoroughly	
  washed	
  and	
  sterilized	
  milking	
  utensils	
  
6) Prompt	
  and	
  efficient	
  cooling	
  of	
  milk2	
  
	
  
On	
  Elmwood	
  farm,	
  Bergeron	
  would	
  use	
  milking	
  machines	
  to	
  milk	
  the	
  cattle.	
  
From	
  there,	
  the	
  raw	
  milk	
  was	
  poured	
  into	
  large	
  20	
  and	
  40-­‐quart	
  cans	
  where	
  it	
  
would	
  remain	
  until	
  it	
  was	
  poured	
  into	
  the	
  pasteurization	
  machine.	
  Having	
  worked	
  
with	
  Mrs.	
  Caroline	
  Lea	
  to	
  pasteurize	
  and	
  bottle	
  milk,	
  Bergeron	
  recalls	
  that	
  “The	
  
place	
  was	
  spotless,	
  [and]	
  Mrs.	
  Lea	
  was	
  a	
  peach	
  of	
  a	
  lady.”	
  	
  
The	
  pasteurization	
  machine	
  was	
  operated	
  by	
  hot	
  water	
  and	
  steam,	
  and	
  
would	
  automatically	
  record	
  the	
  temperatures	
  of	
  the	
  machine	
  at	
  different	
  times	
  
during	
  the	
  day.	
  “You	
  had	
  to	
  watch	
  the	
  chart	
  and	
  watch	
  the	
  temperatures	
  or	
  you	
  
could	
  ruin	
  it	
  and	
  burn	
  it”	
  said	
  Bergeron.	
  At	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  the	
  pasteurization	
  machine	
  
was	
  a	
  bottling	
  machine,	
  which	
  would	
  automatically	
  turn	
  as	
  the	
  bottles	
  filled	
  with	
  
milk.	
  After	
  the	
  bottles	
  were	
  filled	
  to	
  the	
  top,	
  the	
  machine	
  would	
  secure	
  a	
  cardboard	
  
cap	
  on	
  the	
  bottle.	
  When	
  capping	
  was	
  finished,	
  they	
  were	
  placed	
  into	
  milk	
  crates	
  for	
  
delivery.	
  	
  
Bergeron	
  and	
  other	
  workers	
  on	
  Elmwood	
  farm	
  delivered	
  milk	
  to	
  different	
  
sections	
  of	
  Hanover	
  each	
  day	
  of	
  the	
  week.	
  After	
  loading	
  the	
  farm’s	
  1941	
  green	
  Ford	
  
pick-­‐up	
  truck	
  with	
  milk,	
  the	
  workers	
  would	
  head	
  out	
  on	
  their	
  milk	
  route.	
  	
  “We	
  
would	
  drive	
  down	
  the	
  street,	
  and	
  one	
  guy	
  would	
  deliver	
  to	
  one	
  side,	
  and	
  the	
  other	
  
guy	
  would	
  deliver	
  to	
  the	
  other	
  side”	
  said	
  Bergeron,	
  “In	
  a	
  very	
  short	
  time	
  you	
  knew	
  
where	
  the	
  next	
  house	
  was,	
  who	
  your	
  were	
  delivering	
  to,	
  and	
  how	
  much	
  they	
  took.”	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Elmwood	
  farm	
  not	
  only	
  sold	
  milk,	
  but	
  light	
  and	
  heavy	
  cream	
  as	
  well.	
  Quart-­‐
sized	
  bottles	
  were	
  reserved	
  for	
  milk,	
  while	
  pint-­‐sized	
  bottles	
  contained	
  light	
  cream	
  
and	
  half-­‐pint	
  bottles	
  contained	
  heavy	
  cream.	
  On	
  Elmwood	
  farm,	
  bottles	
  that	
  were	
  
used	
  for	
  delivery	
  were	
  orange.	
  Bottles	
  that	
  could	
  be	
  purchased	
  at	
  the	
  local	
  market	
  
were	
  red,	
  and	
  often	
  had	
  a	
  red	
  “STORE”	
  label	
  around	
  the	
  neck.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Elmwood Farm Milk Bottles
Circa 1940
Courtesy of Mark Lancaster
 
Beverly	
  Hayes	
  remembers	
  the	
  milk	
  delivery	
  well.	
  “In	
  the	
  winter	
  the	
  milk	
  
would	
  freeze,	
  and	
  the	
  cream	
  would	
  come	
  to	
  the	
  top	
  and	
  push	
  the	
  stopper	
  right	
  off.	
  
And	
  we	
  would	
  take	
  the	
  cream	
  right	
  off	
  the	
  top	
  and	
  put	
  it	
  on	
  our	
  cereal”	
  said	
  Hayes.	
  
Her	
  family	
  got	
  their	
  milk	
  from	
  Brook’s	
  farm	
  because	
  her	
  father	
  worked	
  for	
  Brooks.	
  
Having	
  grown	
  up	
  on	
  raw	
  milk,	
  Hayes	
  said	
  that	
  the	
  milk	
  no	
  longer	
  separated	
  in	
  the	
  
bottle	
  after	
  pasteurization	
  was	
  implemented.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Elmwood Farm 1 Pint and ½ Pint Bottles,
Bray Farm (Red Clover Farm) 1 Quart Bottle
1940-1945
Hanover Historical Society
	
  
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
As	
  pasteurization	
  became	
  more	
  popular,	
  so	
  did	
  large	
  dairy	
  farms.	
  Around	
  the	
  
1950s,	
  small	
  dairy	
  farms	
  began	
  going	
  bankrupt.	
  For	
  a	
  long	
  time	
  dairy	
  farming	
  had	
  
been	
  a	
  family	
  business.	
  However,	
  younger	
  generations	
  were	
  no	
  longer	
  interested	
  in	
  
farming.	
  “Nobody	
  wanted	
  to	
  farm	
  anymore,”	
  said	
  Lorine	
  Bergeron	
  “The	
  big	
  dairies	
  
put	
  the	
  small	
  guys	
  out	
  of	
  business”.	
  Small	
  dairy	
  farms	
  began	
  selling	
  their	
  land,	
  and	
  
housing	
  developments	
  began	
  to	
  appear	
  where	
  pastures	
  once	
  were.	
  Peter	
  Gluckler	
  
remembers	
  this	
  time	
  well:	
  “Milk	
  regulations	
  were	
  stiffening,	
  and	
  even	
  with	
  the	
  
federal	
  subsidies,	
  the	
  farmer	
  could	
  make	
  much	
  more	
  money	
  by	
  selling	
  off	
  land	
  one	
  
lot	
  at	
  a	
  time	
  or	
  wholesale	
  development.	
  Post-­‐war	
  demand	
  for	
  housing	
  and	
  the	
  
outpouring	
  of	
  young	
  families	
  from	
  Boston…	
  nailed	
  the	
  coffin	
  shut.”	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Milk Bottle Lid
Circa 1935
Brooks Farm
	
  
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
As	
  the	
  small	
  dairies	
  died	
  out,	
  people	
  purchased	
  milk	
  from	
  big	
  name	
  suppliers	
  
such	
  as	
  H.P.	
  Hood.	
  The	
  small	
  rural	
  town	
  of	
  Hanover	
  had	
  slowly	
  grown	
  larger	
  right	
  
under	
  everyone’s	
  noses.	
  Said	
  Peter	
  Gluckler,	
  “With	
  residential	
  development	
  came	
  
commercial	
  development,	
  came	
  increased	
  need	
  for	
  infrastructure	
  like	
  better	
  roads	
  
and	
  schools,	
  came	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  rural	
  life	
  in	
  Hanover.”	
  	
  
	
  
References	
  
	
  
1. “Company Overview." Hood. HP Hood LCC, 2014. Web.
2. "Early Developments in the American Dairy Industry." (2014): Special Collections,
National Agriculture Library. United States Department of Agriculture, Web.
3. "Raw Milk Questions and Answers." Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
USA.gov, 7 Mar. 2014. Web.
	
  
	
  
Hood Milkman, 1950
From Dairy to Doorstep.
HistoricNewEngland.org, Web.
	
  

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Dairy Farm Exhibit

  • 1. The  Village  Cow:  Life  at  Home  in  Hanover  before  Big  Dairy  Productions     Researched  and  written  by  Emily  Hauser,   Exhibit  and  Collections  Intern,  Hanover  Historical  Society,  2014     Dairy  farming  in  America  has  a  long  history  that  dates  back  to  the  early   1600s  when  people  brought  cattle  overseas  from  Europe.  However,  it  wasn’t  until   the  1800s  that  farmers  began  to  breed  cattle  specifically  for  milk  production.  While   dairy  farming  started  out  as  small  operations  in  the  home,  it  slowly  grew  into  the   booming  milk  and  dairy  industry  that  we  know  today.  Around  the  turn  of  the   century  it  became  necessary  to  mass-­‐produce  milk  due  to  increased   industrialization  and  the  influx  of  people  moving  away  from  the  country  and  into   urban  settings2.                               Mehring Milking Machine An early milking machine in Maryland, 1908 USDA Bureau of Dairy Industry Records. Special Collections, National Agricultural Library
  • 2.                                                 "New Milking Machine." Popular Mechanics Aug. 1907: 868. Google Books. Web.  
  • 3. Although  the  mass  production  of  milk  began  in  the  early  1900s,  the  shift  from   small  dairy  farms  to  large  dairy  productions  took  many  years.  Some  of  our  very  own   residents  of  Hanover  grew  up  in  town  from  the  1930s  to  the  1950s.  They  recall   Hanover  at  this  time  to  be  quite  rural.  It  is  remembered  as  a  time  when  children   were  brought  up  on  raw  milk  from  the  neighbor’s  cattle  and  would  run  and  play  in   the  open  pastures  that  once  made  up  the  town  of  Hanover.  “It  was  the  happiest  time   of  our  lives,”  said  Hanover  resident  Beverly  Hayes  “We  never  wondered  what  to  do   or  where  to  go,  we  never  said  ‘I’m  bored.’”   Between  the  1930s  and  the  1950s,  the  village  of  North  Hanover  was  known   for  its  dairy  farms.  The  three  largest  farms  in  the  area  were  John  Brooks’  Farm,   Charles  Bray’s  Farm,  and  Ben  Ford’s  farm.  These  three  farms  were  very  close  to  one   another,  around  the  intersection  of  Webster  Street  and  Main  Street  in  North   Hanover.  While  North  Hanover  was  known  for  its  cow  farms,  South  Hanover  and   Hanover  Center  were  known  for  their  horse  farms.  Long-­‐time  North  Hanover   resident  Roger  Leslie  remembers  this  well.  As  a  child,  he  and  his  friends  would  get   into  fights  with  children  from  South  Hanover.  Not  your  typical  skirmish  between   neighborhood  kids,  the  boys  from  North  Hanover  would  throw  cow  flops  at  the  boys   from  South  Hanover,  while  the  South  Hanover  boys  peppered  the  North  Hanover   boys  with  horse  buns.        
  • 4.       A Map of North Hanover Hanover Historical Society
  • 5. Apart  from  engaging  in  neighborhood  fights,  Leslie  spent  much  of  his   childhood  around  Ben  Ford’s  farm.  Ford’s  farm  was  the  largest  of  the  farms  in  North   Hanover,  and  much  of  the  milk  produced  there  was  sent  up  to  Boston.  The  farm   housed  nearly  200  milking  cattle,  all  of  which  were  kept  in  the  pasture  near  Webster   Street.  When  it  was  time  for  milking,  all  of  the  cattle  would  gather  around  the  edge   of  the  fence.  “They  had  one  cow  with  a  leather  collar  and  the  bell  attached,”  said   Leslie  “One  cow  was  the  leader,  and  when  they  wanted  the  cows  to  cross  the  street   to  milk,  they  would  ring  the  bell  and  say  “Come  Boss!  Come  Boss!”                                   The Cows I woke up early in the morn, Before the sun proclaimed the dawn, And listening heard the well known call, That’s heard so oft from spring to fall, Come boss, come boss. And then I heard the tramp of feet. From field through lane they come to meet The one who ties them in each stall, And who had just sent out the call, Come boss, come boss. They found some grain was there to greet, And green feed too for them to eat. As they were milked the pails to fill, Quite oft that voice kept calling still, Come boss, come boss. When all the milk was taken, they Were sprayed to keep the flies away, Theyere started down the lane again And I can hear him calling then, Go on, go on. After the milking hour at night, They wander out to get a bite, And then lie down their cud to chew, Waiting the morning call anew, Come boss, come boss   “The Cows” Circa 1900 Poems of John F. Brooks Hanover Historical Society  
  • 6.                                                
  • 7.           To  care  for  the  cattle,  there  were  15  to  20  men  that  worked  on  Ford’s  farm.   Many  of  the  men  came  down  from  Boston  to  work.  Leslie  describes  the  men  as   “tough  guys”  who  seemed  to  enjoy  playing  with  Leslie  when  he  entered  the  barn   around  milking  time.  “They  would  take  the  cow’s  udder  and  squirt  it  right  in  my   face,”  he  recalls.                         Leslie  is  not  the  only  one  who  remembers  the  workers  at  Ford’s  farm.  Kenton   Greene  and  his  wife  Janet  Briggs  Greene  remember  a  man  named  “Jerry  Ben  Ford”   who  was  named  after  Ben  Ford  because  no  one  seemed  to  know  his  last  name.  The   Greenes  describe  him  as  a  tall  and  skinny  man  in  his  fifties,  who  was  completely   Cow Bell Circa 1900 Donated by Fred Phillips Treasurer of Lot Phillips & CO in the early 1900s Hanover Historical Society     Tom Ford with a worker and young Guernsey Ford’s Farm, Circa 1940 Charlie Gleason Scrapbooks Hanover Historical Society  
  • 8. harmless.    Jerry  Ben  Ford  would  run  the  till  cart  (or  manure  wagon)  up  and  down   Webster  Street.  A  9-­‐year-­‐old  Roger  Leslie  remembers  Webster  Street  covered  with   cow  flops  after  Jerry  Ben  Ford  had  driven  by  with  his  wagon.     Another  Hanover  resident,  Mary  Sides,  grew  up  in  North  Hanover  next  door   to  the  Bray’s  farm.  As  a  young  girl,  she  remembers  running  across  the  street  to  the   farm  to  bring  milk  home  for  her  family.  “Everyone  knew  everyone!”  She  said,  “You   didn’t  misbehave!  Your  father  would  know  before  you  got  home!”  Sides  recalls  that   the  farm  workers  were  very  patient  with  the  children,  even  when  they  would  hang   onto  the  back  of  the  hay  wagon  to  get  a  ride  with  their  roller  skates.                               Although  North  Hanover  was  littered  with  dairy  farms,  everyone  in  the  area   worked  together  to  support  one  another.  “[The  farms]  weren’t  competitors  really,     Bray  Farm  Ad   Hanover  Directories   Early  1900s   Hanover  Historical  Society  
  • 9. just  farmers  trying  to  make  a  living”  said  Sides.  Mary  Sides  spent  much  of  her   childhood  playing  in  the  cow  barn.  She  remembers  that  the  cattle  on  Bray’s  farm   were  kept  on  the  street  level  of  the  barn  and  the  hay  was  kept  in  the  upper  level,   while  Brooks’  barn  had  three  levels.  The  cows  were  kept  in  the  lower  level,  barrels   of  grain  were  kept  in  the  middle  level,  and  the  hay  was  kept  at  the  top  level.  Barns   such  as  these  became  a  second  home  to  many  children  all  over  Hanover.                             Peter  Gluckler  moved  to  Hanover  when  he  was  2-­‐years  old  after  his   grandfather  purchased  property  on  Broadway.  Growing  up,  Gluckler  was  friends   with  a  young  boy  named  Lee  Marden,  whose  father  had  purchased  Sylvester  Farm   along  Washington  Street  in  1949.  Gluckler,  like  many  children  in  Hanover  at  the   time,  had  his  fair  share  of  memorable  experiences  in  the  cow  barn.  Upon  jumping  off     Twin  steers  “Pete”  and  “Repete”     Sylvester  Farm,  Circa  1946   Charlie  Gleason  Scrapbooks   Hanover  Historical  Society    
  • 10. of  a  tractor  parked  in  the  barn,  he  fell  through  the  trap  door  in  the  floor  to  the   manure  pit,  where  he  landed  safely  in  several  feet  of  manure.  After  roaring  with   laughter,  Lee  Marden  and  company  were  able  to  pull  Gluckler  out  of  the  pit  with  a   rope  they  had  attached  to  the  tractor.  Looking  back  on  the  incident,  Gluckler  is   relieved  that  he  was  not  hurt.     In  the  early  1940s,  when  many  young  Hanover  residents  spent  time  playing   in  the  cow  barn,  Lorine  Bergeron  was  working  hard  on  Elmwood  Farm.  Mr.  and  Mrs.   George  W.  Mitton  owned  Elmwood  Farm  at  this  time,  land  previously  owned  by   Michael  Sylvester.  The  farm  was  located  where  Cardinal  Cushing  School  is  located   today.                           Bergeron  worked  along  side  four  other  employees,  Herbert  Casey,  Caroline   Lea,  and  the  Foreman,  Ed  Sykes.  He  spent  his  time  at  work  mowing  the  hay  fields,     Elmwood  Farm  Ad   Hanover  Directories   Circa  1940   Hanover  Historical  Society  
  • 11. cleaning  the  barns,  milking  the  cows,  and  delivering  the  milk.  Bergeron  milked  50   Guernsey  cows  twice  a  day,  and  sold  the  milk  all  across  the  town  of  Hanover.                             Pasteurization  became  routine  in  the  United  States  in  the  1920s,  and  was   widespread  by  the  1950s3.  Many  Hanover  residents  growing  up  at  this  time   remember  drinking  raw  milk  at  home,  and  Bergeron  recalls  that  Elmwood  Farm   sold  pasteurized  milk,  but  also  had  raw  milk  available  for  purchase.     With  the  enactment  of  the  Meat  Inspection  Act  of  1890,  the  US  Department  of   Agriculture  also  began  inspection  of  dairy  industries  to  ensure  sanitation  and   hygiene.  Inspection  officials  observed  the  health  of  the  herd,  the  cleanliness  of  the   cattle  and  employees,  as  well  as  the  cleanliness  of  the  milking  tools  and  the  handling   of  the  milk2.     Cows in pasture on Mitton (Elmwood) Farm Circa 1946 Charlie Gleason Scrapbooks Hanover Historical Society  
  • 12. In  the  beginning  of  the  20th  Century,  Dr.  Charles  E.  North  was  the  first  to   encourage  dairy  farms  to  pasteurize  their  milk.  North  was  a  both  an  agricultural   scientist  and  a  public  health  officer.  He  developed  a  6-­‐step  system  that  he  believed   any  dairy  farm  could  implement  to  ensure  sanitation:     1) Healthy  cows   2) Careful  grooming  of  cows   3) Clean  hands  and  clothing   4) Clean,  dust-­‐free  barns   5) Thoroughly  washed  and  sterilized  milking  utensils   6) Prompt  and  efficient  cooling  of  milk2     On  Elmwood  farm,  Bergeron  would  use  milking  machines  to  milk  the  cattle.   From  there,  the  raw  milk  was  poured  into  large  20  and  40-­‐quart  cans  where  it   would  remain  until  it  was  poured  into  the  pasteurization  machine.  Having  worked   with  Mrs.  Caroline  Lea  to  pasteurize  and  bottle  milk,  Bergeron  recalls  that  “The   place  was  spotless,  [and]  Mrs.  Lea  was  a  peach  of  a  lady.”     The  pasteurization  machine  was  operated  by  hot  water  and  steam,  and   would  automatically  record  the  temperatures  of  the  machine  at  different  times   during  the  day.  “You  had  to  watch  the  chart  and  watch  the  temperatures  or  you   could  ruin  it  and  burn  it”  said  Bergeron.  At  the  end  of  the  pasteurization  machine   was  a  bottling  machine,  which  would  automatically  turn  as  the  bottles  filled  with   milk.  After  the  bottles  were  filled  to  the  top,  the  machine  would  secure  a  cardboard   cap  on  the  bottle.  When  capping  was  finished,  they  were  placed  into  milk  crates  for   delivery.    
  • 13. Bergeron  and  other  workers  on  Elmwood  farm  delivered  milk  to  different   sections  of  Hanover  each  day  of  the  week.  After  loading  the  farm’s  1941  green  Ford   pick-­‐up  truck  with  milk,  the  workers  would  head  out  on  their  milk  route.    “We   would  drive  down  the  street,  and  one  guy  would  deliver  to  one  side,  and  the  other   guy  would  deliver  to  the  other  side”  said  Bergeron,  “In  a  very  short  time  you  knew   where  the  next  house  was,  who  your  were  delivering  to,  and  how  much  they  took.”                                      
  • 14.                     Elmwood  farm  not  only  sold  milk,  but  light  and  heavy  cream  as  well.  Quart-­‐ sized  bottles  were  reserved  for  milk,  while  pint-­‐sized  bottles  contained  light  cream   and  half-­‐pint  bottles  contained  heavy  cream.  On  Elmwood  farm,  bottles  that  were   used  for  delivery  were  orange.  Bottles  that  could  be  purchased  at  the  local  market   were  red,  and  often  had  a  red  “STORE”  label  around  the  neck.                     Elmwood Farm Milk Bottles Circa 1940 Courtesy of Mark Lancaster
  • 15.   Beverly  Hayes  remembers  the  milk  delivery  well.  “In  the  winter  the  milk   would  freeze,  and  the  cream  would  come  to  the  top  and  push  the  stopper  right  off.   And  we  would  take  the  cream  right  off  the  top  and  put  it  on  our  cereal”  said  Hayes.   Her  family  got  their  milk  from  Brook’s  farm  because  her  father  worked  for  Brooks.   Having  grown  up  on  raw  milk,  Hayes  said  that  the  milk  no  longer  separated  in  the   bottle  after  pasteurization  was  implemented.                 Elmwood Farm 1 Pint and ½ Pint Bottles, Bray Farm (Red Clover Farm) 1 Quart Bottle 1940-1945 Hanover Historical Society  
  • 16.                       As  pasteurization  became  more  popular,  so  did  large  dairy  farms.  Around  the   1950s,  small  dairy  farms  began  going  bankrupt.  For  a  long  time  dairy  farming  had   been  a  family  business.  However,  younger  generations  were  no  longer  interested  in   farming.  “Nobody  wanted  to  farm  anymore,”  said  Lorine  Bergeron  “The  big  dairies   put  the  small  guys  out  of  business”.  Small  dairy  farms  began  selling  their  land,  and   housing  developments  began  to  appear  where  pastures  once  were.  Peter  Gluckler   remembers  this  time  well:  “Milk  regulations  were  stiffening,  and  even  with  the   federal  subsidies,  the  farmer  could  make  much  more  money  by  selling  off  land  one   lot  at  a  time  or  wholesale  development.  Post-­‐war  demand  for  housing  and  the   outpouring  of  young  families  from  Boston…  nailed  the  coffin  shut.”           Milk Bottle Lid Circa 1935 Brooks Farm  
  • 17.                         As  the  small  dairies  died  out,  people  purchased  milk  from  big  name  suppliers   such  as  H.P.  Hood.  The  small  rural  town  of  Hanover  had  slowly  grown  larger  right   under  everyone’s  noses.  Said  Peter  Gluckler,  “With  residential  development  came   commercial  development,  came  increased  need  for  infrastructure  like  better  roads   and  schools,  came  the  end  of  rural  life  in  Hanover.”       References     1. “Company Overview." Hood. HP Hood LCC, 2014. Web. 2. "Early Developments in the American Dairy Industry." (2014): Special Collections, National Agriculture Library. United States Department of Agriculture, Web. 3. "Raw Milk Questions and Answers." Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. USA.gov, 7 Mar. 2014. Web.     Hood Milkman, 1950 From Dairy to Doorstep. HistoricNewEngland.org, Web.