Charles Mack developed the original recipe and was the
master ice cream maker for the company. Before the building was
completed, Mack made the ice cream in the basement of his Candy Kitchen
on North Main Street. DeLuxe became another "Moor"
brand that was known for its premium quality.
Robert S. Edmiston succeeded B. A. Troutman as president
of the company. Ralph C. Millsaps served as secretary-treasurer and general
manager until 1943 when he became president of the Mooresville Ice Cream
Company. The Millsaps family purchased Edmiston’s interest in the
company in 1947. R. C Millsaps became president, with his sons Harvey
and Clyde serving as vice presidents.
The company broadened its line of products to include
more flavors of ice cream, popsicles, fudge bars and the Mooresville
bar. New products were added and promoted over the years such as the
locally popular Texas Pecan flavor. The company engaged in an extensive
promotion of the product. The company’s signature ice cream bar was named for
the town, the Mooresville Bar. Always a favorite of customers, it is
part of a product line that strives to provide high quality refreshment
for everyone.
Cooperative Creamery Success Led to Sweet Treats
Ice cream manufacturing started
as a result of the success of the Mooresville Cooperative Creamery.
Officials looked for a way to use the excess cream and milk and found
ice cream as a solution.
Southern Iredell dairy farmers joined forces in 1914
to operate a creamery in Mooresville. Much of the butter fat sold in
Hickory was coming from Mooresville and Iredell County, so it seemed
prudent to the local farmers to organize their own creamery. Stock was
sold for $25 per share, and $6,000 was raised in two days. To insure
that the operation was truly a "cooperative", stockholders were limited
to four shares each.
The Mooresville Cooperative Creamery produced large
quantities of butter fat and sold it in regional markets. Autumn Leaf
butter was produced in the plant at the corner of Moore Avenue and Broad
Street and was available in local grocery stores. Eugene Johnston and
William Perry managed the day to day operations.
In 1937 pasteurizing equipment was installed to make
Grade A milk for local consumption. Whole milk was purchased from
farmers in the cooperative and processed in the local plant. Daily
delivery from the creamery resulted in additional revenues for the
farmers and freedom from the delivery and collection process.
The milk produced was of the finest quality,
establishing another "Moor" product as the best available. "Pure-Pak"
coated paper cartons replaced the standard glass bottles containing the
slogan "I serve healthful Mooresville Creamery milk... it’s country
fresh." Other "Moor" quality products included homogenized milk,
buttermilk, whipping cream, chocolate milk, orangeade and Autumn Leaf
butter.
The Mooresville Dairy, operated by the Harris Brothers, produced milk
for delivery in town and to the Mooresville Cotton Mills and Mill
Village. The operation was sold to the Creamery in 1946.
The glass milk bottles of the Cooperative Creamery,
Mooresville Dairy and
Edmiston Dairy were delivered daily to Mooresville area residents. Each
home that bought milk was supplied with an insulated metal "cooler" for
the front porch. In the early days a card with numbers was placed in the
window to tell the "milkman" what to deliver.