The relentless quest by the British gentry during the 19th century for the perfect hunting dog led to the development of most of today’s retrievers and hunting dogs. On his Scottish estate, Guisachan, Sir Dudley Marjoribanks, the first Lord Tweedmouth, aspired to create a breed of dog to retrieve waterfowl that was more powerful than previous retrievers whilst retaining their gentle, easily trained nature.
The Russian Myth
According to legend, the yellow retrievers at Guisachan originated from a troupe of Russian circus dogs purchased at Brighton and taken back to the estate. This tale was accepted as fact for many years until in 1952, the sixth Earl of Ilchester published his research into his great uncle Lord Tweedmouth's kennel record book in “Country Life”. Meticulously kept from 1835 to 1890 these records showed the true facts of the origin of the Golden Retriever.
The First Golden Retrievers
In 1865 Lord Tweedmouth purchased his first yellow retriever at Brighton, a dog named Nous, bred by the Earl of Chichester. Nous was the only yellow puppy in an unregistered litter of black Wavy-coated retrievers. In 1867 he was given a Tweed Water Spaniel, Belle, by his cousin Mr David Robertson, MP of Ladykirk on the Tweed. Nous and Belle produced three yellow puppies in 1868 at Guisachan, named Crocus, Primrose and Cowslip. These were the foundation of the Golden Retriever as a breed. From this litter, Lord Tweedmouth kept the two bitches Cowslip and Primrose at Guisachan. The only dog, Crocus, was given to the second Lord Tweedmouth, then the Hon Edward Marjoribanks. A repeat mating in 1972 produced another yellow puppy, Ada who was given to the fifth Earl of Ilchester and founded the Ilchester strain, in which black crosses were often used. Lord Tweedmouth consistently line-bred his strain of yellow retrievers back to this original mating, though he occasionally resorted to an outcross.
During the period from the first recorded mating in 1868 to the last in 1889 some of the puppies bred were kept and others were given to keepers on neighbouring estates or given to friends and relatives in England and Scotland. No records of the dogs bred at Guisachan were kept after the death of the first Lord Tweedmouth and this left a gap in the knowledge of the breed between 1890 and 1901, when the first pedigrees were kept. However through the research of Elma Stonex (former Chairman of the Golden Retriever Club UK), positive links have been established with the ancestors of present day Goldens and the dogs Lord Tweedmouth thoughtfully bred at Guisachan between 1835 and 1889. The roots of the breed lie in Scotland and the border country.
In 1911 in the UK a club for Yellow Retrievers was formed and in 1913 The Golden Retriever Club (UK) was officially recognised by the UK Kennel Club. The breed was given a separate register by the UK Kennel Club in 1913 – Retrievers (Golden or Yellow). The first champion in 1921 was Ch Noranby Campfire bred by Mrs Charlesworth, sired by Lord Harcourt’s dog Culham Copper ex Noranby Beauty. The first Dual Champion was Dual Ch Balcombe Boy, bred by Lord Harcourt from Culham Tip and Culham Amber II, who completed both his titles in 1922.
Australian Golden Retrievers
Although there is a report of a dog and bitch being bought to Australia in 1914, the first official registration of Golden Retrievers imported to Australia was in 1937 when the dog Grakle of Tone (Noranby General - Silence of Tone) and the bitch Temeraire (Stubbings Golden Hidalgo - Stubbings Golden Calypso) arrived from England. Temeraire was to become the first Golden Retriever KCC Champion, Grakle of Tone gaining his title soon after. The first Golden Retriever litter was from these imports, two dogs and two bitches who were registered on 26th December 1938. Grackle of Tone is thought to have died of distemper during the early years of the Second World War.