The Belted Galloway derives from the traditional
Galloway stock of the
Galloway region of south-western
Scotland, which in turn form part of a broader group of traditional Scottish cattle including the
Aberdeen Angus and
Highland breeds. The Galloway is most often black, but other colours occur; the white-belted or white-middled Galloway was one of them. The origin of the white belt is unknown; it is thought to have resulted from some
cross-breeding with the Dutch
Lakenvelder in the seventeenth century. From 1852, both Aberdeen Angus and Galloways could be registered in a
herd-book for
polled cattle. A separate Galloway herd-book was established in 1878. In 1921 a group of breeders set up the Dun and Belted Galloway Association, which – as the name suggests – registered both belted and
dun-coloured animals; its first herd-book was published in 1922. In 1951 registration of non-belted dun cattle was discontinued, and the society changed its name to the Belted Galloway Society. It also maintains herd-books for the Red Galloway and the White Galloway. In the twentieth century the Belted Galloway was exported to many countries including Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand and the United States.
Breed societies were started in New Zealand in 1948, in the United States in 1951, and in Australia in 1975. Like other breeds, the Belted Galloway suffered heavily during the epidemic of
foot-and-mouth disease in the British Isles in 2001, and a substantial part of the total population was lost. By 2007, numbers had recovered to the point where it could be removed from the endangered native breed watchlist of the
Rare Breeds Survival Trust; in the same year the global breed population was listed by the
FAO as "not at risk". In 2012, there were approximately registered breeding cows in the United Kingdom. In 2022 it was listed by the American
Livestock Conservancy as "watch"; in 2015 the total number in the United States was reported to be . == Characteristics ==