Standard Dairy
Mrs. McKinnon couldn’t bear the thought of losing her home. Her son made sure that it was moved to higher ground when they were forced off of their farm.
Delia Morgan married Hector McKinnon in 1906, and in 1916 they purchased five acres of land in Revelstoke, near the Columbia River. Delia insisted that the farmhouse have running water and electricity.
The McKinnons acquired more land and started Standard Dairy.
Hector McKinnon also had business interests in Revelstoke and served as Mayor for several terms. He died in a tragic fire in the barn on an adjoining farm in 1929, while still in office as Mayor. Delia and their children continued to run the farm, expanding it until it reached 100 acres along the Columbia River up to the Illecillewaet River. Their dairy herd was up to 224 Holsteins at its peak.
Standard Dairy was purchased by BC Hydro.
The corporation never publicly discussed payments but BC Hydro’s Columbia News Letter of June 7, 1966, refuted a story in the Vancouver Sun that BC Hydro offered James McKinnon $100,000 for his dairy business and later raised the offer to $227,000. The newsletter did not give the purchase price but made it clear that it was nowhere near $100,000.
The McKinnons had other land in Revelstoke and moved their original farmhouse and one of the barns to their new property.
This was not an easy feat. The buildings had to cross the Illecillewaet River, and the large moving truck drove each building right through the river, assisted by a bulldozer at the front.
Delia McKinnon’s beloved home still stands on Nichol Road, in the Arrow Heights subdivision of Revelstoke.