History Of Brown Red Gamefowl

Older, sometimes famous fowl which are at risk of extinction - with loss of valuable genetics. About DanBar Ranch Heritage Fowl Many years ago, as an animal control officer, I was involved in a local 'cock fight bust' that resulted in the death of hundreds of healthy, friendly birds which the sheriff's office 'rescued'. Red Fox Farm A first-class gamefowl farm, originated by Harold Brown in 1938. Supplying gamefowl to customers around the world; Hatch, Grey, Roundhead, Claret, and Butcher. A third generation gamefowl farm, breeding gamefowl since 1938.

BROWN RED

History Of Brown Red GamefowlHistory of brown red gamefowl pictures

SPEED AND QUICKNESS KILLS

Brown

History Of Wingate Brown Red Gamefowl

Bloodline History

Wingate Brown Reds

Joe Wingate brought over from Northern Ireland a pure strain of chickens in 1870 into his Alabama farm. These birds were mostly brown red in breast and feather color, with some showing ginger colors, but all showing dark legs and hazel eyes. The hens in particular were sharp and stylish looking, all of them dark brown or ginger and some showing straw neck feathers. The stock were medium stationed and many grew spurs.
One of the Irish hens among his brood was Joe`s personal choice and he even had the chicken set up and mounted when she died as a memento of her best breeding days. This stuffed and preserved progenitus of the Brown Red bloodline is still on display but it looks nothing like the modern generation hens of the Wingate bloodline of Brown Reds. The cocks of this family were not big cocks weighing in at 5.4 lbs. or under. Joe Wingate made the effort to improve the bloodline by crossing with an English hen, mahogany colored and with dark legs, then line breeding to the original line to keep the stock intact and with new vigor. The line from this mix was brown feathered or ginger red breasted, had dark legs and hazel eyes like the original Irish gamefowl he shipped in. They were broad backed and not heavy, though strong boned.
These fighters were quick off the drop, fast and strong in the mix-up; with the cocks just rushing at their enemy with wild cutting attacks that don’t stop. They break for defense, but don’t fly high.
The line breeding with the English hen made for heavier fighters, around 6.2 lbs. Then, to further enhance the Wingate stock, Mister Holly Chappell from Alabama, took a winning fighter from one of his trips to the South and brought it back home to breed with hens that were north Britain and brown red crosses. Friends with Joe Wingate, he lent Joe one cock from the cross and this was bred to a Brown Red hen from the mahogany chicken cross. After reducing the new cross a bit, Wingate bred the Chappell experiment into his own Irish stock. The final offspring becoming the beloved Wingate Brown Red speed slasher we all know and love. Joe Wingate passed on in 1924 and left behind a broodfowl that many cockers still treasure as a pure bred stock as well as a base for breeding a better gamefowl.

History Of Brown Red GamefowlHistory Of Brown Red Gamefowl

Phenotype

The colour brown-red , just as black-red comes from the English pit description of fowl to be fought in the pit. Breast colour always is first named as it is not trimmed in any fashion. So the literal description of a brown-red is a brown breasted fowl with a red top.

Favorable Crossing Matches

Because the Brown Red is already fast and pugnacious, crossing with a quarter of Hatch, Asil or Jap, gives them added power hitting, endurance, and the wits to fight drag fights against superior opponents.
– See more at: http://www.reach-unlimited.com/p/1369332765/brown-red–speed-and-quickness-kills#sthash.3Ej8Ryqa.dpuf

History Of Brown Red Gamefowl Birds

About the beginning of the century John Hoy of Albany obtained possession of the fowl of Billy Lawman (relative of the Lawman in England). Morgan and Hoy exchanged brood fowl freely and as the fowl were identical in general make-up and characteristics the offspring bred on as the pure strain. Morgan bred the lawman cock when reduced to one quarter in his favorite pens at the time of his death there was a small percentage of this blood in most of his fowl. In the early nineties Morgan gave a small pen of his fowl to a Col. in Virginia. The Col. inbred the fowl and on his death they fell into the hands of a professor at Georgetown university, who knew nothing about breeding or cock fighting. He kept the family pure breeding his favorite cock to the whole flock of hens. When he died the fowl were still inbred in NJ. Neither the family Morgan bred or the family that had been inbred had changed appearance or quality in twenty-five years. Although kept absolutely apart bred together the young cannot be told from the parents on either side except that they are larger and stronger that the offshoot family.