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A
Question of Breeding
Fillies
in foal as 3 year olds?
There
were few show classes in the late 19th C
for 3 year old horses or ponies, except now
and again classes for 3 year old geldings:
does this mean that fillies were expected
to be in foal or in work by then?
Breeding "a Fell" or "a
useful sort"?
Fell
pony breeders of the late 19th C may not
originally have been breeding "a Fell pony" but "a
useful sort". Some fancied the Highland,
Welsh cob, Dale,
Hackney
and Norfolk Roadster "types" as additions
to the stock. The Secretary for the Northern Committee
of the National Pony Society wrote in 1914 that "It
must be borne in mind that the Highland Pony, ie
the original Galloway, and our own, now called the
Fell Pony, are of one and the same foundation breed,
and the interchange of stallions between the two
districts in which they are bred has been continuous
from time out of mind."
There
are Wilson ponies recorded in the background
of "Fell" ponies in the early years. For
instance Little Wonder, who was bred by C
W Wilson and was chestnut or bright bay,
was a grandson of
Sir George
; and of his son Little Wonder II's photograph,
the FPS chairman has said, "Not by any stretch
of the imagination could you call that a
Fell". But Little Wonder is 'in the book'
as a grandsire of at least one registered
Fell pony, Heather's Model 381.
A
wide variety of introduced blood is registered
in the early ponies, particularly the stallions,
though it begins to recede into history by
the 1920s:
Sir
George and his son Sir Richard, who descended
partly from Thoroughbred and partly from
Norfolk Roadster stock;
The Mikado who was skewbald yet said to trace back
to Flying Childers [TB] and to the Shales breed of
Norfolk Trotters;
Norfolk Swell, a 14.2 or 14.3 black Norfolk Cob;
Yorkshire Fashion, a 15 hand "pure Dales cob",
but also said to be by a Norfolk cob;
Daybreak, by Norfolk Cob;
General Gordon, who at 14.2 was suspiciously large
for a "Fell";
Valence Heather, ditto, at 15 hands although he was
by Blooming Heather -- 13.2;
Beacon Swell, ditto, at 15 hands and chestnut;
a
bay Exmoor mare from the Acland herd;
Telegraph, a grey half bred Arab stallion;
Dalesman,
14 hh (572 in Dales Stud Book);
Guy Mannering (937 Dales);
Glengarry (1019 Dales);
Teasdale Comet (904 Dales) who was a 14.2 grey;
Brown Jock, 14.3 (973 Dales);
Yorkshire Champion, brown 14 hh;-- surely not a "pure
Fell Pony" with a Yorkshire name?;
Chepstow Boy -- surely not a "pure Fell Pony" with
a Welsh town name?;
Lowthian Prince 14.1 or 14.2 who was recorded as
the sire of General Pride 641, though he was not
himself eligible to be registered by the Polo Society
because he was by Royal Lothian (Clydesdale);
Park
End Fanny, a black and white mare by Park
End King;
Sporting Times 916, a black and white stallion out
of Park End Fanny by Valence Heather.
Many of the sires in the early years were not defined
as any breed at all. They were just good ponies --
and sometimes, horses: it appears that if there was
any consistency in the breed, it was the dams which
perpetuated the Fell type.
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