About this episode
Ginger Rogers poured her Oscar money into 32 Golden Guernseys on a thousand acres of Oregon riverfront — then lost them all to a world war. In 1941, while still the highest-paid actress in Hollywood, Rogers and her mother Lela bought a ranch on the Rogue River, built a Jamesway milking parlor from scratch, joined the American Guernsey Cattle Club, and began shipping 150 gallons of rich golden milk a day to soldiers at nearby Camp White. The wartime labor crisis killed the dairy within two years — but the breed she chose, and the bet she placed on premium components and A2 genetics, turned out to be eight decades ahead of its time.Key Moments:How a tap-dancing Academy Award winner ended up with electric milkers and a 12-cow Guernsey parlor in southern OregonThe skeptic who joked her livestock would "probably consist of nothing but bees" — and how Rogers answered himWhy she chose Golden Guernseys over Holsteins in 1941, and what that choice looks like in hindsightThe Camp White contract: 150 gallons a day, bacteria counts of 900 to 1,200 on raw milk, and a wartime market that vanished as fast as it appearedThe moment the labor shortage forced her to sell the herd — and the five decades she held the land anywayHow today's A2 Guernsey micro-dairies are finishing what Rogers started, from Promise Valley Farm in Canada to Pleasant Meadow Creamery in IdahoThe Guernsey breed Rogers chose in 1941 now sits at the center of a global A2 milk market projected to reach nearly $8 billion by 2034. Over 80% of tested American Guernseys carry the A2A2 genotype, and every Guernsey sire in AI service tests 100% A2A2. The butterfat, the protein, the golden color she was bottling for soldiers — those are the exact traits driving a new generation of small-herd, direct-to-consumer dairies that sell at three times conventional prices.The full written profile — with rare LIFE Magazine photos, the 1943 Jamesway ad, and an original Rogers' Rogue River Ranch milk bottle — is live now at https://www.thebullvine.com/breeder-profiles/ginger-rogers-the-oscar-winner-who-bet-it-all-on-golden-guernseys/. Search "Ginger Rogers" to read the complete story. Subscribe to The Bullvine Podcast so you never miss a history episode, and share this one with someone who'd appreciate knowing that the woman who danced with Fred Astaire also milked Guernseys at dawn.