Results tagged “Rutters” from York Town Square

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This 1998 photo from the York Daily Record/Sunday News files shows Albert Garber's dairy farm, lower left, next to Eddie Steider's farm, in West Manchester Township. At right, homes and businesses occupy what were once cornfields. That's Taxville Road cutting through both areas. York/Adams' dairy industries have changed greatly over the years. But now one part of them is changing back - home milk deliveries. Background posts: Baltimore screamed for York County ice cream and Pinch Gut or Arbor or Adamsville is in Red Lion or Dallastown or, uh, actually York Township and Perrydale's bovine: 'She's a wonderful, laid-back cow'.

York County's last milkman may have made his final delivery in 1994. That is believed to have been John Schwartz, who retired from Rutter's Dairy.

Now comes a Hanover Evening Sun (4/15/09) story that tells of the East Berlin-based Apple Valley Creamery's venture into delivering to homes in parts of Adams, York and Cumberland counties.

Apple Valley's owners looked at the home delivery business from a historical perspective.

According to the Evening Sun:

From Meadowbrook Mansion to York County farmhouse

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The Meadowbrook Mansion is pictured after renovations in the 1980s. Christmas Tree Hill now operates out of the former home of cigarmaker Edwin Myers and, later, the family of Clair Long. Background posts: From top dog and hot dogs to dogfight and dog days in York County, Pa., Before Geno's made news in Philly, Gino's headlined in York and Property rights foundational factor in Lauxmont dispute.

Clair Long remembers when his parents, Alva R. and Mary Long, lived in Springettsbury Township's Meadowbrook Mansion.

And he and his wife Jorene resided in another house on the farm. Borders Books stands today in the vicinity of Long's former living room.

He shared memories of his former 180-acre farm after reading about the Meadowbrook and its former grounds in the news. The saga of Mother Goose and her goslings made it to the front page. It was a story of a Canada goose trying to subsist among sprawl... .

Southeastern York County made for Sunday drive

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After you've visited Round Hill Presbyterian Church in Cross Roads, consider other points of interest in the Chanceford Township-area of southeastern part of York County in your Sunday afternoon drive. (See previous post: "Get around to seeing ornate Round Hill church.")

-- Hershaull Park, near Round Hill church, sports a ball field that abuts a cornfield. Put in bleachers, and it's a small-scale version of that famous field from "Field of Dreams. ... "

Rutter's store offers snapshot of change in York County

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A provocative mark of change in York County surrounds the Rutter's convenience store on Lightner Road in Manchester Township.

That Rutter's spread is on company land, originally settled by Jacob Rutter and Nathaniel Lightner in 1747.

On the hill behind the store, several sprawling homes have served as the residences of family members... .

Milkman's relic humming around York County today

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Paul Kuehnel of the York Daily Record/Sunday News has produced a video showing an operational old-time gas/electric Rutter's Daily milk truck.

That truck, seen nowadays at the York Fair, aided in milk delivery years ago. (See Paul's video below.)

More recently, the last-known milkman to make deliveries in the York area was a Rutter's route man, John Schwartz.

That came in 1994, after Schwartz had been making deliveries for 45 years.

Rutter's opened its first convenience stores in York in 1968, the beginning of the end for home deliveries... .

Of dinosaurs and big blue mailboxes

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"Buggies. Milkmen. Now mailboxes?"

The head on a recent York Daily Record/Sunday News' story gave a good summary about the U.S Postal Service's survey of which big blue mailboxes around York to eliminate.

E-mail and use of the Web to pay bills has cut into snail mail traffic.

Some might wonder when the last the last bottle of milk was eliminated in the York area.

The answer is 1994, perhaps.

The following from "Never to be Forgotten" tells the story:


Grazr



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