In the 1930’s a semi-wealthy landowner and small-scale dairy farmer on Harris Road thought Pitt meadows would be a perfect place to raise polo ponies and for weekend polo matches. With this in mind he turned much of his property into a polo pitch. Alas, it was not to be – the polo pitch went and so did the land owner. He moved his creamery to Vancouver and it eventually became Jersey Farms.<\/p>\r\n
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*Please note: We are unsure of where the farm would have originally been located, just that it was along Harris Road.<\/p>","SEO_LINK":"polo-anyone","VIDEO_LINK":"","SOUNDCLOUD_LINK":"","IMG1":"","IMG2":"","IMG3":"","IMG4":"","IMG5":"","IMG6":"","IMG7":"","IMG1_THUMB":"","IMG2_THUMB":"","IMG3_THUMB":"","IMG4_THUMB":"","IMG5_THUMB":"","IMG6_THUMB":"","IMG7_THUMB":""}X
In the 1930’s a semi-wealthy landowner and small-scale dairy farmer on Harris Road thought Pitt meadows would be a perfect place to raise polo ponies and for weekend polo matches. With this in mind he turned much of his property into a polo pitch. Alas, it was not to be – the polo pitch went and so did the land owner. He moved his creamery to Vancouver and it eventually became Jersey Farms.
*Please note: We are unsure of where the farm would have originally been located, just that it was along Harris Road.
Details:
Latitude: 49.2187084547122
Longitude: -122.68921037847
Direct Link: https://www.pittmeadowsmuseum.com/locations/polo-anyone
Welcome to the Pitt Meadows Museum and Archive's Memories Mapping Project!
Click on the map to add your history or explore what others have left.
This project funded in part by:
Government of British Columbia
BC | Canada 150 Grants