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The Fox Terrier Club of England was founded in 1876, ... Grove Nettle and Tartar, three ancestors of the modern Fox Terrier. Girl taking a photo of a Fox Terrier.
The Smooth Fox Terrier is a breed of dog, one of many terrier breeds. It was the first breed in the fox terrier family to be given official recognition by The Kennel Club (circa 1875; breed standard 1876).
Some Toy Fox Terrier breeders can trace their dogs' lineage back to a Smooth Fox Terrier called "Foiler", the first fox terrier registered by the Kennel Club in Britain, circa 1875–76. [5] It is believed that careful breeding from smaller Smooth Fox Terriers without crosses to other toy breeds such as Manchester Terrier and Chihuahua resulted ...
English White Terrier: A British breed of terrier from England that was all-white in appearance; it was the progenitor of the Fox Terrier and one of several progenitors of the Bull Terrier. [18] Fila da Terceira: A mastiff-type dog from the Azores, [19] it was the ancestor of both the Saint Miguel Cattle Dog and the Fila Brasileiro. Fuegian dog
Old Jock (1859–1871), was a Fox Terrier famous during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A mostly white dog, he ran briefly with a hunting kennel before becoming a show dog, most notably with a victory at the show which popularised the Fox Terrier.
The Wire Fox Terrier (also known as Wire Hair Fox Terrier, Wirehaired Terrier or simply Fox Terrier) [1] is a breed of dog, one of many terrier breeds. It is a fox terrier , and although it bears a resemblance to the Smooth Fox Terrier , they are believed to have been developed separately.
An extinct Late Pleistocene wolf may have been the ancestor of the dog. [5] [1] [6] The dog is a wolf-like canid. [7] [8] [9] The genetic divergence between the dog's ancestor and modern wolves occurred between 40,000 and 30,000 years ago, just before or during the Last Glacial Maximum [2] [1] (20,000–27,000 years ago). This timespan ...
By the late 19th century a dog type known as the Miniature Fox Terrier (known colloquially as "Mini Foxies") was well established in rural Australia as a vermin killer and family companion. By the 1920s the dog had become a fixture in urban households. [2] The name "Tenterfield" is sometimes incorrectly stated to denote the breed's place of ...