The Boxer Dog Who Cheated
Death and Became a Television Star Instead
In 1985, a white boxer dog called Bomber was
snatched from a vet’s surgery by an animal nurse and later appeared
in the UK television series, Oliver Twist. It appears the
dog’s previous owners, Tony and Elaine Chapell, decided to put the
dog to sleep when they learned he didn’t quite fit new Kennel Club
standards for his breed! In filming he was made to look flea
bitten, dirty and covered in sores. Bomber even had a dressing
room all to himself and was congratulated on giving a superb
performance. Well done Bomber, and shame on those who gave up
on him!
A Boxer Dog With His Own
Fan Club
A boxer dog called George was used in media
advertisements in the early 1990s and became so well known that he
eventually had a fan club all to himself. George’s strange
expressions appeared in ads. for Coleman’s Mustard and eventually
the dog became a household name and even made guest appearances at
public functions and schools.
The Boxer Dog With The
Longest T-o-n-g-u-e!
A boxer dog called Brandy featured on Ripley’s
Believe It Or Not due to her incredible 17 inch long tongue!
Brandy, from Michigan, USA, was bought from a local breeder in 1995
and her new owner was assured the dog would eventually grow into her
l-o-n-g t-o-n-g-u-e! She didn’t and on television
she was shown performing antics such as eating from a bowl 13 inches
away. Her owner, John Scheid, says brandy likes sunbathing and
even gets tan lines on her tongue, but says the beautiful boxer is
fit, happy and healthy, so her unique feature isn’t a problem at
all. She even has her own web site at: www.tungdog.com
Zoe, The Boxer Dog Who Came
Back to Life!
Zoe’s owner, Cathy Walker, from Manuden, near
Bishop’s Stortford in the UK, has been told by a medium that she is
surrounded by all the pets she has lost. That certainly seems
true of Zoe, a tan and white boxer bitch who died several years ago,
aged eleven. The Daily Mail (November 6th 2001) printed
an amazing photograph of the bark of a tree under which Zoe spent
her last day, showing what can only be described as the image of a
boxer dog in the bark. Cathy tells how she is a great believer in
life after death and claims the image of Zoe has strengthened that
belief.
The White Boxer Dog Who
Received Hate Mail
To anyone who loves dogs in general, and Boxer dogs
in particular, Solo was as beautiful as any other of her breed.
To her owner, Joyce Lang, she was more than just beautiful, she was
a constant friend, a much loved family member. But not
everyone thought the same way and, surprisingly, in 1982, in Burgess
Hill in the UK, an anonymous letter arrived addressed to Solo,
saying: “I think you are the ugliest dog I have ever seen.”
What sort of human could write such nonsense is beyond most people’s
comprehension, and probably the letter was intended mainly to upset
Joyce, an objective the hateful writer most definitely achieved.
Letters continued to come saying: “Why don’t you get your master or
mistress to take you for a face lift?”. One even contained a
paper bag which the sender said should be placed over Solo’s head!
When local newspapers heard the story the headlines proclaimed that
beauty is always in the eye of the beholder and in Joyce’s and other
dog lover’s eyes, Solo was beautiful.
A Little Boy’s Tribute to
His Pet Boxer, Lance
This story appeared in The Faithful Friend
(Writings About Owning and Loving Pets) and concerned dog owners
in the United States who often loaned their pets to the military in
World War Two. Lance, a Boxer, worked with Dogs for Defence
which eventually became the noted K09 Corps, and belonged to a
family with young children, one a boy who wrote this letter to Dogs
for Defence: ‘My Boxer, Lance, was in the army since last
June. I have not heard anything about him since I received a
certificate from the Quartermaster General. The number on it
was 11281. I love Lance very much and want to know if he is
doing anything brave. Can you please tell me where he is and
what kind of a job he does? Please answer soon because I can’t
wait much longer to know what has become of him’.
Origins of the Boxer Dog
What we know about the origins of most breeds,
including the Boxer, is largely owed to early sculptures, painting
and drawings. In the Boxer’s case, a carving of a
dog looking much like a boxer can be seen on a tomb in Arnstadt
where lies Elizabeth of Hohenstein who died in 1368. Flemish
tapestries from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries show dogs
resembling the Boxer engaged in stag- and boar-hunting.
German Origins
Boxer dogs became very popular in Munich where
the breed is thought to have originated. But the history of
the breed has not been without controversy. In fact the first
Boxer Club in the UK was closed because of disagreements over almost
everything pertaining to Boxers. By 1905, however, the most
enthusiastic followers of the German Boxer met to develop a standard
for the Boxer which would be accepted by all. The Munich Boxer
Club drew up the standard which exists largely unchanged even today.
Boxer Dogs in America
The first Boxer dog in America was imported in
1903 from Switzerland. The new owner of the dog was New York
Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals, Irving Lehman who imported
many other Boxer dogs. The first Boxer dog registered with the
American Kennel Club was in 1904. The dog was Arnulf Grandenz,
bred in America by James Welch of Illinois.
Boxer Dogs in Warring
Nations
The boxer dog gained rapid popularity soon after
the Second World War ended, ironically more prominently in countries
formerly opposed in war with the Boxer’s most likely native home,
Germany. Listen to what Rowland Johns says in Our Friend
The Boxer: ‘The re-emergence of the Boxer breed has added
proof that warring nations do not carry their antagonisms for long
into the relations between them and other nations’ dogs. Both
with the Alsatian and the Boxer their popularity derives directly
from the contacts made during a state of war. In those two
wars the adoption of both breeds by members of the British forces
provided some personal satisfaction and uplift of the spirit in long
periods of exile from home, family, and friends.’
All
articles provided in good faith and to the best of our writing
abilities.