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Belgian
Brief History of the Breed
The Belgian, as the name implies, is native
to the country of Belgium. This little country
is blessed with a fertile soil and abundant
rainfall providing the thrifty farmers of
Belgium with the excellent pastures and the
hay and grain necessary to develop a heavy,
powerful breed of horse.
Belgium lies in the very center of that area
of western Europe which gave rise to the
large black horses known as Flemish horses
and were referred to as the "great horses"
by medieval writers. They are the horses
that carried armored knights into battle.
Such horses were known to exist in that part
of Europe in the time of Caesar. They provided
the genetic material from which nearly all
the modern draft breeds were fashioned.
Stallions from Belgium were exported to many
other parts of Europe as the need to produce
larger animals of draft type for industrial
and farm use was recognized. There was no
need to import into Belgium for she was the
"mother lode." It remained only
for this ancestral home of the "great
horse," by whatever name, to refine
and fix the type of the genetic material
she already had at hand.
The government of Belgium played a very energetic
role in doing just that. A system of district
shows culminating in the great National Show
in Brussels, which served as an international
showcase for the breed, was established.
The prizes were generous. Inspection committees
for stallions standing for public service
were established.
The result was a rapid improvement into a
fixed breed type as the draft horses of Belgium
came to be regarded as both a national heritage
and, quite literally, a treasure. In 1891,
for example, Belgium exported Stallions for
use in the government stables of Russia,
Italy, Germany, France, and the old Austria-Hungary
empire. The movement of horses out of Belgium
for breeding purposes was tremendous in scope
and financially rewarding for her breeders
decade after decade.
The American Association was officially founded
in February of 1887 in Wabash, Indiana. The
breed offices are still in Wabash. It was
slow going for the Belgian until after the
turn of the century. In terms of promotion
the Percheron, Clydesdale, and Shire all
enjoyed a substantial head start in this
country.
In 1903 the government of Belgium sent an
exhibit of horses to the St. Louis World
Fair and the International Livestock Exposition
in Chicago. While this effort was attended
by plenty of controversy over which type
of horse best suited Americans, it also generated
great deal of interest in the breed.
From that point forward the breed's acceptance
grew steadily. The year 1910 shows a total
of 1773 registrations with virtually every
major importer in the country including Belgians
in his offering. That figure was closely
approached again in 1913. New memberships
which ranged from 4 to 25 in the early years
of the century took off dramatically in 1910
with 83 new members, 92 in 1911, 125 in 1912
, and 135 in 1913. In terms of importing
seed stock and establishing new breeders,
it was none too soon, for the onset of World
War I in 1914 brought all importations to
a complete halt.
Suddenly, American Belgian breeders were
on their own. Fortunately, they had plenty
of the "right kind" with which
to develop their own style of Belgian horse.
The post war depression in agriculture retarded
the purebred Belgian business in this country
for a few years but by 1925 the total of
annual registrations again passed the 1,000
mark. A record high for the pre-World War
II period was hit in 1937, the golden anniversary
of the association, when 3196 Belgians were
recorded.
It was during this draft horse decline in
the 20's that the Belgian moved into a very
solid number two position in this country.
During the 20's and early 30's the Belgian
decline was much less than the other breeds.
Thus the percentage of draft horses that
were Belgian grew dramatically during this
period. The Belgian prospered while the other
breeds either stood still or went backwards.
Thus, it should not be surprising to know
that during the 20's there was a resumption
of importing from Belgium on a small scale.
With the dramatic upturn in draft horse fortunes
in the mid-30's, the importation of horses
from Belgium again assumed major proportions
for a few years. In fact, the last importation
was landed in New York by E. F. Dygert, Iowa
importer, on January 15, 1940, four months
after war had started and four months before
the German invasion of Belgium.
It was about that time that a number of things
conspired to very nearly put an end to draft
horse breeding of any kind. The labor shortage
of World War II, the introduction of small,
rubber-tired row-crop tractors, and the tremendous
push for mechanization in the wake of World
War II put all draft breeds under severe
pressure. The decline of interest in draft
horse breeding was precipitous, obituary
notices were a dime a dozen. The number of
annual registrations even dropped under the
200 mark for a couple of years during the
early 50's. The other breeds were in even
worse shape, a couple of them even closed
up shop for a few years.
Then slowly, almost imperceptibly at first,
the return of the draft horse got underway.
As the price of horses recovered so did the
breeding. Registrations and transfers made
slow but steady gains until in 1980 they
surpassed the previous high set in 1937.
The average for 1981-85 was 4056 registrations
and 5920 transfers ... easily the greatest
five year period in the breed's history.
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