Originally published February 26, 2010 at 10:38 PM | Page modified February 26, 2010 at 10:47 PM
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Smith Brothers dairy celebrating 90th anniversary in tight industry
Travis Eaton navigates his father's old truck down a dirt road, spotted with muddy potholes on a recent early morning. With precision, he jumps...
Seattle Times staff photographer
ERIKA SCHULTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Eaton is a fourth-generation Smith Brothers Farms family member and milkman. This year, the company will be in its 90th year of business.
ERIKA SCHULTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES
At the Helpline House, a Bainbridge Island food bank and social-service provider, Travis Eaton stocks milk, which some Smith Brothers customers choose to pay for as a community service.
Travis Eaton navigates his father's old truck down a dirt road, spotted with muddy potholes on a recent early morning.
With precision, he jumps in and out of the truck to stash each family's milk, eggs and butter in an insulated box or garage refrigerator.
Each week, Eaton winds through Bainbridge Island's forested roads, delivering to about 550 households.
Later this year, Eaton, his family and the 60 employees at Smith Brothers Farms will celebrate 90 years of providing home dairy service to the Puget Sound region. They pasteurize, package and distribute a variety of products to more than 40,000 homes from Olympia to Mount Vernon.
Smith Brothers is one of only a handful of home-delivery dairies still serving a metropolitan area in the United States, said Brian Soudant, sales and marketing manager at Smith Brothers.
"In the 1950s, there were over 30 companies doing home delivery throughout the Puget Sound," Soudant said. "When refrigeration became commonplace in the American home, it decreased the demand for daily milk delivery. That, coupled with the advent of the modern-day supermarket, put a lot of stress on the dairy home-delivery service."
Therese Coad, a Bainbridge Island resident, grew up with a milkman and carries on the tradition.
"I'm very, very busy, and I always feel like I'm going a million miles an hour," Coad said. "The milkman, when I see him, it slows me down a little bit. It's something from the past that has been able to continue in this incredible busy world that we live in."
Eaton, a University of Washington graduate and fourth-generation Smith Brothers Farms family member, said he prefers the open road to a traditional 9-to-5 profession.
"I've had a handful of office jobs," he said. "I prefer working outdoors, especially in the summer."
Eaton also likes the exercise, working on his own schedule and being admired by young children. And — when Eaton is in a serious bind — he can call his father out of retirement to help with his route.
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