Red Angus
Red Angus Beef Cattle Information and Resources.
In America the Red Angus beef cattle are registered and recorded in a herd
book by the Red Angus Association of America. A visit to their web site will convince you that the Red Angus breed
is one of the more progressive breeds in America.
Below are a few excerps from the OSU information:
Seven innovative breeders chose to use Red Angus in 1954 to establish the industry’s first
performance registry. Throughout its history, the Red Angus Association of America has gone on to make all the
tough choices, and all the right choices. In recent years, the Red Angus breed has attained a high level of
popularity from commercial cattlemen, and for all the right reasons.
The Origin of "Angus"
Like most modern American beef breeds, the Red Angus breed had its beginning in Europe. In
the eighth-century, according to some authorities, hardy Norsemen raiding the coasts of England and Scotland
brought with them a small, dun-colored hornless cattle which interbred with black native Celtic cattle of inland
Scotland, which had upright horns. A naturally polled black breed was produced, which roughly corresponded to the
black Aberdeen Angus of today, although it was a considerably smaller-bodied animal. The polled characteristic was
very slow to spread inland, and for almost a thousand years was confined principally to the coastal areas of
England and Scotland.
Eric L.C. Pentecost, the noted English breeder of Red Angus cattle, offers
a specific and logical explanation for the introduction of the red coloration into the Aberdeen Angus breed. In the
eighteenth century, the black Scottish cattle were too light to provide sufficiently large draught oxen, so larger
English longhorns, predominantly red in color, were brought in and crossed with the black native polled breed. The
resultant offspring were all black polled animals, since black is a dominant color, and red a recessive one.
However, all carried the red gene. Subsequent interbreeding produced an average of one red calf in four, in
accordance with Mendel’s law of heredity.
Angus -Red or Black
Early in the development of the Aberdeen Angus, Hugh Watson of Keillor, Scotland
arbitrarily decided that black was the proper color for the breed, and thereby started a fashion. He might well
have chosen red instead. Leon J. Cole and Sara V. H. Jones of the University of Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment
Station published a pamphlet in 1920 on "The Occurrence of Red Calves in Black Breeds of Cattle" which contained
this pertinent paragraph:
"One more point should be emphasized, namely that the red individuals appearing
in such stock (Aberdeen Angus)...are just as truly 'purebred' as their black relatives, and there is no reason why,
in all respects save color, they should not be fully as valuable. The fact that they are discarded while the blacks
are retained is simply due to the turn of fortune that black rather than red became established fashion for the
Aberdeen Angus breed. Had red been the chosen color, there would never have been any trouble with the appearance of
blacks as off-color individuals, since red-to-red breeds true."
The preceding paragraph, written more than three decades prior to the
establishment of the Red Angus Association of America, shows a true appreciation of the basic strengths of the
reds. This is emphasized by the current revival and popularity of the red strain of Aberdeen Angus throughout the
world.
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