American Bulldog
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| Country of origin | United States of America | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Dog (Canis lupus familiaris) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Contents
Description
| This section does not cite any references or sources. (February 2011) |
Appearance
Scott type American Bulldog. Typical mandibular prognathism is evident.
Temperament
A Standard-type American Bulldog
A Bully type American Bulldog
History
History in Spain and England
Even the slight modifications the bulldog underwent in Spain and England up to the Industrial Revolution (before 1835), were absent in the working strains. Most settlers of the American South came from the West Midlands of England and emigrated as a result of the Civil War between Royalists and Parliamentarians, well before the Industrial Revolution).History in the United States
The original bulldog was preserved by working class immigrants who brought their working dogs with them to the American South. Small farmers and ranchers used this all-around working dog for many tasks including farm guardians, stock dogs and catch dog. These dogs were not an actual breed as considered by today's standards but were a generic bulldog type. There were no recorded pedigrees or records and breeding decisions were dependent on the best working farm dogs despite breed or background. Several separate strains of the "bulldog" type dogs were kept by ranchers as utilitarian working dogs.Perhaps the most important role of the bulldog and the reason for its survival, and in fact why it thrived throughout the South, was because of the presence of feral pigs, introduced to the New World and without predators. The bulldogs were the settlers' only means of sufficiently dealing with the vermin. By World War II, the breed was near extinction until John D. Johnson and his father scoured the back roads of the South looking for the best specimens to revive the breed. During this time a young Alan Scott grew an interest in Johnson's dogs and began to work with him on the revitalization process. At some point, Alan Scott began infusing non-Johnson catch bulldogs from working Southern farms with John D. Johnson's line, creating the now Standard American Bulldog. At another point, Johnson began crossing his line with an atavistic English bulldog from the North that had maintained its genetic athletic vigor.
Recent history
American bulldogs are now safe from extinction and are enjoying a healthy increase in popularity, either as a working/protector dog or as a family pet. All over the world, they are used variously as "hog dogs" (catching escaped pigs or hunting razorbacks), as cattle drovers and as working or sport K-9s. American Bulldogs also successfully compete in several dog sports such as dog obedience, Schutzhund, French Ring, Mondio Ring, Iron Dog competition and weight pulling. They are also exhibited in conformation shows in the UKC, NKC, ABA, ABRA and the SACBR (South Africa).Health
A 6-week old male American Bulldog
American Bulldogs in popular culture
- Spike and Tyke from the Tom and Jerry franchise.
- Chance from the feature film Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey and its sequel, Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco. Suregrips Rattler (Chance) was only in the first Homeward Bound movie.
- The Deftones' video "Bloody Cape" featured a model walking an American Bulldog down the street. The American Bulldog was actually played by two separate dogs from the Norcal's American Bulldog Kennel. The names of the dogs were Big Trouble and Tory Hesta.
- In the 2001 film Kevin of the North one of Kevin Manley's sled dogs is an American Bulldog named Snowflake.
- Cheaper by the Dozen
- Nedd ("Nasty Evil Dead Dog") in The Number 23
- In "Return to Me" 2000 "Mel", David Duchovny’s character’s dog, was played by an American Bulldog named Peetey.
- In "Tucker and Dale vs Evil" 2010, "Jangers", Tyler Labine's character’s dog, starred an American Bulldog named Weezer.
- Although the original Petey from Hal Roach's Our Gang was an American Pit Bull, in the 1994 film remake, The Little Rascals, Petey was played by an American Bulldog.
- An American Bulldog features prominently as the titular character's companion in the 2013 film Joe.
See also
References
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to American Bulldog. |
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