Southpoint Sun - February 23, 2022

Page 9

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Southpoint Sun - 9

Remembering Kingsville’s Hillside Dairy

By Stephen Wuerch Taken from notes after meeting Herbie and Ernie MacPherson in 1994. After receiving a Hillside Dairy Kingsville milk bottle in a trade with another collector over 30 years ago, I was both fascinated and curious because I had never heard of such a dairy. In fact, at the time, no other collectors, dealers or antique shop owners had ever heard of Hillside Dairy from Kingsville. However, after much research and persistence, I received a phone call from Norman and Margerite Fuller, who told me the dairy was located west of Kingsville, just off the highway at Wigle Creek. Soon after, I was sitting down at the kitchen table at the home of Herbie McPherson — along with his younger brother Ernie — to talk about the dairy.

The McPherson family moved to the area in 1924 after purchasing the farm from Frank Hall, who operated Halls Dairy/Hillside Dairy from 19201923. Frank Hall left the dairy business during hard times and opened up a photography shop on Pearl Street in Kingsville. After introducing myself to the MacPherson brothers, I showed Ernie and Herbie the Hillside Dairy milk bottle that I had received. It didn’t take long for a smile to appear on Herbie’s face as he immediately identified the bottle as being from the family

farm. Herbie and Ernie then proceeded to tell me that the dairy had about 50 of these bottles, and then took me down to the basement to where the dairy operation was located. As a young lad, Herbie recalls going into the basement in the late ’40s and throwing away all the advertising, flyers, price lists, log books and every piece of dairy paraphernalia he could find, and it was taken to the dump. The Hillside milk bottles were then smashed against the wall with the shards thrown into a wooden bin and

tossed over into the Wigle Creek ravine. “There was no use for these bottles anymore,” Herbie explained. “So we just broke them and dumped them.” Herbie then pointed out where the milk tank was located, the bottle racks, milk can storage area, and talked about how the bottles were loaded onto the horse and wagon for the day’s delivery through the big basement door. Both Herbie and Ernie remembered the layout of the farm as they reflected on their childhood years growing up and playing in the buildings.

There was the ‘ice barn’ for storing ice, the barns that housed the livestock, the maintenance shed and the ‘boothouse’ where empty bottles and cans were stored. Both Herbie and Ernie also remember the wooden sign with the words ‘Hillside Dairy’ hanging on the side of the barn, which was removed a few years later after the farm purchase. So the next time you’re driving west of Kingsville on the highway, look to the right just past Wigle Creek and in your mind picture one of Kingsville’s first registered dairies — one that existed back in

the early 1920s – Halls/ Hillside Dairy. And who knows? Perhaps there are still a few dairy related treasures still lying in the Wigle Creek ravine somewhere. If there is any other historical information, photos or contacts regarding Frank Halls Dairy/Hillside Dairy Kingsville that can be noted for permanent record, please email sewuerch@hotmail.com. For more information on Windsor/ Essex County dairies, please visit Ontario Dairy Collectables and History Facebook page.

Area vaccination sites going through changes REGIONAL — As the province prepares to further ease public health restrictions, residents are reminded that it is not too late to get vaccinated against COVID-19 at a mass vaccination clinic before the following transitions occur in the coming weeks: • Hôtel-Dieu Grace Healthcare’s Mass Vaccination Site in the Dr. Y Emara Centre for Healthy Aging and Mobility, located at 1453 Prince Road, will be open 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. until Thursday, February 24, the last day of operation. • Grovedale Arts and Cultural Centre Mass Vaccination Site, located at 103 Park Street in Kingsville, will continue to be open for appointment and walkins on Tuesdays from 11:30 a.m. to 6:15 p.m. and Wednesdays to Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. until Saturday, March 5, the last day of operation. • Devonshire Mall’s Mass Vaccination Site at 3050 Howard Ave (former Sears location at the north end of the mall) continues to be open Monday through Sunday from 8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. until Friday, March 4. This clinic will then temporarily transition to include a catchup Vaccination Clinic for other types of vaccinations under the Immunization of

School Pupils Act (ISPA), as well as continue to offer walk-in appointments for COVID-19 first, second and third vaccinations. Appointment bookings at the Devonshire Mall site will be for ISPA based vaccinations only. The clinic will be closed March 5, 6 and 7, and will open with the new hours of operation on March 8 which are Tuesdays from 11:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., and Wednesdays to Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Individuals between the age of 12 to 17 are now able to receive their third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in Ontario. To be eligible for a third dose, individuals in this age group must have received their second dose at least 168 days (six months) ago. Any eligible resident can get their third dose by appointment or walk-in at the mass immunization clinics in Windsor and Essex County. Additionally, appointments can be made at participating pharmacies and healthcare providers, and walk-ins are accepted at all pop-up vaccination clinics throughout Windsor and Essex County.

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