In an effort to improve the health and welfare of its employees and their families, CF&I began a medical department in 1880. In 1917, CF&I purchased a dairy farm on land about five miles south of Pueblo to provide milk for patients in its Minnequa Hospital (later to become St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center.)
Soon after purchase, company officials made several improvements to the building including installing a concrete floor in the milking room, adding window screens, installing new feed racks for cattle and improving the drainage system within the building. Holstein grade cattle were housed at the dairy.
The dairy was short-lived however, and the last record the Steelworks Archives has is that it ceased operations around 1930, presumably when economic strains began to be placed on the company.