OAK PARK AMERICAN BULLDOG KENNELS

BREEDERS- JOHNSON & PERFOMANCE DOGS

American Bulldog- BREED HISTORY 

 

         American Bulldogs and many other bull breeds are descended from ancient Mastiffs that originated in Asia and were brought to Europe by nomads. Mastiffs were bred to bring down, fight or hold large aggressive prey such as wild boar, bears or big cats.

Phoenician traders brought a strain of Mastiff to England around 800 B.C. Celts bred these dogs to catch cattle and wild boar. Today's English Mastiff and Bullmastiff have a similar color and to some degree are descended from this strain.

Around 400 A.D. a second very tough strain of Mastiff reached English shores. This dog was called the Alaunt. English butchers and farmers turned the Alaunt into the world's first true Bulldog. In medieval times, the working English Bulldog was the first dog to develop the so called 'lock jaw grip' which really has more to do with a dog's gameness than any structural difference in its jaw. A true Bulldog has the ability to chase, catch and hang onto the nose, cheek or throat of a large herbivore and not let go no matter how hard the beast struggles or how much punishment the dog is forced to absorb. Throughout medieval, Elizabethan and the early industrial periods, Bulldogs routinely caught horse, cattle and boars. Sometimes in routine farm or butchery work and sometimes in staged competitions. When catching domestic animals, the Bulldog was usually able to make the hoofed creature submit to the excruciating pain of the bite before being harmed himself. The bovine could then be slaughtered or put into a holding pen.

          An old time working Bulldog also had the ability to throw a bull to the ground by rapidly corkscrewing his body right when the big beast was off balance in the middle of a stride. It was possible for an experienced 35 kg Bulldog to topple a 1000 kg bull. Though his main opponent was usually a bull, the English Bulldog was also used against bears, lions and other ferocious carnivores. These staged fights were called baits. The Bulldogs used on bears and large meat eaters were heavier than the ones used solely on livestock. For the larger opponents speed was not as important and the fight would take place in an enclosed area so endurance was less of a factor. Whether large or small the working English Bulldog that survived this grueling gauntlet of animal combat became the greatest canine warrior ever. In 1835, all animal baiting contests were made illegal in England.

The only baiting that survived the ban was dog baiting or dog fighting. Coal miners in the Staffordshire region crossed English Bulldogs with scrappy terriers and continued the gladiator tradition. From these Bulldog terrier crosses we get the American Pit Bull Terrier, the Staffordshire Bull terriers and the Bull Terrier.

         Because of the anti-baiting laws, purebred Bulldogs were very rare in England by the middle of the 19th century. Some were being exported to America and were also shipped to Germany where they helped create the Boxer. They were crossed with Mastiffs to create superior guard dogs. Interestingly, the early Bullmastiffs were often white or piebald, only latter with the addition of dark brindle mastiff blood did darker colors evolve. And finally the last of the working Bulldogs were crossed with pugs to create a blocky mild mannered little show dog.

         Today, the dog the world calls the British Bulldog is really a Pug Bulldog cross, some say, a fine animal in its own right, but not a true working bulldog. Compared to its ancestors, the current British Bulldog has many health problems and is not the least bit athletic. In fact, the working English Bulldog became extinct in his native land at the turn of the 19th century. Fortunately he survived in America, especially in the mountainous regions of the rural south. There he was saved from extinction because he still had work to do. Hogs and cattle were allowed to free range in this rugged terrain where fences were impossible and stock could only be caught with hardy English Bulldogs.

 

        Throughout the south and the southwest of America, Bulldogs were also used as guard dogs. In the 19th century and earlier there are numerous historical records of large plantation Bulldogs or estate Bulldogs that were kept in yards sometimes on chains and used for protection. Plantation bulldogs were occasionally allowed to roam in prison yards, patrolling open spaces between cells and the main wall. Regional varieties developed and many names were applied to the southern Bulldogs. Some of the more common names were Old English White, White English, Swamp Bulldog, Backwoods Bulldog, English Pit, Old Country White, Hillbilly Bulldog and many others.

         Towards the end of the 1950's. the last remnants of working Bulldogs were disappearing from the rural southern states of America. Large agribusiness firms were consilidating land and eliminating small scale ranching. Also, small all terrain vehicles were allowing farmers to herd, catch and move cattle without dog assistance. It looked like the working Bulldog was truly going to become extinct once and for all.

 

        Fortunately at this time a few dedicated Bulldog enthusiasts made a concerted effort to locate some of the last of the hill Bulldogs and begun efforts to breed them, preserve them and foster a public awareness so their breeding programs could continue. Because of their work, the Bulldog, the breed that had toughed it out for so long against so many adversaries, could survive.

The principal architects of today's American Bulldog are Allen Scott and John D. Johnson. From the breeding programs of these two men, two distinct strains have emerged, commonly called the Johnson/Classic type and the Scott/Standard type. The former is a larger, wider dog with more bone, pendulous lips, an undershot jaw, facial wrinkles and a shorter muzzle. The Scott type is more lean, leggy, agile and usually has a longer snout.

 

         To say that today's American Bulldog is a direct descendant of the original working English Bulldog is not to say that a small percentage of other breeds have not been added. Most recently in the 1970s when the AB was being rebuilt, J.D. Johnson put some modern day British Bulldog back into his American Bulldogs to achieve his strain of the breed. Due to the low number of original Old English  Bulldogs left, some breed out-crossing was inevitable to insure enough genetic diversity.

 

         The two types differ temperamentally as well as physically. The Johnson dogs are descendants of the plantation Bulldogs that were kept as yard dogs in the old south. They are typically more territorial, more of a guardian. The athletic Scott strain descended from pig and cattle catch dogs. They were and still are used to catch wild pigs and cattle that have strayed into brush so thick that a man on horse back would find it impenetrable. This type of work requires extreme physical prowess.

Today many of the American Bulldogs we commonly see are a mixture of the two strains and are refered to as Hybrids or performance type Bulldogs.

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