Yesterday afternoon Marybeth and I went to walk around the old Maple Glen Dairy Farm. I don't know much about this place. I've found mentions of it in old newspapers from the 1940's and 1950's. It's definitely different from researching mines and coke plants. I found that it was a working farm up into the 1960's and was operated by the Glick Brothers. They did home deliveries of milk. According to the Images Of America- Mount Pleasant Borough (2014, Friends Of The Mount Pleasant Public Library) book, the Glick Brothers owned a meatpacking plant on Rt. 31 west of town and their three farms bordering the town provided doorstep delivery of milk from the 1930's through the 1960's.
I remember going to a dairy farm with my grandfather when I was a kid. It was somewhere in Mt. Pleasant. The barn here reminded me of it, but I would think the layout is similar to most dairy farms.
Some of the milk caps I collected. |
A Maple Glen milk bottle I found on Etsy. |
Walking back to the farm. |
Marybeth. One of my favorite people on the planet. |
This twin silo is what caught my attention before anything else. I've never seen one like it. |
This house is amazing. |
One of the farm buildings. |
Inside of this building. |
A brick grill outside. |
The crooked house. |
Shelves inside the crooked house. We laughed because this was the first time we could explore an old house without even stepping inside. |
Crooked house. Interior from the exterior. |
Basement of the crooked house. |
Other side of the crooked house. |
One of the barns. |
Inside the barn. |
Collapsed wall. |
Corn crib! |
Another barn. |
Vent falling victim to time and gravity. |
A collapsed farm building. |
Inside of the other barn. |
Old boiler in one of the buildings. A cat lived in this building and wasn't a big fan of us being there. |
Inside the cat's house. |
Bottom of the silo's. |
Looking up one of the silos. |
It sort of reminds me of the countryside around Gettysburg.
ReplyDeleteI worked there as a teenager in the 70's
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather was farm manager in the 1950s ...they lived in a farmhouse there when I was born in 1955.
ReplyDelete