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  2. Robert Bakewell (agriculturalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Bakewell...

    Pat Stanley 1995, Robert Bakewell and the Longhorn Breed of Cattle (ISBN 0-85236-305-2) Wykes 2004, "Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) of Dishley: farmer and livestock improver" Wood & Orel 2005, "Scientific Breeding in Central Europe during the Early Nineteenth Century: Background to Mendel's Later Work", Journal of the History of Biology 38, p. 251

  3. Durham Ox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durham_Ox

    After a visit in 1784 to Robert Bakewell, a successful breeder of Longhorn cattle, Colling began using Bakewell's techniques to develop and improve the Shorthorn breed. The animal eventually known as the Durham Ox was the grandson of Colling's original bull Hubbach or Hubback, [ 2 ] and became known as the Ketton Ox when he was exhibited in ...

  4. English Longhorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Longhorn

    In the eighteenth century Robert Bakewell applied his methods of selective breeding to these cattle, which for a short time became the predominant British breed. [ 5 ] : 232 [ 6 ] : 32 Both the numbers and the quality of the breed declined throughout the nineteenth century and for much of the twentieth.

  5. Leicester Longwool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leicester_Longwool

    Leicester Longwool sheep date back to the 1700s, and were found in the Midland counties of England, originally developed in Dishley Grange, Leicestershire, [3] by Robert Bakewell. Bakewell was the foremost exponent of modern animal-breeding techniques in the selection of livestock. The Leicester Longwool in the 1700s was slow-growing and ...

  6. Charles Colling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Colling

    Colling was one of the earliest and most successful improvers of the breed of shorthorn cattle.Born in 1751, he was the second son of Charles Colling (1721–1785) by Dorothy Robson (d. 1779), and succeeded his father in the occupancy of a farm at Ketton, near Darlington, in 1782, shortly after a visit he paid to the well-known breeder, Robert Bakewell.

  7. Bluefaced Leicester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluefaced_Leicester

    The Bluefaced Leicester (BFL) is a longwool breed of sheep which evolved from a breeding scheme of Robert Bakewell, in Dishley, Leicestershire in the eighteenth century. . First known as the Dishley Leicester, and then the Hexham Leicester, because of the prevalence of the breed in Northumberland, the name Bluefaced Leicester became known at the beginning of the 20th cent

  8. Ex-ballerina convicted of killing husband gets 20 years in ...

    www.aol.com/ex-ballerina-convicted-killing...

    A former ballerina was sentenced to 20 years in prison Tuesday in the 2020 shooting death of her estranged husband in Florida. CBS affiliate WTSP reports that Ashley Benefield was sentenced to 20 ...

  9. Shorthorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorthorn

    The breed developed from Teeswater and Durham cattle found originally in the North East of England. In the late eighteenth century, the Colling brothers, Charles and Robert, started to improve the Durham cattle using the selective breeding techniques that Robert Bakewell had used successfully on Longhorn cattle.