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  2. Elliott B. Norris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliott_B._Norris

    Norris attended Hillsdale College in Michigan and Eastman Business College. He worked as a farmer in Sodus. [2] He was a larger breeder of thoroughbred Shorthorn cattle an extensive fruit grower. He was a member of the fruit firm Case & Norris. He was also very involved in the Granger movement. He was a charter member of the Sodus Grange and ...

  3. Shorthorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorthorn

    All Shorthorn cattle are coloured red, white, or roan, although roan cattle are preferred by some, and completely white animals are not common. However, one type of Shorthorn has been bred to be consistently white – the Whitebred Shorthorn , which was developed to cross with black Galloway cattle to produce a popular blue roan crossbreed, the ...

  4. Retzlaff Farmstead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retzlaff_Farmstead

    [2] [3] [4] Retzlaff raised purebred Shorthorn cattle on the farm, and he "became one of the county's most prominent citizens." [2] By the late 1970s, the property belonged to the fourth generation of the same family. [3] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since May 31, 1979. [1] [4]

  5. 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.

  6. Beef Shorthorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beef_Shorthorn

    The Beef Shorthorn breed of cattle was developed from the Shorthorn breed in England and Scotland around 1820. [1] The Shorthorn was originally developed as a dual-purpose breed, suitable for both dairy and beef production. However, different breeders opted to concentrate on one purpose rather than the other, and in 1958, the beef breeders ...

  7. Robert Milne House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Milne_House

    Milne was also one of the first breeders of Shorthorn cattle in the United States. Four generations of the Milne family lived on the farmstead, owning the house until 1979. Most of the land that was previously on the farm is now owned by the Lockport school district although the house itself is a private residence. [2]

  8. Henyon-Kasper-Duffy Barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henyon-Kasper-Duffy_Barn

    They also housed horses in the barn. John's son-in-law Charles D Duffy bought the farm from John Kasper, his father in law, and then his son Chuck succeeded him in the operation. Charles Duffy and wife Joyce housed hogs and then began the Newport Valley Shorthorn cattle Charles is well known for. The barn is unusually tall for its time.

  9. Dairy Shorthorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dairy_Shorthorn

    The Dairy Shorthorn is a British breed of dairy cattle. [5]: 132 [6]: 59 It derives from the Shorthorn cattle of Teesside, in the North Riding of Yorkshire and in Northumbria (now divided between County Durham and Northumberland) in north-eastern England. [7] The Shorthorn was for this reason at first known as the Durham or Teeswater. [7]

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