Dairying Returns Full Circle To Chester Dairy Farm ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff COCHRANVILLE (Chester Co.) To some dairy families, there’s an adage that sticks: life is not a ladder, it’s a circle. Charles Moore remembers when, in the ’6os, milk went from being bottled by small processors for local home delivery to huge processors with delivery to giant supermarkets. Then, things changed. Now, because consumers want more per sonalized services they can trust, the Cochranville dairy farmer sees the lifecycle of the public milk supply swinging back to indepen dent producers, and maybe even the return of the glass bottle with a paper cap, delivered right to the door, in some areas of the country. Moore held up one of those glass bottles, embossed on the face of the glass in green with the com pany logo, specially produced for the 75th anniversary of the place • he sells his milk: Hy-Point Dairy, near Wilmington, Del. At one time, the Moore family managed a dairy farm near Ches ter, Delaware County. Up until 1954, the Lemuel L. Moore family would take the cattle out to the meadows surrounding the 98-acre farm. But the U.S. Army stepped in in 19SS and negotiated a deal which transferred the family nd thr Penny cares for her own herd, milking about 20 and tak ing care of 18 young stock. She also works part-time for a local Implement dealer. Here she tends to Sonny, son of Magnum, born late April, a ’/«Jersey and V• Holstein. which Penny shows here, Is a I'year-old mixed, % Holstein and “Bailey,” ’/« Llneback. The Moore family, who operate Rol-Pen-Lyn farm pie- Moore, right, manages registered and grade Holstein, while fix created using first names of their son and two daught- his daughter Penny, 28, left, maintains a mixed breed, Con ors), farm a total of 180 tillable acres, including 38 at the listing of Jerseys, Llnebacks, and Holstelns. In center Is home farm, where they raise two separate herds. Charles Charles’ wife, Anna Grace. Photo by Andy Andrews A ' Why were they asked to leave? “The farm was converted to a radar-guided missle sight,” said Moore as he scattered wheat straw about in the stall bam. A neighboring farm, about a mile away from the original Dela ware County residence, was used for the actual rockets. The site was completed in 1956. But it was nev er used. Why? The military installation “was obsolete right after they had it built,” Moore said, shrugging. What’s left now is single homes, an array of condominiums, an elementary school, and fast-food restaurants. “It doesn’t look anything at all like it was long ago," said Moore. Back in the 19505, the Moores were selling raw milk from the Chester location. In 1985, believ ing perhaps that life was indeed a circle, they saw a potential market, erected a farm sign, and tried to sell to Cochranville in 1960. (Turn to Paso A 25) * ***** her classic tractor collection.'Here she looks at a'Ford Gol- jrmwasconv'. -gu. Jssle sight,” said Moore as he scattered wheat straw about In the stall barn. V * V f ' 9 ** • * 'k~,‘