Yorkshire Terrier
The Yorkshire Terrier is a compact, toy-size terrier of no more than seven pounds whose crowning glory is a floor-length, silky coat of steel blue and a rich golden tan.
Don’t let the Yorkshire Terrier’s daintiness fool you. Tenacious, feisty, brave, and sometimes bossy, the Yorkshire Terrier exhibits all the traits of a true terrier. Often named the most popular dog breed in various American
cities, Yorkshire Terriers pack lots of big-town attitude into a small but self-important package. They are favorites of urbanites the world over.
Yorkshire Terriers are long-lived and hypoallergenic (the coat is more like human hair than animal fur), and they make fine little watchdogs. This is a true “personality breed,” providing years of laughs, love, and close
companionship.
History
The Yorkshire Terrier was developed during the mid-1800s in the northern English counties of Yorkshire and Lancashire. It became a fashionable lapdog for proper English ladies in late Victorian times, but its beginnings were distinctly working-class.
The breed is said to be the creation of weavers from Scotland who migrated to the English north country and brought their Scottish terriers with them.
Several breeds of now-extinct Scottish terriers are a part of the Yorkie’s genetic mix, along with such still-extant terriers as the Skye and Dandie Dinmont. One historical source suggests the addition of Maltese blood.
The Scots weavers were proud of their tough little terriers, bred small enough to squeeze into the nooks and crannies of textile mills in pursuit of rodents. Jokes were made about the Yorkshire Terrier’s long, silky coat,
inferring that its finely textured hair was a product of the looms. The Yorkshire Terrier’s home region was a center of mining as well as textile making, and many Yorkies were employed in coal mines as exterminators.
The turning point in breed history came in 1886, when the Kennel Club (England) granted the Yorkshire Terrier recognition. With this splash of publicity, the Yorkshire Terrier became fashionable as a ladies’ companion.
And, as the Yorkshire Terrier’s popularity among the fashionable increased, its size decreased to better meet its new job description: adorable, amusing companion sitting in the lap of luxury.
Yorkshire Terriers were first seen in America in the 1870s, and the AKC recorded its first Yorkie, a female named Belle, in 1885.
Reference: www.akc.org
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