HISTORY OF THE BIEWER YORKIE
BY: Nancy Anderson
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To accurately describe the history of the Biewer Yorkie we will have to start with the development of the Yorkshire Terrier.  The Yorkshire Terrier origin begins in England in 1886 in the districts of Yorkshire but whose ancestry is of  half Scotland descent.    For the purpose of this article we feel the need to revert back to the dogs that were used to develop the breed so a clear understanding is achieved as to the breeds used and their role in the development of the dog we know today.

The first unofficial named breed to be associated with the Yorkshire Terrier was the Waterside Terrier so named for the river banks at the rivers and canals where it's origin began.  The Waterside Terrier was a larger terrier than what the Yorkshire Terrier is today reportedly weighing up to 20 pounds with the fur of shimmering blue/black with the tan markings on the head.   The Waterside Terrier is known today as the Airedale Terrier whose beginnings can be traced back as far as 1853.

Around 1864 the Airedale was referred to as Working, Waterside or Bingley Terriers.  They were shown in ever increasing entries at agricultural shows during the infancy of dog shows.

The Skye Terrier originated centuries ago on the Isle of Skye, Scotland.  Their origin is connected with a shipwreck in the early 1600's in the Scottish Hebrides.  Several Maltese type dogs that survived the wreck  were bred with what is reported to be local Terrier type dogs on the Island of Skye .  The Skye's short, sturdy legs made it a candidate for burrowing to locate underground vermin and it's double coat served it well as protection from injury and fail weather.   They were originally used to control vermin but are used today primarily for companions.  The Skye's weight can be up to 25 pounds.  The breed was first shown in England in 1864.  The first registered Skye with AKC was in 1887.  The breed was quite popular in the mid-1800's when Queen Victoria took a fancy to the breed.   It should also be noted that the Cairn Terrier was known at the turn of the century as "Short-haired Skye Terrier" or "Prick Earred Terrier".

When the Scott's migrated to England during the mining days of the 19th Century during the Industrial Revolution, they brought with them what were called "Scotch Terriers" later classified as Skye Terrier and the Paisley Terrier (also called Clydesdale Terrier).   These two breeds were used to cross with the Waterside Terrier through careful selection to begin 1 bloodline toward the development of what became known today as the Yorkshire Terrier.

The Skye Terrier and Clysdale/Paisley Terrier were one and the same until the 1880's when they were divided into separate breeds based on hair coat texture.  While the Skye Terrier continued to survive the Clysdale/Paisley did not favor as well and became extinct.  

The Clysdale/Paisley strains were the ones probably used the most in the development of the Yorkshire Terrier due to their silkier, long and straight hair coat seen in the Yorkshire Terrier today.  The Clysdale/Paisley also had the erect ear set covered with long silky fringed hair.

In later years it is reported that the black/tan  terrier known today as Manchester Terrier was introduced into the breed by the Scott's using the Skye - black and tan terrier crosses and crossing them with the Waterside Terrier.  This black/tan terrier  was referred to as a crossbred terrier dark brown in color.  This could answer the age ole question of how "Chocolate Yorkshire Terriers" can occur.  This could very well be the limited gene pool for which the Chocolate Yorkies seen today are produced from.

Laws passed in the 11th century required a dog that was owned by the simple people of England to be hunted to be able to fit through a 7 inch diameter tire.  Selective breeding was begun at this time to downsize this versatile yet tenacious dog so that it would be within the limit of the law.   These dog held by the simple people to obey the law were the beginning of the ancestry for the Yorkshire Terrier and were used to hunt rabbits, and catch rats and mice. 

In 1866 these dogs were registered by The Kennel Club (known as AKC today) as "Broken Haired Scotch Terrier" and later changed to be registered as "Yorkshire Terrier" in the year  1874.  Yorkshire was given due to the district of Yorkshire where the dog had the beginning of it's roots and terrier from the Latin term "terra" meaning earth.

IT was not until the 19th century that terriers were given breed distinction.  Prior to 1800 they were labeled as to hair coat/texture/length and placed into loose groups of rough/hard-haired, broken coated, long-legged and short-leg variety.  

It is quite amazing that the smallest documented dog in the world through the Guinness Book of World Records is a 4 ounce Yorkshire Terrier but yet it's origin started from the largest of all the terrier breeds nicknamed "The King of Terriers" the Airedale Terrier.  The recorded dog was at the age of 2 years and stood 2.5 inches at the withers and measured 3 3/4 inches from tip of nose to root of tail.  He was owned by Arthur Marples of Blackburn, Great Britain and died in 1945.

The Kennel Club was created in April of 1873 and was later changed to American Kennel Club in 1884.

The Broken-Haired Scotch Terrier was bench shown in England in 1861, shown through  The Kennel Club in 1872 and became an officially recognized breed in 1878 by The Kennel Club.   

The first Broken Haired Scotch Terrier came to America in the early 1870's.  It was first shown in America in 1872. 

It was during the 1870's that the weight standard was downsized from up to 12 pounds to 3 to 7 pounds in size.

The first known Broken-Haired Scotch Terrier was Huddersfield Ben, Registration # 3612 and lived from 1865-1871.  "Ben" is considered the foundation dog for the later recognized Yorkshire Terrier and produced many outstanding offspring in his too-short lifetime.  Ben was shown in Manchester in 1869.  Ben died on September 23, 1871 at the wheels of a buggy.  He was sired by "Old Bouncer" and his dam was "Lady".  Ben was bred by Mr. W. Eastwood of Huddeersfield and owned by a Bradford woman by the name of Mrs. M.A. Fowler.  Ben won over 70 shows and was also a champion on the rat-catching scale as well.

The earliest record of a Yorkshire Terrier born in the United States was in 1872 being a dog called Jack bred by J. Marriot and sired by Havelock Ex Jessie.  

In the early years as far back as 1872 they were shown in two classes being "over 5 pounds" and "not exceeding 5 pounds".  The original breed standard was for the dogs to be allowed to weigh up to 12 pounds.  

The first Yorkshire Terrier shown at Westminster was in 1878.

The first Yorkshire Terrier club formed in the UK was in 1898.

The first French Yorkshire Terrier Club was formed in 1953.  

The Yorkshire Terrier was recognized by UKC - United Kennel Club in 1956.

The Yorkshire Terrier Club of America was accepted in 1958 as the parent club for AKC.      

The Yorkshire Terrier was not on the top of the popularity breed chart until the 1960's.  It was during this time that the Yorkshire Terrier became widely recognized and show enthusiast and breed clubs took interest and formed.  It was also at this time that the 12 pound and under Yorkshire Terrier was at it's best in health and physical abilities.

AKC has said that the first Yorkshire Terrier made it's first appearance at a bench show in England in 1861 known as "broken-haired Scotch Terrier" .   Since the breed was first recognized as "broken-haired Scotch Terrier" we are led to believe that the Scott's did indeed have a hand in it's development.  

The Biewer Yorkie originated in Germany in 1984 and was a belted/banded genetic recessive gene occurrence exhibiting a specific banded/stripped offspring reportedly produced by Gertrud and Werner Biewer's Yorkshire Terriers.   The sire and dam of the first recognized Biewer Yorkie were reportedly "Darling of Friedheck" and "Frufru of Friedheck" .  

The Biewer's saw this little dog with it's white markings as extraordinarily attractive and began the selective breeding process to produce more.  The Biewer's named these little dogs with their white base coat "Biewer Yorkshire a la Pom Pon".   Thus the beginning of the Biewer Yorkies as we know them today.

The first German Biewer Yorkshire club was established on May 24, 2003.

The Biewer Yorkie was recognized as a breed unto itself  long before this date though when the general public recognized it unofficially as a breed.

The Biewer Yorkshire is bred, registered and shown in other countries and is on the top of the popularity list for the United States.  Few registries in the United States as this date have acknowledge the Biewer Yorkshire as a breed.  The American Canine Registry is one of the few and the first United States known registry that does recognize the Biewer as a breed and is helping to promote the breed in the United States and throughout the world by the breed name of "Biewer Yorkie".  The American Canine Registry formed the Biewer Yorkie Association on May 15, 2003 preparing to set in place breed standards and other club necessities and applied for recognition in 2004 to be the Biewer Breed Club for ACR. 

The Biewer was originally a banded/belted genetic recessive gene occurrence from 2 Yorkshire Terriers but unscrupulous breeders have tried to match the looks of the Biewer Yorkshire by crossing the Yorkshire Terrier and the Shih-Tzu.  The crossing will produce the parti/piebald white markings from the Shih-Tzu influence after the second generation but these crossbred dogs would take generations before they would produce the hair coat and the  facial features seen in the Biewer Yorkshire.  If the dog being presented to you as a Biewer Yorkshire has wavy and/or course hair, or the facial features or body style of the Shih-Tzu then it's highly unlikely that it is a TRUE purebred Biewer Yorkie.

The AKC registers what is a close anomaly to the Biewer as Tri-color Yorkshire Terriers but the markings of the Tri-color are not as  distinctive in pattern as the Biewer Yorkie bloodlines from Germany.  AKC however does not allow the showing of the Tri-color Yorkies and AKC's Yorkshire Terrier breed club's standards shows it as a disqualification and the clubs policies consider it unethical to reproduce the Tri-color Yorkies.

The Biewer Yorkie Association is the first and only known United States Biewer Yorkie Club that formed in order to promote, educate, document, register and propagate the Stripped/Banded patterned Yorkie in the United States by starting a foundation registry by which verifiable, pedigreed & purebred Yorkshire Terriers & Biewer Yorkies may be bred together to produce the Stripped/Banded Patterned Yorkies through F1-F2 crosses and their linage documented for the purpose of receiving full recognition through ACR.

It should be noted that the Scottish Terrier, the Skye Terrier, the Dandie Dinmont, the Cairn Terrier, and the West Highland White Terrier are all kissing cousins.  All of these breeds share the same beginnings. It should also be noted that as of to date all of the Stripped/Spotted/Banded bloodlines have been traced back to one kennel in England including those of German lineage.


 

HISTORY OF THE YORKSHIRE TERRIER

By: Nancy Anderson
This article may not be reproduced or used in any way by any other person.
copyright 2002 is solely owned by Nancy Anderson
The Yorkshire Terrier better known as "Yorkie" began it's development in the 1700's from a mixture of dogs that the Scottish immigrants brought over from Scotland when they migrated to York County around Glasgow in Northern England in their pursuit of work.  Those dogs known then as "Scotch Terriers", were actually members of the Clydesdale Terrier, the Skye Terrier and the Paisley Terrier breed of dog possessing long, silky coats and semi-erect ears.  Both of these breeds of dogs were known for their rat catching skills.  The Paisley Terrier and the Clydesdale Terrier both have seen become extinct. 

   The Paisley and the Clydesdale were bred with the English black/tan Toy Terrier, the Skye terrier and the Waterside Terrier in England to start the initial development of what we know today as the Yorkshire Terrier.  The Waterside Terrier was said to be a brown dog found along the water-front of England and is accredited for the Brown gene found in some bloodlines of Yorkshire Terriers existing today.  The Waterside Terrier developed into what we know today  as the Airdale.  The English black/tan is given credit for the distinctive pattern of the Yorkie as it is known today.

     If past accounts are to be believed the Yorkies golden head and legs were specifically bred for so as to be easily seen in the dark corners of the mine shafts where it was used to exterminate vermin.  The dogs of original decent were also more sturdy weighing in on the average of around 12 pounds in size.  It was however not unheard of to see some as heavy as 30 pounds.  The dogs bred today for their delicate features would of never withstood the harsh elements of the coal mines.  I'm sure many early breeders of the breed would be truly disgusted with the current status of development and declining health of their much beloved and healthy dogs.   Every Registry, Kennel Club, Breed Club and organization have their own set of standards, protocols, by-laws and constitutions but American Canine Registry better known as "ACR" are the only registry to my knowledge that has breed standards  based on the true preservation of the breed as it was intended by the forefathers of the breed.  The Yorkies of today are not being bred to be sturdy, healthy animals adaptable to a multitude of situations but are being bred as delicate lap dogs that can no longer even hold up under the ministrations of little hands.  The sizes averaged from 3 to 7 pounds by the mid-19th century when they started being kept and remade by the "Fancy" and shown in dog breed shows.

     The early developers of the Yorkshire Terrier called their little working dogs "broken-haired Scotch Terriers".   It was shown at bench shows in England under the breed name Broken-haired Scotch Terrier in 1861 and changed in 1874 to the breed name of Yorkshire Terrier..   The Kennel Club now known as American Kennel Club recognized them as Yorkshire Terriers in 1886.  Prior to 1886 The Kennel Club recognized them as 2 sizes  in separate weight categories in the Toy Terrier class.  They were shown as Yorkshire Terriers over 5 pound and Yorkshire Terriers not exceeding 5 pounds and.  The first French Yorkshire Terrier Club was formed in 1953.  The United Kennel Club recognized the Yorkshire Terrier in 1956.  The first Yorkshire Terriers were shown at Westminster in 1878 and were categorized as to weight of over 5 pounds and under 5 pounds.  There were 18 shown in the over 5 pound class and 15 in the under 5 pound class.

 
The first Yorkshire Terrier on record in the United States is Huddersfield Ben out of a mating of Old Crab and Old Kitty in 1850.  Ben is accredited as the founding sire of the Yorkshire Terrier in America.  He was killed in the prime of his life when he was ran over by a carriage in XXXX.  Ben's grandson "Ted" in 1883 is said to of weighed in at 4.5 pounds, measuring 9 inches tall and 17 inches long.

 

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