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No breed has a more
interesting background or a more disputed heritage than that
dog from long ago, the Dalmatian. His beginning is buried so
deep in the past that researchers cannot agree as to his
origin. As to the great age of the breed, and the fact that
it has come through many centuries unchanged, investigators
are in complete agreement.
Models, engravings,
paintings, and writings of antiquity have been used with
fair excuse but no certainty to claim the spotted dog first
appeared in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Perhaps some of the
divergences in opinion as to the original home of the
Dalmatian can be accounted for by the fact that the dog has
frequently been found in bands of Romanies, and that like
his gypsy masters, he has been well known but not located
definitely in any one place. Authoritative writers place him
first as a positive entity in Dalmatia, a province of
Austria on the Eastern shore of the coast of Venice. Though
he has been accredited with a dozen nationalities and has as
many native names -- he is nick named by the English, the
English Coach Dog, the Carriage Dog, the Plum Pudding Dog,
the Fire House Dog and Spotted Dick -- it is from his first
proved home that he takes his correct name, The Dalmatian.
We find references to him as Dalmatian in the middle
eighteenth century. There is no question whatsoever that his
lineage is as ancient and his record as straight as that of
other breeds.
His activities have
been as varied as his reputed ancestors. He has been a dog
of war, a sentinel on the borders of Dalmatia and Croatia.
He has been employed as draft dog, as shepherd. He is
excellent on rats and vermin. He is well known for his
heroic performances as fire-apparatus follower and
fire-house mascot. As a sporting dog he has been used as
bird dog, as trail hound, as retriever, or in packs for boar
or stag hunting. His retentive memory has made him one of
the most dependable clowners in circuses and on the stage.
Down through the years the intelligence and willingness of
the Dalmatian have found him in practically every role to
which useful dogs are assigned. Most important among his
talents has been his status as the original, one-and-only
coaching dog.
The imaginative
might say that his coaching days go back to an engraving of
a spotted dog following and Egyptian chariot! Even the
practical minded will find no end of proof, centuries old,
of the Dalmatian, with ears entirely cropped away and
padlocked brass collar, plying his natural trade as follower
and guardian of the horse-drawn vehicle. He is physically
fit for road work. In his makeup, speed and endurance are
blended to a nicety. His gait has beauty of motion and
swiftness, and he has the strength, vitality, and fortitude
to keep going gaily till the journey's end. The instinct for
coaching is bred in him, born in him, and trained in him
through the years. The Dalmatian takes to a horse as a horse
takes to him, and that is to say, like a duck to water. He
may work in the old way, clearing the path before the Tally
Ho with dignity and determination, or following on with his
ermine spotting in full view to add distinction to an
equipage. He may coach under the rear axle, the front axle,
or most difficult of all, under the pole between the leaders
and the wheelers. Where ever he works, it is with the love
of the game in his heart and with the skill, which has won
him the title of the only, recognized carriage dog in the
world. His penchant for working is his most renowned
characteristic, but it in no way approaches his capacity for
friendship.
There is no dog
more picturesque than this spotted fellow with his slick
white coat gaily decorated with clearly defined round spots
of jet black, or in the liver variety, deep brown. He does
not look like any other breed, for his markings are
peculiarly his own. He is strong-bodied, clean-cut, colorful
and distinctive. His flashy spotting are the culmination of
ages of careful breeding.
His aristocratic
bearing does not belie him, for the Dalmatian is first of
all a gentleman. He is quite a chap, and the ideal guard
dog, distinguishing nicely between barking for fun or with a
purpose. His courtesy never fails with approved visitors,
but his protective instinct is highly developed and he has
the courage to defend. As a watchdog he is sensible and
dependable. He is not everyone's dog -- no casual admirer
will break his polite reserve, for he has a fine sense of
distinction as to whom he belongs. Fashion has not distorted
the Dalmatian. He is born pure white, develops quickly and
requires no cropping, docking, stripping or artifices of any
sort. He is extremely hardy and easy keeper, suited to any
climate. He requires only the minimum of care, for he is
sturdy and neat and clean. |