Why did early attempts to transport milk to London by rail meet with 'much criticism'?

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Accepted answer

The Agrarian History of England and Wales E. J. T. Collins, Joan Thirsk Cambridge University Press, 2000 page 993:

Retailers complained that railway milk was not as fresh as town milk, and a difference in price reflected this fact.

The European Cities and Technology Reader: Industrial to Post-industrial City, David C. Goodman, Psychology Press, 1999, page 81:

'railway milk' began its journey frequently mixed with water, uncooled and contaminated with bacteria

The Growth of London's Railway Milk Trade, c. 1845–1914, Peter J Atkins, Durham University

One might have thought that a potentially promising new form of transport such as the railway would have been exploited with enthusiasm and alacrity by traders in London as a means of importing milk from areas better suited to its production than the cramped and costly urban cowsheds. In fact, the volume of β€˜railway milk’ consumed in the capital grew only slowly for the first 20 or 30 years of its potential availability, and one aim of this paper is to explain the nature of the trade in these early decades. ... A key factor throughout the period was the highly perishable nature of the milk itself. This was the main reason why milk had been produced in and around the city since time immemorial, and it also accounted in large part for the nature of subsequent changes in supply. In hot weather milk was often sour and therefore unsaleable within a few hours of leaving the cowshed, and this remained a restriction on the location of its production until a way could be found either to reduce the deleterious effect of heat and therefore inhibit the souring process, or to provide a very rapid and suitable means of transport to the place of consumption.

Upvote:5

The reference to "self-churning" seems to point pretty clearly at a quality issue with the delivered milk. "Churning" means making butter from cream by agitation (try taking a hand mixer with whisks to a bowl of cream and watch what happens after a couple of minutes). Milk these days probably was not h*m*genized (treated so cream does not separate out), so the separated out cream might indeed have been churned into butter (thinning the milk in the process) when transported in the wrong kind of container and subject to vibration. Now why nobody loaded milk in one place and delivered butter to another that way remains a mystery :)

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