About this episode
Henry Stevens hadn't seen a cow in years. Illness had taken his sight in middle life. But every morning, he walked through his barn at Brookside Farm, running weathered fingers along toplines and udders, making breeding decisions that confounded rivals with perfect vision. His sons learned to trust their blind father's hands more than their own eyes. In 1912, a cow from his program became the first animal of any breed to produce 1,000 pounds of butterfat in a year. The blind man had seen further than anyone.This is the story of four visionaries who, in just 30 years, transformed an obscure Dutch dairy cow into the dominant force in global milk production. A Boston merchant who ordered replacement cattle the very day the government destroyed his herd. A reformer's grandson who walked his first Holsteins through October snow. Nurserymen who wanted manure for their orchards and accidentally changed an industry. And a blind farmer whose $6,000 gamble now echoes through approximately 7% of every Holstein on the planet.If you milk black-and-white cows, you milk their legacy. And this story will change how you think about the genetics in your barn.The Story You'll HearThe rum ship that docked in Boston Harbor in 1852—and the cow that changed everythingThe devastating cattle plague that destroyed one man's dream, and what he did the very same dayTwo buggies arriving at the same farmyard on the same afternoon—the founding moment of two dynastiesWhy fruit growers became the most important Holstein breeders in AmericaThe Madison Square Garden showdown where the Jersey trophy was pre-engraved—and what happened when the results came inThe bitter feud that tore a community apart but made the breed famousA blind man's hands finding what sighted eyes missedThe mansion fire that ended an era—and the legacy that survivedEvery mating decision you make builds on foundations these men laid 150 years ago. When you pull genomic proofs, you're tracing predictive power back to variation they established. When you check inbreeding coefficients pushing past 8-9%, you're navigating a genetic bottleneck that started in their barns.Subscribe to The Bullvine Podcast wherever you listen, and never miss a story that matters to your operation.Read the full feature article at https://www.thebullvine.com/breeder-profiles/the-importers-how-4-visionaries-in-30-years-built-the-foundation-of-modern-holstein-genetics/, including historical production records, traceable bloodlines to modern champions, and actionable insights for your 2026 breeding program.Have a story of your own? A mentor who changed everything, a decision