Embedded Document /system/files/2023-07/KHAL_PT_TechnologyMechanizationAndTheLifeAndDeathOfAKansasCommonPasture_McCoy.pdf Download this PDF Abstract Many small towns in Kansas had a shared dairy commons. The author of this study connects the commons in Westmoreland, Rock Creek Valley, with the strong German and Sudetenland settler culture; he also traces the life of the commons and its eventual decline to milk trucks able to deliver bottled milk by the 1930s. By World War II, the commons was in its final days. The writer locates the original site and provides photographs. Authors McCoy, Travis J. Date Mar 01, 2010 Tags Dairy Kansas History and Life Pottawatomie County Westmoreland World War II Publisher Kansas State University, The Chapman Center for Rural Studies Citation Travis J. McCoy, “Technology, Mechanization, and the Life and Death of a Kansas Common Pasture: The Story of the Westmoreland Common Pasture, Westmoreland, Pottawatomie County, Kansas, 1860-1940,” Lost Kansas Communities, https://lostkansas.ccrsdigitalprojects.com/westmoreland-common-pasture-pottawatomie-county. Rights This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). NOTE: Rights status of accompanying images may differ from text.