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UKC
United Kennel Club Information
Established in 1898, the
United Kennel Club is the largest all-breed
performance-dog registry in the world, registering dogs
from all 50 states and 25 foreign countries. More than
60 percent of its 12,000 annually licensed events are
tests of hunting ability, training and instinct. UKC
prides itself on its family-oriented, friendly, educational
events. The UKC has supported the "Total
Dog" philosophy through its events and programs for
over a century. As a departure from registries that
place emphasis on a dog’s looks, UKC
events are designed for dogs that look and perform equally
well. Our mission is to be the world's best registry
of purebred dogs, to offer our customers the most efficient
and creative services possible, to use our data to help
our customers breed the best dogs in the world and to
create a wide spectrum of performance and conformation
events in which those dogs can prove their instincts
and heritage.
The programs at UKC include Obedience
Trials, Agility Trials, Weight Pull Events, Terrier
Races, Earth Work Events, Total Junior Program, Dog
Sports (including Family Obedience), Coonhound Field
Trials, Water Races, Nite Hunts and Bench Shows, Hunt
Tests for retrieving breeds, Pointing Dog Events, Beagle
Events (including Hunts and Bench Shows, and Cur and
Feist Squirrel and Coon Events and Bench Shows. Rounding
out the 'Total Dog' package, UKC Conformation
Events are among our largest growing events. UKC
dog shows are family events designed by and for the
breeder-owner-handler. Professional Handlers are not
eligible to exhibit dogsfor others at UKC Conformation
Events. At UKC dog shows, the emphasis
is on the DOG, not the SHOW.
Part of our mission is to have events where all dogs
can compete. In addition to our purebred dog registry,
United Kennel Club offers a Limited
Privilege program. The Limited Privilege is open to
all dogs that are spayed/neutered. This includes mixed
breed dogs, purebred dogs of unknown pedigree, and purebred
dogs with disqualifying faults as described in the
UKC breed standards. The programs open to Limited
Privilege dogs areObedience Trials, Weight Pulls, Agility
Trials, Total Junior Program and Dog Sports (including
Family Obedience).
It is our firm belief that the right balance between
performance and conformation results in healthier happier
dogs for everyone. We are proud that we share that same
philosophy with our growing number of dedicated participants.
Essentially, the UKC world of dogs is a working world.
That's the way it was developed over a century ago,
and that's the way it remains today. The History of
the PitBull - Pit Bulls
are known by many different names. Since the breed's
conception, they have been known as: Bull and
Terrier, Half-and-Half, Brindle Bull Dog, Pit
Dog, Pit Bull, Yankee
Terrier, American PitBull Terrier,
American Staffordshire Terrier, and
Staffordshire Bull Terrier. These names
illustrate the vast and colorful history that the Pit
Bull breeds have. All of the members of this breed trace
their roots back to the early 19th Century. It was the
cross between the Bulldog and the terrier that resulted
in the Staffordshire Terrier, which was originally called
the Bull-and-Terrier Dog, Half and Half, and also the
Pit Dog or Pit Bullterrier.
Later, it became known in England as the Staffordshire
Bull Terrier, and is the dog breed
that ultimately started the American Staffordshire
and American Pit Bull Terrier breeds.
In the early part of the 19th century, the Bulldog was bred
in England for the purpose of bull baiting. Bull baiting
is a sport in which a tethered bull, brought to market for
slaughter, would be attacked by bulldogs. The supposed purpose
of the bull baiting was to help tenderize the meet of the
bull prior to slaughter. It was thought that the dog attacks
would help to tenderize the meat. While there was no scientific
proof that the bull baiting actually tenderized the meat,
its purpose was most likely to profit those who trained
dogs. The bull baiting was cruel to both the dog and the
bull. During these matches the dog would assault the bull,
while trying to avoid the stomping hooves and slashing horns
of the bull. The dog would attempt to grab on to a nose
or ear, and hang on until the bull collapsed from exhaustion
or lack of oxygen. Many dogs were crushed underneath the
bull's hooves, disemboweled by slashing horns, and tossed
through the air causing broken legs, backs, and skulls when
they hit the ground. On the whole, both the dogs and the
bulls suffered greatly. Every class of person from commoners
to royalty enjoyed this sport until mass public outcry finally
forced Parliament to take a stand and ban the practice of
bull baiting in 1835. With bull baiting banned, dog breeders
turned their attention to dog fighting. These dogs were
preferred because of their fierceness, courage, and tenacity.
The dog breeders began with the Bull Dog, mixed in some
terrier blood for gameness, and produced the Bull and Terrier,
a dog that met all of their expectations. The Bull and Terrier
was bred for aggression to other dogs, unrelenting bravery,
a high pain threshold, a superior blood clotting ability
to aid him when wounded, a willingness to fight to the end,
and an unmatched affection for people. Dogfights were also
very brutal on the dog as they sometimes were allowed to
go until death. Not only were the dogs bred to be aggressive
towards other dogs, but they also had to be loyal to people.
If a pit dog ever turned on, bit, or showed aggression to
a human it was put down immediately. This led to the breeds
overwhelming people friendly personality and truly kept
the breed from being an outright danger to man.
The Pit Bull arrived in America in
1870's, as all-around farm dogs and frontier guardians.
They excelled in their service to mankind on the frontier
and soon earned a reputation as one of the finest dogs
a man could own. To increase the dog's usefulness in
relation to his new frontier lifestyle, breeders of
the Bull and Terrier began to selectively breed for
a larger dog. The Bull and Terrier dog became adept
at just about anything he was tasked with to include:
herding, livestock protection, vermin removal, weight
pulling, watchdog, and family companion. In all, things
were good for this breed as it was loved and respected
as a true family companion and faultless dog. Eventually,
these dogs began to assume other names such as Pit
Dog, the PitBull Terrier,
the American Bull Terrier, and even
the Yankee Terrier. In 1898 the United Kennel
Club (UKC) recognized the Bull and Terrier
Dog as the American Pit Bull
Terrier. The Pit Bull has also been seen in
the advertisements of Buster Brown shoes, whose mascot
Tige, an American Pit Bull Terrier,
was put on every shoe to enhance it's image as a sturdy,
dependable shoe. RCA used Nipper to illustrate the clarity
of sound emulating from it's phonograph bye showing
the pitbull being fooled into thinking he was actually
hearing his master's voice and not a recording. The
breed was also used to illustrate American neutrality
without fear in 1914, the toughness of Levi jeans, and
as a "defender of Old Glory". Then in 1917 came Sgt.
Stubby who became a war hero for saving several soldiers
lives and capturing a German spy while serving in the
trenches of France with the 26th Yankee Division.
About two decades later came a sturdy white pooch with
a patch over one eye named Petey, who played alongside
a lovable bunch of kids called 'The Little Rascals'.
The American Kennel Club (AKC) did not recognize breeds
called "pit bulls" until 1936, when it recognized the
American Pitbull Terrier under the
alias Staffordshire Terrier. The name Staffordshire
Terrier comes from the miners of Staffordshire, England,
who had a hand in the development of the original English
fighting breed. Originally, 50 Staffordshire Terriers
were accepted into the AKC. One of the original dogs
was none other than the famous Petey, from the Little
Rascals. The name was changed in 1972 to the American
Staffordshire Terrier to distinguish the breed from
the Staffordshire Bull Terrier of England,
the ancestor to the American dogs, which was recognized
by the AKC in 1974. The British version of the dog is
14-16 inches tall at the shoulder and weighs up to 45
pounds. The American cousin is 18-19 inches at the shoulder
and weighs up to 80 pounds. The UKC's American
Pit Bull Terrier is preferred
to range from 30-60 pounds with the females generally,
but not necessarily, smaller than the males. Since acceptance
into the AKC, the American Staffordshire Terrier breed
of dog has been bred separately from the UKC's American
Pit Bull Terrier.
This has resulted in two separate breeds. The AKC does
not recognize the American Pit Bull terrier
as a pure bred dog. The only bull terrier breeds recognized
by the AKC are the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, and the
American Staffordshire Terrier. On the other hand, the
UKC does recognize the AKC's American Staffordshire
Terrier as an American Pit Bull Terrier
and allows them to be registered with the UKC. Today
the American Staffordshire Terrier and American
Pit Bull Terrier are wonderful family dogs,
capable of anything their owner's demand of them. Neglect
and bad training has been a cause for severe damage
to the reputation of the breed and has resulted in the
deaths and mutilations of many people. There is a growing
movement around the world to improve the ownership of
these dogs and to educate people as to the true value
these creatures hold as companions to people. The Bull
Terrier breed has a long history as a dog of
the common man, and it is from his basic stock that
the AKC's American Staffordshire and Staffordshire Terriers,
and the UKC's American Pit Bull Terrier
developed.
All of our dogs are UKC
registered

Haris: (678) 462-2335

thebullyzone@aol.com
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