Raw Milk in Easley, South Carolina
4 raw milk sources found in Easley, South Carolina, the United States
Free, no paywalls, no private equity.
Keep this project going and growing.
Select a tip amount
Please enter a valid email address to generate a secure payment form.
✓ You're supporting a free community resource. This is a tip/donation, not a purchase of milk or products.
Trusted by farms, local businesses, and startups nationwide.
Raw Milk Sources in Easley
Each listing below shows a raw milk source in Easley. Click any listing to view products, pickup methods, and contact information.
Showing 4 sources
-
Winslett's Produce Market
401 Powdersville Road
Easley, SC
USLots of options from the farm, vegetable, meat, raw milk and ‘near raw milk’ in addition to other dairy and eggs, produce and plants.View Winslett's Produce Market's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Easley, SC.
Winslett's Produce Market -
Farmacy
508 South B Street
Easley, SC
USView Farmacy's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Easley, SC.
Farmacy -
Earthworks Unlimited
1830 Dacusville Hwy
Easley, SC
USView Earthworks Unlimited's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Easley, SC.
Earthworks Unlimited -
Hive and Garden Country Store
1926 Anderson Hwy
Easley, SC
USView Hive and Garden Country Store's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Easley, SC.
Hive and Garden Country Store
Find raw milk by species
Find other raw milk products
Other ways to find raw milk
Contribute
Your support covers hosting, development, and growth. Help keep raw milk accessible.
-
Submit a new listing +Add a farm to the database
-
SponsorshipsOngoing support with visibility
-
Buy me a milk 🥛Leave a one-time tip
Swipe right on some shirts
Latest Blog Posts
-
“Raw Milk Can Kill You”: The 1945 Coronet Article That Shaped American Pasteurization Policy
Harold J. Harris’s 1945 Coronet article “Raw Milk Can Kill You” shaped American pasteurization law on a fictional epidemic and survey data the author knew was misleading.
-
Pure Milk Is Better Than Purified Milk: The Milk Question, 1912
Milton J. Rosenau’s 1912 public health synthesis covered milk composition, disease transmission, certified milk, pasteurization standards, and infant mortality across 309 pages and six editions.
-
Franz von Soxhlet: Agricultural Chemist and Inventor of Milk Pasteurization
Before pasteurization reached milk, it was applied to wine and beer. The chemist who first proposed heat-treating milk was Franz von Soxhlet, in Munich in 1886.
-
Abraham Jacobi, Father of American Pediatrics, and the Milk Question
Imprisoned in Prussia for his role in the 1848 revolution, Abraham Jacobi arrived in New York in 1853 and spent the next six decades building the institutional foundations of American pediatrics and shaping the debate over how urban children should be fed.
-
Nathan Straus and the Pasteurized Milk Depots, 1893–1920
Bavarian-born merchant and Macy’s co-owner Nathan Straus built a privately funded network of 297 pasteurized milk depots across 36 American cities between 1893 and 1920, accumulating the mortality data that drove mandatory pasteurization legislation across the United States.
-
The Farm Behind the World’s First Certified Milk, 1893–1923
Fairfield Dairy produced the world’s first certified milk in 1894, became the movement’s showcase, then its most public failure.