The Golden Retriever was developed in Scotland in the nineteenth century by Sir
Dudley Marjoribanks (later to become
Baron Tweedmouth) from
Flat-coated Retrievers judiciously crossed with
Tweed Water Spaniels and some other British dog breeds. Before the 1952 publication of the detailed stud book, meticulously maintained by Marjoribanks, a number of romantic tales about the breed's origins were published. In the 1860s, Marjoribanks set out to create what, to his mind, was the ultimate breed of retriever at
Guisachan, his Scottish estate. He started by acquiring a yellow-coloured Flat-coated Retriever dog named Nous; Nous had been
whelped in June 1864 and was the only yellow pup in an otherwise all black-coloured
litter. Although uncommon, occasionally liver-, brown-, golden- or yellow-coloured purebred Flat-coated Retriever pups are whelped to matings of two black parents. It was Nous's pedigree that gave rise to the romantic tales of the Golden Retriever's heritage. One early account claimed Nous was purchased from a Russian circus trainer in
Brighton; another claimed he was bought from a cobbler; and yet another claimed he was bought from a
gypsy. The stud book states that Nous was a Flat-coated Retriever bred by
Henry Pelham, 3rd Earl of Chichester on his
Stanmer Park estate near Brighton. In 1868, Nous was mated to a Tweed Water Spaniel female named Belle, who is recorded in the stud book as being whelped in 1863 and being of "Ladykirk breeding". The litter from this mating consisted of four yellow pups: Primrose, Ada, Cowslip, and Crocus. The female selected from this litter, Cowslip, was mated to a Tweed Water Spaniel called Tweed with the mating producing a bitch pup called Topsy. Cowslip was subsequently mated to a
Red Setter called Sampson; that mating produced a dog pup called Jack. Topsy was mated with a black Flat-coated Retriever called Sambo and a bitch pup from that litter, Zoe, was mated back to Jack and two pups from that mating were retained, a dog called Nous II and a bitch called Gill. Gill was mated to a black
Labrador Retriever called Tracer, and a bitch pup from that mating, Queenie, was mated back to Nous II; all Golden Retrievers descend from this mating. The progeny from these various matings varied in colour from pure black to light cream, but it was the golden-coloured ones that were retained and mated to each other, forming the foundation stock of the Golden Retriever breed. Marjoribanks is also known to have used a sandy-coloured
Bloodhound and another Labrador in subsequent years of the breeding programme. ---- • FCR =
Flat-coated Retriever • TWS =
Tweed Water Spaniel • RS =
Red Setter • Lab =
Labrador Retriever In 1952, Marjoribanks's great-nephew,
Giles Fox-Strangways, 6th Earl of Ilchester, teamed up with Elma Stonex, and together they studied Marjoribanks's stud book. In 1960, their research was published, presenting all of the evidence required to counter all tales of Russian ancestry. The stud book, which covers the period from 1868 to 1890, is preserved in the library of
the Kennel Club in
London. In the early days, Golden Retrievers were called the "Flat-coated Retriever, Golden". Initially, the Golden Retriever was considered a colour variety of the former breed. In 1903,
the Kennel Club recorded the first examples, listing them in the same register as Flat-coats. In 1904 a Golden Retriever won a
field trial and in 1908 the first examples were exhibited at
conformation shows. In 1911, a breed club for the breed in England, the Golden Retriever Club, was formed, and the breed was given a new name, the "Yellow or Golden Retriever". From this point, they were increasingly seen as a separate breed from the Flat-coated Retriever. It was not until 1913 that the Kennel Club began recording them on a separate breed register from the Flat-coated Retriever, and in 1920, the "Yellow or" was dropped from the breed name, and they were officially called the "Golden Retriever". One early twentieth-century enthusiast of the breed, Winifred Charlesworth, was instrumental in establishing the breed club and in securing its separate Kennel Club recognition. It was she who drew up the first breed standard, which was adopted by the Kennel Club and, with only minor amendments, remains essentially unchanged. She bred and exhibited the first Golden Retriever
Show Champion, was a strong advocate for maintaining the working instincts of the breed, and is credited with popularising it at field trials and introducing it to shooting sportsmen. In the years after the
First World War, its popularity increased markedly, and in the 1920s and 1930s it spread through much of the
Western world. The
Canadian Kennel Club recognised the breed in 1927, and the
American Kennel Club in 1932. The first examples were registered in
France in 1934 and in
Australia in 1937. The worldwide popularity of the breed meant it did not suffer the misfortunes many British dog breeds did during the
Second World War due to British wartime restrictions on the breeding of larger dogs, with ample quality breeding stock available globally to ensure none of its characteristics were lost. Since the 1940s, its popularity has continued to grow, and it has become one of the most recognised and most frequently registered dog breeds in the Western world. ==Description==