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Nettie Metcalf

Nettie Metcalf (née Williams; October 13, 1859 – 1945) was an American farmer from Warren, Ohio.[1] She is best known for creating the Buckeye chicken breed, which was officiated by the American Poultry Association in February 1905.[2] Metcalf attended poultry meetings across North America and became President of the American Buckeye Club. She is the only woman recorded by the American Poultry Association to create a chicken breed.[3][4][5][6]

Nettie Metcalf
Metcalf c. 1910s
Born
Nettie Williams

(1859-10-13)October 13, 1859
Died1945 (aged 85–86)
Known for

Personal life edit

Nettie Williams was born in Warren, Ohio in 1859. She was a descendant of William Williams, a Connecticut politician and Founding Father who signed the Declaration of Independence.[7]

On March 6, 1879, she married Francis "Frank" C. Metcalf.[7] They had three children.[citation needed]

Metcalf may have experienced occupational burnout as a result of the high demands for Buckeyes, leading to her move from Ohio to California. In 1917, she explained:

The demand created for this breed caused me, the originator, such strenuous work that I gave all my time to chickens entirely and tried to supply the demand for the Buckeyes until my health was breaking down...[8]

By 1917, she had moved to California with her husband.[8][9] Her husband died on November 17, 1929.[citation needed]

Buckeye chickens edit

Metcalf created the Buckeye chicken breed in the 1890s,[10][11][12] which she first named "Buckeye Reds."[13] She described them as having "a modified Cornish shape, with the very darkest of red plumage."[8]

Her goal was to create a practical breed that was able to survive harsh Ohio winters.[14][15]

Creation of breed edit

In 1879, she began housekeeping with a flock of Brown Leghorn chickens. However, she was dissatisfied with their temperament, stating they "scratched and destroyed more than their necks were worth, laid only in the spring, and hid their nests then in the most out-of-the-way places they could find."[8] When Metcalf would suggest slaughtering them, her husband would claim it was the wrong time of year, because according to Metcalf, "they were always scrawny and in poor condition."[8]

After reading poultry literature, she tried domesticating Black Langshans and Plymouth Barred Rocks for a profit. She then mixed the Barred Rocks with Buff Cochins to produce what she called "a big, lazy fowl."[8] Afterwards, she bought eggs from a breeder of B. B. Red Games, later speculating that his chickens were not purebred and mixed with Indian Game. That year's mating produced red birds, which were new to Ohio. She tried to reproduce the red birds and was "laughed at" presumably by neighbors for the attempt, but "determined to 'show folks' or die trying."[8] She worked in a 9 foot by 12 foot coop in her 100-acre farm.[8]

While attempting to replicate the red birds, Metcalf was concerned with the negative effects of inbreeding, and her surmises were proven correct when the four progenitors produced an irregular flock with "Green legs and feathered legs, buff chicks, black chicks, and even red and black barred chicks; single combs and pea combs, and no combs at all, but fighters from away back."[8]

Metcalf's neighbors were amused by the flock, but she claimed one neighbor "quit laughing and decided to help me out." However, the neighbor's husband, Van, "didn't want any of those Metcalf mongrels on the place."[8]

The neighbor's husband, Van, put a Barred Rock rooster on one side of a high fence and the buckeye game on the other and went in for tea and supper. When the neighbor expressed concern, her husband replied, "Let them fight; my big rooster will soon knock the spots off that little scamp." However, later in the day, they found the Barred Rock rooster dead with his eyes gouged out and the Buckeye on top. Van said, "Well, I swan" (a euphemism for "I swear").[16] Van went on to become a breeder of buckeyes.[8]

Rhode Island Reds edit

In the winter of 1896, Metcalf learned of the existence of Rhode Island Reds, which were bred during the second half of the 19th century. Realizing other farmers had also attempted to breed red chickens, Metcalf exchanged birds and eggs with East Coast breeders to discover that the Buckeyes were a darker mahogany color, and Buckeyes had single and pea combs as opposed to rose and single combs.[8][17]

 
Metcalf created the Buckeye breed in Warren, Ohio

Officiating breed edit

In 1902, Metcalf exhibited her breed at a poultry show in Cleveland, Ohio.[18][19] On August 24, 1903, the president and secretary of the American Poultry Association inspected the buckeye breed and advised Metcalf to continue breeding them, as it was a distinct breed from Rhode Island Reds.[8]

In 1904, she and her husband displayed the chickens at a poultry show in Rochester, New York.[8] Buckeyes were admitted as an American Poultry Association breed in February 1905.[8]

In 1907, she attended the American Poultry Association's first mid-summer meeting in Niagara Falls, which involved sending telegrams to other members.[20] The 1908 APA revision committee advised that Buckeye should be dropped from the standard, but this was voted down in Niagara, New York in 1909.[21]

Legacy edit

In 1909, the American Buckeye Club was established to preserve the Buckeye breed.[19] As of 2022, the website of the organization is accessible.[19]

The 2001 Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds mentions Nettie Metcalf and claims she created Buckeyes by crossing Cornish Games, Brahmas, and Black Breasted Gamefowl.[22]

In the early 21st century, the Shumaker Farm Buckeye Chickens website compiled images relevant to Nettie Metcalf's life and work.[23]

In 2003, the Buckeye breed became endangered, with less than 72 breeding birds on record. In 2005, the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy began a program to restore the breed as backyard birds.[10]

In 2013, Nettie Metcalf's life and chicken breed was the episode topic of agriculture podcast The Urban Chicken.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ McGrew, Thomas Fletcher (1912). The Book of Poultry: Standard-bred poultry. Standard-bred poultry management. Poultry judging. American fowls. Asiatic fowls. Belgian, Dutch and German fowls. International Textbook Company.
  2. ^ McGrew, Thomas Fletcher (1921). The Book of Poultry. Macmillan.
  3. ^ Urquhart, Kristina (November 10, 2015). The Suburban Chicken: The Guide to Keeping Happy, Healthy Chickens in Your Backyard. i5 Publishing. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-62008-197-6. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  4. ^ Hatchery, Sponsored by Melissahof (June 13, 2022). "Know how your eggs got laid?". Buckrail – Jackson Hole, news. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  5. ^ Sparling, Nina (September 7, 2016). "Protecting Disappearing Livestock Breeds". Food Tank. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  6. ^ "Why we should protect disappearing livestock breeds". Christian Science Monitor. September 8, 2016. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  7. ^ a b The American Atlas Company (1899). "Section "METCALF, FRANK C."". Atlas and Directory of Trumbull County, Ohio: Including a Directory of Freeholders and Official Register of the County. Unigraphic. p. 210.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Poultry Success. A. D. Hosterman Company. 1917.
  9. ^ American Poultry Advocate. Clarence C. Depuy. 1918.
  10. ^ a b Sullivan, Andrew. "Bringing buckeye chickens to Dryden". Ithaca Times. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  11. ^ Sullivan, Andrew. "Dryden Agway, local organizations donate buckeye chicks to T'burg youth". Ithaca Times. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  12. ^ Ekarius, Carol (July 18, 2016). Storey's Illustrated Guide to Poultry Breeds: Chickens, Ducks, Geese, Turkeys, Emus, Guinea Fowl, Ostriches, Partridges, Peafowl, Pheasants, Quails, Swans. Storey Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-61212-843-6.
  13. ^ "Heritage breed tied to a bit of Ohio history". Ohio Ag Net | Ohio's Country Journal. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  14. ^ Dan (January 31, 2022). "Best Chicken Breeds to Raise on the Homestead". Southeast AgNET. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  15. ^ Ussery, Harvey (October 7, 2011). The Small-Scale Poultry Flock: An All-Natural Approach to Raising Chickens and Other Fowl for Home and Market Growers. Chelsea Green Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60358-290-2.
  16. ^ Bartlett, John Russell (1860). A Glossary of Words & Phrases Usually Relating to the U.S. Little.
  17. ^ Heinrichs, Christine (May 15, 2016). The Backyard Field Guide to Chickens: Chicken Breeds for Your Home Flock. Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-4953-3.
  18. ^ John Campanelli, The Plain Dealer (November 22, 2010). "PDQ's guide to the buckeye, just in time for the OSU-Michigan game". cleveland. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c "Home Page". americanbuckeyeclub. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  20. ^ Poultry, Garden and Home. 1907. pp. 611, 618.
  21. ^ McGrew, Thomas Fletcher (1921). The Book of Poultry. Macmillan. p. 301.
  22. ^ Dohner, Janet Vorwald (January 1, 2001). The Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13813-9.
  23. ^ "Nettie Metcalf". SHUMAKER FARM LLC. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  24. ^ UCP Episode 002 – Buckeye Chickens & Nettie Metcalf, retrieved September 9, 2022

nettie, metcalf, née, williams, october, 1859, 1945, american, farmer, from, warren, ohio, best, known, creating, buckeye, chicken, breed, which, officiated, american, poultry, association, february, 1905, metcalf, attended, poultry, meetings, across, north, a. Nettie Metcalf nee Williams October 13 1859 1945 was an American farmer from Warren Ohio 1 She is best known for creating the Buckeye chicken breed which was officiated by the American Poultry Association in February 1905 2 Metcalf attended poultry meetings across North America and became President of the American Buckeye Club She is the only woman recorded by the American Poultry Association to create a chicken breed 3 4 5 6 Nettie MetcalfMetcalf c 1910sBornNettie Williams 1859 10 13 October 13 1859Warren Ohio U S Died1945 aged 85 86 Known forBreeding buckeye chickens President of American Buckeye Club Contents 1 Personal life 2 Buckeye chickens 2 1 Creation of breed 2 2 Rhode Island Reds 2 3 Officiating breed 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 ReferencesPersonal life editNettie Williams was born in Warren Ohio in 1859 She was a descendant of William Williams a Connecticut politician and Founding Father who signed the Declaration of Independence 7 On March 6 1879 she married Francis Frank C Metcalf 7 They had three children citation needed Metcalf may have experienced occupational burnout as a result of the high demands for Buckeyes leading to her move from Ohio to California In 1917 she explained The demand created for this breed caused me the originator such strenuous work that I gave all my time to chickens entirely and tried to supply the demand for the Buckeyes until my health was breaking down 8 By 1917 she had moved to California with her husband 8 9 Her husband died on November 17 1929 citation needed Buckeye chickens editMetcalf created the Buckeye chicken breed in the 1890s 10 11 12 which she first named Buckeye Reds 13 She described them as having a modified Cornish shape with the very darkest of red plumage 8 Her goal was to create a practical breed that was able to survive harsh Ohio winters 14 15 Creation of breed edit In 1879 she began housekeeping with a flock of Brown Leghorn chickens However she was dissatisfied with their temperament stating they scratched and destroyed more than their necks were worth laid only in the spring and hid their nests then in the most out of the way places they could find 8 When Metcalf would suggest slaughtering them her husband would claim it was the wrong time of year because according to Metcalf they were always scrawny and in poor condition 8 After reading poultry literature she tried domesticating Black Langshans and Plymouth Barred Rocks for a profit She then mixed the Barred Rocks with Buff Cochins to produce what she called a big lazy fowl 8 Afterwards she bought eggs from a breeder of B B Red Games later speculating that his chickens were not purebred and mixed with Indian Game That year s mating produced red birds which were new to Ohio She tried to reproduce the red birds and was laughed at presumably by neighbors for the attempt but determined to show folks or die trying 8 She worked in a 9 foot by 12 foot coop in her 100 acre farm 8 While attempting to replicate the red birds Metcalf was concerned with the negative effects of inbreeding and her surmises were proven correct when the four progenitors produced an irregular flock with Green legs and feathered legs buff chicks black chicks and even red and black barred chicks single combs and pea combs and no combs at all but fighters from away back 8 Metcalf s neighbors were amused by the flock but she claimed one neighbor quit laughing and decided to help me out However the neighbor s husband Van didn t want any of those Metcalf mongrels on the place 8 The neighbor s husband Van put a Barred Rock rooster on one side of a high fence and the buckeye game on the other and went in for tea and supper When the neighbor expressed concern her husband replied Let them fight my big rooster will soon knock the spots off that little scamp However later in the day they found the Barred Rock rooster dead with his eyes gouged out and the Buckeye on top Van said Well I swan a euphemism for I swear 16 Van went on to become a breeder of buckeyes 8 Rhode Island Reds editIn the winter of 1896 Metcalf learned of the existence of Rhode Island Reds which were bred during the second half of the 19th century Realizing other farmers had also attempted to breed red chickens Metcalf exchanged birds and eggs with East Coast breeders to discover that the Buckeyes were a darker mahogany color and Buckeyes had single and pea combs as opposed to rose and single combs 8 17 nbsp Metcalf created the Buckeye breed in Warren Ohio Officiating breed edit In 1902 Metcalf exhibited her breed at a poultry show in Cleveland Ohio 18 19 On August 24 1903 the president and secretary of the American Poultry Association inspected the buckeye breed and advised Metcalf to continue breeding them as it was a distinct breed from Rhode Island Reds 8 In 1904 she and her husband displayed the chickens at a poultry show in Rochester New York 8 Buckeyes were admitted as an American Poultry Association breed in February 1905 8 In 1907 she attended the American Poultry Association s first mid summer meeting in Niagara Falls which involved sending telegrams to other members 20 The 1908 APA revision committee advised that Buckeye should be dropped from the standard but this was voted down in Niagara New York in 1909 21 Legacy editIn 1909 the American Buckeye Club was established to preserve the Buckeye breed 19 As of 2022 the website of the organization is accessible 19 The 2001 Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds mentions Nettie Metcalf and claims she created Buckeyes by crossing Cornish Games Brahmas and Black Breasted Gamefowl 22 In the early 21st century the Shumaker Farm Buckeye Chickens website compiled images relevant to Nettie Metcalf s life and work 23 In 2003 the Buckeye breed became endangered with less than 72 breeding birds on record In 2005 the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy began a program to restore the breed as backyard birds 10 In 2013 Nettie Metcalf s life and chicken breed was the episode topic of agriculture podcast The Urban Chicken 24 See also editCaroline Rose Foster contemporary woman farmer in New Jersey Rosella Rice contemporary Ohioan writer Chicken breeds recognized by the American Poultry Association Buckeye chickenReferences edit McGrew Thomas Fletcher 1912 The Book of Poultry Standard bred poultry Standard bred poultry management Poultry judging American fowls Asiatic fowls Belgian Dutch and German fowls International Textbook Company McGrew Thomas Fletcher 1921 The Book of Poultry Macmillan Urquhart Kristina November 10 2015 The Suburban Chicken The Guide to Keeping Happy Healthy Chickens in Your Backyard i5 Publishing p 45 ISBN 978 1 62008 197 6 Retrieved November 21 2022 Hatchery Sponsored by Melissahof June 13 2022 Know how your eggs got laid Buckrail Jackson Hole news Retrieved September 8 2022 Sparling Nina September 7 2016 Protecting Disappearing Livestock Breeds Food Tank Retrieved September 8 2022 Why we should protect disappearing livestock breeds Christian Science Monitor September 8 2016 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved September 8 2022 a b The American Atlas Company 1899 Section METCALF FRANK C Atlas and Directory of Trumbull County Ohio Including a Directory of Freeholders and Official Register of the County Unigraphic p 210 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Poultry Success A D Hosterman Company 1917 American Poultry Advocate Clarence C Depuy 1918 a b Sullivan Andrew Bringing buckeye chickens to Dryden Ithaca Times Retrieved September 8 2022 Sullivan Andrew Dryden Agway local organizations donate buckeye chicks to T burg youth Ithaca Times Retrieved September 8 2022 Ekarius Carol July 18 2016 Storey s Illustrated Guide to Poultry Breeds Chickens Ducks Geese Turkeys Emus Guinea Fowl Ostriches Partridges Peafowl Pheasants Quails Swans Storey Publishing LLC ISBN 978 1 61212 843 6 Heritage breed tied to a bit of Ohio history Ohio Ag Net Ohio s Country Journal Retrieved September 8 2022 Dan January 31 2022 Best Chicken Breeds to Raise on the Homestead Southeast AgNET Retrieved September 8 2022 Ussery Harvey October 7 2011 The Small Scale Poultry Flock An All Natural Approach to Raising Chickens and Other Fowl for Home and Market Growers Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 978 1 60358 290 2 Bartlett John Russell 1860 A Glossary of Words amp Phrases Usually Relating to the U S Little Heinrichs Christine May 15 2016 The Backyard Field Guide to Chickens Chicken Breeds for Your Home Flock Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 7603 4953 3 John Campanelli The Plain Dealer November 22 2010 PDQ s guide to the buckeye just in time for the OSU Michigan game cleveland Retrieved September 8 2022 a b c Home Page americanbuckeyeclub Retrieved September 8 2022 Poultry Garden and Home 1907 pp 611 618 McGrew Thomas Fletcher 1921 The Book of Poultry Macmillan p 301 Dohner Janet Vorwald January 1 2001 The Encyclopedia of Historic and Endangered Livestock and Poultry Breeds Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13813 9 Nettie Metcalf SHUMAKER FARM LLC Retrieved September 8 2022 UCP Episode 002 Buckeye Chickens amp Nettie Metcalf retrieved September 9 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nettie Metcalf amp oldid 1215392766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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