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    Hoyden R.

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    Posts posted by Hoyden R.

    1. I think out of all of the Sr Military colleges in the US, Norvich and VMI have the largest rings. Citadel and Texas AM have very similar rings. Virgina Tech; don't anything about. Is Norwich Free Academy the same as Norwich (Military)? If I am not mistaken, alumni get a Gold Ring with a stone in it and a "Combat Ring" that is Silver with no stones right?

      Norwich Free Academy is a "private" high school in Norwich, CT that pre-dates the American Civil War. It has an Art Museum, Planetarium and Observatory on Campus. For me the big draw was the language program, I was able to take Italian 3, French 3, Latin 2 and Russian 1 all at the same time. I loved it.

      Norwich University indeed has some HUGE class rings. I was actually accepted into the Military College of Vermont, went up to spend four days with others who were accepted after getting into the Naval Academy as an alternate. Unfortunately, I did not attend either to my great regret.

    2. If I go back into Advertising & marketing, I will keep you in mind.

      I let Paul know you'll get to his picture soon. He's been super busy with studying and getting us ready to move.

    3. Absolutely stunning arrangement of that collection. Your fiance did a good job. I especially appreciate the inclusion of Saint Nicholas and Saint Serafim Sarovski into the frame. (On a side note, I was very pleased that I could read and understand a good deal of the Russian, I've been working on it.)

      I find it very interesting that the clubs have created such beautiful commemorative pins to memorialize the KYPCK while the government has not issued any.

    4. Wow! Paul R asked me if I had seen this topic and it was hard to imagine this done with a pencil and color pencils.

      From the standpoint of someone who used to create print ads, billboards, TV commercials & other adverts, your talent surpasses that of many of the artists we paid a pretty penny to to draw components of our print ads. Really.

    5. Welcome to the forum!

      Most, if not all of the dogs shown in the photos thus far are pets or mascots and not real "working" dogs. Is your interest in dogs kept by the soldiers as pets or in trained duty canines?

      Chip

      Both!

      I have pets, military mascots and working dogs. Usually, what catches my eye and prompts me to buy pictures is the relationship between the dog and it's handler.

    6. Hi Noel, welcome to the forum.

      Ive had alot of dog pics in my time of collecting and i sold them all to a fellow collector named john perryman he is a avid dog photo collector like yourself and he is trying to get a book done on the dogs of war in ww2 in german photos.

      i know ive sold over 200+ pics to him over the years. he lives in southern calif.

      anyway here are a few of my ww1 postcards with dogs.

      enjoy

      joe

      Hi Joe,

      Thank you for the photos. Before I met my husband, I was only collecting photos in which I could see the dog collars in as I make dog collars and I am very very knowledgeable about them due to my endless research on them. I can date paintings and photographs by the dog collars on the dogs. I've been told that next to the curator of the Dog Collar Museum at Leeds Castle in England, I am the most knowledgeable person on the subject.

      I'd love to be put into contact with John. I'd share my photos with him if they would be of use to him. I am currently editing hundreds of pictures for Col. Scott Pritchett's next book or I would offer to help him with his dog book.

      My husband introduced me to another dog picture and document collector whom my friends have enviously dubbed my "Canadian Dog Father" (a pun on Fairy God Mother) who has broadened my collecting horizons quite a bit. Of course, my husband has encouraged and enabled my collecting. :-)

    7. Cool. I understand that most of the dogs had Military documents that included their lineage- some going back to Frederick the Greats' era.

      Frederick the Great died in 1786, so it is not likely that our modern working dogs had their lineage traced back to his time. In that time period, breeders were just beginning to breed like to like to form specific breeds. Earlier dog breeders tended to breed the best dog for the job to the best female dog for the job in hopes of producing more dogs that could do that job at hand.

      The German Shepherd breed had it's beginnings in the mid to late 1800's depending on which source you check. The earliest club to record the lineage of the dogs that still exists today is The Verein fur Deutche Schaferhunde which was founded in 1899 after the demise of the Phylax Society in 1894. The Bunderssieger Zuchtschau has been held every year since 1899 with dogs entering from all around the world. If you click the link and have a look, you can see the great difference between the early German Shepherd dogs and the modern abominations with spinal deformities. It is truly heartbreaking to see.

      Another working breed used by the Germans are the Airedale terriers, which where bred in the later part of the 1800's by crossing a Black & Tan Terrier (Welsh Terrier) to an Otterhound with some Bull and Terrier thrown in for good measure.

      The Doberman breed was developed around 1890 by Karl Friedrich Louis Dobermann to protect him as he was the Tax Collector and needed protection from bandits and the like.

    8. As much as I love working dogs, I love seeing canine unit mascots too.

      I found this gem at the Bay Area Militaria show and just HAD to have it. It has a pit bull dog as the unit mascot for this WWI Staff Officer photo. The picture has Armory penciled on it.

      I'll be adding more to this thread as I scan pictures.

    9. Why do I imagine him guarding the back door to the butcher shop?

      Nice photo, thank you for sharing.

      Do you feel the depiction on this pin is the same ?

      --dj--Joe

      That is a BEAUTIFUL pin! Where did you find it? I make leather dog collars, I love that border!!

      Yes. That is the same breed of dog. The dog that I posted does not have as much flews (the floppy jowls hanging from the top of the mouth) as the one in your pin, but it is indeed the same dog breed.

      Danes were not commonly the butcher or the midden dogs. Those were typically smaller bulldog or mixed type dogs. I have a good deal of documentation about them as they are progenitor of the pit bull terrier breed, my heart breed of dog. The butcher or midden dogs can be traced back to the middle ages accurately.

      As to guarding the back door, that would be something that this dog would do. They are a guardian breed.

    10. Now that is one powerful looking dog!

      Yes! It most certainly was a powerful dog. It was used for hunting boar and as a guard dog. There are some really awesome paintings in several museums of Danes. They were ofter referred to as the the "Danish Hunting Hound" in older manuscripts.

      That is a great photo. I wonder if the dog was really that big or if the people were that small?

      Yep. He is THAT big. Think indoor pony big, probably 36 - 40 inches at the withers/shoulders.

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