Was this the greatest dog of all time?

King, the dog, is enjoying a steak, well-done,
at Sardi’s, the famous theatre district

restaurant in New York.

He deserves it, because he just won Best in
Show at the 143rd Westminster Kennel Club

dog show, in 2019.

Then he tried to eat a microphone.

King is at the end of the long list of terriers
to win Best in Show at Westminster.

But King, as wonderful as he is, will almost
certainly not do what this dog did.

This is the only dog to win Best in Show at
Westminster 3 times in a row.

That’s a 3-peat!

How did she do it?

And was she really the greatest dog of all
time?

The answer involves a breed, a socialite,
and the short life of a legend named Warren

Remedy.

This is not a steak.

This is a rat.

Terriers made their reputation as ratcatchers.

First bred in the British isles, the smooth
terrier and wire fox terrier’ crossed over

to America.

Warren Remedy was a smooth fox terrier while
King is a wire fox terrier.

The dogs don’t just share a Best in Show
title, but also a common fox terrier heritage.

With just a few exceptions, the American smooth
fox terrier started off in the 1880s in “the

oldest of our great kennels,” Warren Kennels,
the one started by Winthrop Rutherfurd.

Rutherfurd was a wealthy Manhattan socialite
- he dated a Vanderbilt before marrying a

Vice-President’s daughter.

He was also really into terriers.

Rutherfurd was president of the American Fox
Terrier club, funding it and working to boost

the breed’s clout.

And he raised them at his estate in Allamuchy,
New Jersey.

(Phone Rings)
“Allamuchy Township Tax and Animal Licensing

office.”

Hi, uh, what county are you in?

“Warren County.”

That’s why his kennels were called Warren
Kennels.

“Ohhh….what kennels?”

So that is where Warren Remedy got her name.

All the Warren Kennel dogs were Warren...something.

And all that stuff sets the stage for the
confluence of events that would make her not

just a dog, but an icon.

Let’s go back to King.

King didn’t win just for being the best
dog.

He won according to the standards used by
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show judges — standards

of what an ideal wire fox terrier is.

“He has small, v-shaped ears of moderate
thickness,

A flat topline of the skull,
A coat with dense wiry texture,

(dense reading of rules).”

It’s not just an awesome dog, but the dog
that best exemplifies the breed.

Winthrop Rutherfurd helped write the standards
for the smooth fox terrier for his club, and

Westminster.

The Westminster Kennel Club started shows
in 1877, just a few years before Rutherfurd’s

Warren Kennel started.

It didn’t have Best in Show — a competition
between breeds — until 1907.

By then, Rutherfurd was a member of the Westminster
Bench Show Committee, and guaranteed prize

money for the smooth and wire fox terrier
categories.

He ran one of the two top smooth fox terrier
kennels in the country.

Other dogs were measured by the type he’d
established.

His dog Warren Remedy won shows around the
country.

The judges called her the “sprightly clean
limbed little miss”, and raved that she

was truest to type.

But is it any wonder that she won Westminster
specifically again, and again, and again?

The surprise isn’t that she won three times.

It’s that she lost a fourth time to the
other big fox terrier breeder out of Texas,

Sabine Kennels.

Even though Sabine beat Warren Remedy, it
wasn’t really a loss for the Rutherfurd

type.

A dog from the Sabine Kennel sired Warren
Remedy — he was her dad.

So what do we do with Warren Remedy?

Was she really the greatest dog of all time?

After the reign of the smooth terrier, wire-fox
terriers became cooler, all the way up to

King in 2019.

A smooth fox terrier never won after 1910.

Regulations also got stricter in 1924.

There have been a couple of repeat winners
since, but no three-timers, and no two-timers

since 1972.

That’s over.

Before that, even an elite dog like Warren
Remedy had a window.

A 20 year smooth fox terrier trend.

A short 7 year life.

And 3 years as Best in Show.

In 1906, she needed a little size yet, but
had time.

By 1909, even when she was queen of all dogs
at Westminster, Sabine Kennel dogs were winning

other competitions across the country.

But for a couple years, she had the glory.

She endorsed Spratt’s Dog Cakes.

She earned all those front page headlines.

Maybe those three wins, maybe they were about
socialites, and structure, and trends.

Maybe she wasn’t the greatest dog of all
time.

But the window’s small for every dog.

Maybe they’re all the greatest, for a moment.

Maybe all the dogs deserve one night when
they get the steak.

So maybe you’re curious when the terrier
reign over Best in Show finally ended, and

it didn’t happen until 1913 when a bulldog
— this big boy, named Strathtay Prince Albert

— managed to pull off the victory.

No comments:

Post a Comment