The Border Collie is descended from
landrace collies, a type found widely in the
British Isles. The name for the breed came from its probable place of origin along the Anglo-Scottish border. Mention of the "collie" or "Colley" type first appeared toward the end of the 19th century, although the word "collie" is older than this and has its origin in the
Scots language. It is also thought that the word 'collie' comes from the old Celtic word for useful. Many Border Collies today can be traced back to a dog known as
Old Hemp. In 1915, James Reid, Secretary of the
International Sheep Dog Society (ISDS) in the United Kingdom first used the term "border collie" to distinguish those dogs registered by the ISDS from the
Kennel Club's collie (or
Scotch collie, including the
rough collie and
smooth collie) which originally came from the same working stock but had developed a different, standardised appearance following introduction to the show ring in 1860 and mixture with different breeds.
Old Hemp Memorial at
West Woodburn,
Northumberland Old Hemp, a
tricolour dog, was born in Northumberland, England in September 1893 and died in May 1901. He was bred by Adam Telfer from Roy, a black and tan dog, and Meg, a black-coated, strong-eyed dog. Hemp was a quiet, powerful dog to which sheep responded easily. Many shepherds used him for stud and Hemp's working style became the Border Collie style. All
purebred Border Collies alive today can trace an ancestral line back to Old Hemp. He was believed to have sired as many as 200 pups over the span of his life.
Wiston Cap Wiston Cap (b. 28 September 1963) is the dog that the
International Sheep Dog Society (ISDS) badge portrays in the characteristic Border Collie herding pose. He was a popular
stud dog in the history of the breed, and his bloodline can be seen in most bloodlines of the modern-day collie. In the late 1890s James Lilico (1861?–1945) of
Christchurch,
New Zealand, imported a number of working dogs from the
United Kingdom. These included Hindhope Jed, a black, tan and white born in Hindhope,
Scotland in 1895, as well as Maudie, Moss of Ancrum, Ness and Old Bob. It is unclear whether Hindhope Jed was a descendant of Old Hemp. Born two years after him, she is mentioned in a
British Hunts and Huntsmen article concerning John Elliot of Jedburgh: Mr Elliot himself is well known for his breed of collies. His father supplied Noble to the late Queen Victoria and it was from our subject that the McLeod got Hindhope Jed, now the champion of
New Zealand and Australia. On her departure to New Zealand, Hindhope Jed was already in pup to
Captain, another of the then-new "border" strain. Hindhope Jed had won three trials in her native Scotland, and was considered to be the "best to cross the equator". In 1901 the King and Mcleod stud was created by Charles Beechworth King (b. 1855, Murrumbidgee, NSW), his brother and Alec McLeod at Canonbar, near
Nyngan (north-west of
Sydney), brought Hindhope Jed to Australia, where she enjoyed considerable success at sheepdog trials. The
New Zealand Heading Dog breed was developed from Border Collies. ==Description==