Karen McDowell (nee McMaster) emailed 'Your Place & mine' to
say that in the photograph below of J McMaster's ice
cream van, "the two 'unknown' women are on the left
Mary Pollock and on the right my grandmother Dorothy
McMaster (nee Pollock). Both Mary and my grandmother
are alive and well, granny still lives in Ballymoney
and Mary (her sister) lives in Dervock. The ice cream
cart on that day had been driven by my Granda Alec -
who on this occasion was camera shy!"
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John McMaster's homemade icecream lorry
Mary Pollock (on left)
Nellie McClelland (centre)
Dorothy McMaster (on right
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The editorial team had already been contacted by John
McMaster from Ballymoney who's ice-cream lorry features
in the Causeway Shops article.
John built the body of that lorry on top of a car. He then fitted it out to sell ice-cream and did the sign writing too. Unfortunately he never photographed it, so was delighted when a member of the your place and mine team visited him and presented him with a copy.
John is the last surviving member of the McMaster family who sold ice-cream
during the 1930's and 40's in the Ballymoney area where
they were based.
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John McMaster
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HOW IT STARTED
In the early 1930's John's father, James, kept and worked horses for a lving
and John can remember the carts hauling bags of flour
to a baker in Ballycastle.
One winter James came into possession of a horse-drawn
ice-cream cart which he planned to sell to a vendor
later in the summer. However one of his children, George,
(John's brother) suggested to his mother that, as an
experiment, she should try making ice-cream from custard
using the ice which George gathered from the top of
their horse trough.
It was a success and later that March young George
set off from their Meetinghouse Street premises to go
around the country in that horse-drawn cart selling
his wares. By this time mother (Jane McMaster) was making
the ice-cream in a much more hygienic manner with the
ice being supplied from the Belfast Ice Company.
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Jack McMaster - click on
photograph to enlarge it
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GROWTH
Throughout the 1930's the business continued to grow until they had three horse-drawn
carts and two ice-cream lorries.
Listen as John describes the birth of the firm
and his part in building the ice cream lorry
featured. By the way, in this audio clip it might sound
as if John is talking about his mother "burning" the
ingredients. Not so, the word he is using is "boiled".
It really was a family affair with mother, Jane, at home making the ice-cream
helped by her daughter Kathleen, whilst on the road
were her three sons, George, John and Alex, together
with nephew Jack (Pictured) selling the twopence and
sixpenny sliders. They covered a considerable area too.
Listen
to details of the places the lorries travelled
to and a description of George with his horse
and cart at the Giant's Causeway.
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NO SUGAR = NO CUSTARD
However
when the war (WW2) came, trading practically ceased
because they could not get the sugar. But come 1945,
once hostilities were over, business picked up again
and the McMaster's "Ices in all Flavours" horse and
carts were soon to be seen once more trotting through
Antrim and the North Coast. Mrs Jane McMaster continued
making her own brand of ice cream well into her seventies
and the firm eventually ceased trading in the late 1940's.
(Archive photos lent by John McMaster and Isobel McKay)
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