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William D. Hoard was born on October 10, 1836, in Munnsville, New York, to William Bradford Hoard and Sarah Katherine White Hoard.He was the eldest of four children. [1]: 132 His father was a blacksmith and itinerant Methodist minister who preached to the Oneida people.
By the mid-1920s, the Dairyman had an international audience, with readers in Japan, Australia, and England. [9]: 109–110 By 1985, circulation had grown to 180,000 in 104 countries. That year, 91% of milk producers in the United States received the Dairyman. [7] As of 2021, circulation of the magazine had declined to 47,650. [2]
Downloadable Magazines - the magazines can be download in PDF format and can view it online every where . most of them are free magazines. Pages in category "Downloadable magazines" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
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The Hoard's Dairyman Farm, just north of Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, was purchased in 1899 by W. D. Hoard, a former governor of Wisconsin. Hoard used the farm as a laboratory for testing ideas for his magazine Hoard's Dairyman, like the use of alfalfa for feeding dairy cattle. [2] This farm was begun in the mid-1800s by Asa Snell.
In 1851, Fussell sold dairy products from farms in York County, Pennsylvania, via milk routes in Baltimore. Fussell also sold cream to customers, but found the demand to be unpredictable. In the winter of 1851–52, Fussell started to use the excess cream to manufacture ice cream in Seven Valleys, Pennsylvania, and ship it via train to ...
Pages in category "Local interest magazines published in Pennsylvania" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
W.T. Rawleigh was born on the family farm, near Mineral Point, Wisconsin, on December 3, 1870. [3] As the oldest of a family of three boys and four girls born to Charles David and Sarah Malinda Rawleigh, it was necessary for Rawleigh to take on adult responsibilities at a young age in order to help provide income beyond the daily chores that a life in agriculture required.