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Reprinted with pernission from the Australian
Terrier Club of America
History of the
Australian Terrier
How The Australian
Terrier Came To Be Recognized
The first Australian
Terrier Club was formed in Australia in 1887. At about the same
time, Australian Terriers were exported to Great Britain and were
granted a separate registry by the Kennel Club of England.
Australian Terriers
were introduced to the U.S. in the late 1940's. In 1957, the
Australian Terrier Club of America was formed.
The following year, 1958, nine Aussies were entered in the
Miscellaneous Class at Westminster. By 1960, the Miscellaneous Class
at Westminster had its largest entry ever, with 58 Australian
Terriers being exhibited. That same year, the Australian Terrier
became the 114th breed to be admitted to the Registry of the
American Kennel Club.
The Australian Terrier
Club of America became an AKC Member Club in 1977, and today has
approximately 200 members.
The late Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Fox of Plesantpastures Kennels contributed in a major way to
the recognition of the breed in the United States. Nell Fox, a
native of New Zealand, was familiar with the Aussie in her homeland
and imported some of the early dogs that arrived in this country.
Origins of the
Australian Terrier
The Australian Terrier
(or "Aussie") - not to be confused with the Australian Shepherd, the
Australian Cattle Dog, or the Australian Silky (known as the Silky
Terrier in the United States) - was the first Australian-bred dog
ever to be recognized and shown in Australia. Persistent efforts
over the years produced an ideal terrier to suit Australian
conditions and resulted in a rugged, hard-bitten, fearless dog that
was equally at home, indoors or out.
Beginning in Tasmania,
the earliest efforts at breeding a native rough-coated terrier soon
spread to Victoria on the mainland, and then on to the other
Australian states. When the Australians needed help controlling
rodents on the waterfront, in the gold mines, and on the sheep
stations - or to herd sheep and to serve as watchdogs, they began
breeding these small terriers from the rough-coated , short-legged
dogs from Britain that originally came with the first sailing ships
to the Land Down Under.
The Australian Terrier,
one of the smallest of the working Terriers, was bred to be both a
helper and companion in rough times and terrain.
A native dog (known as the "rough-coated terrier") and a close
relative of the old Scotch dog of Great Britain (not to be confused
with the present-day Scottish Terrier) are believed to have been
cross-bred with a number of other breeds of British stock to produce
the fast, sturdy, weather-resistant and fearless little dog that the
settlers needed as they expanded the frontiers of their country. The
breeds chosen for cross-breeding were selected to promote specific
desired traits.
Although there are
differences among writers of the histories of the breed, there is a
consensus of opinion that the breeds used included the precursor of
the Dandie Dinmont Terrier, the Skye, the Yorkshire, and the old
Black and Tan Terrier.
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