Friday 8 November 2019

The Draught Horse




Draught horses are heavy horses used for farm work, barge towing and similar tasks. This is a type, covering many breeds, developed from the mighty war-horses, which needed to be strong enough to carry a knight in full armour. The main object in breeding draught horses was ‘…to increase strength, activity, and power, to remove weight, as much as possible, and procure them of the height of sixteen hands, for general utility.’ At the close of the eighteenth century, the finest breeds were considered the Large Black as well as the Suffolk Punch and the Clydesdale. The Cleveland Bay was also viewed as a cart-horse, although it is not so now, being far lighter in build than the ‘heavies’. It is, of course, a superlative carriage horse. Prince Philip used to drive a team of the Queen’s Cleveland Bays, including competing most successfully in driving trials.

Thomas Brown informs us that a Mr. (Robert) Bakewell (of Leicestershire) introduced breeding stock from the Netherlands and produced one of the best horses of the kind which was ever seen, and sent it to Tattersall’s, for the inspection of his Majesty, King George IV.

The head of this individual was light and well set on, his forehand lofty, his shoulder deep, his legs clean and flat-boned, with the general activity of a pony. It was universally acknowledged, that for lightness, cleanness of make, and bulk, he was superlatively excellent. Mr. Bakewell recommended this horse as highly adapted for the purpose of breeding, with appropriate mares, cavalry horses, hunters, and strong hacks. His majesty did not, however, enter into Mr. Bakewell’s views.

The Large Black

The Large Black was a heavy animal, bred mainly in the Midlands, from Staffordshire to Lincolnshire. There were two types, the Midland or Leicester, and the Lincolnshire or Fen. The Midland was generally a lighter, finer type with greater endurance, while the Fen was commonly heavier with greater bone and ‘feather’ on the legs. Berkshire and Surrey farmers bought them at two years old and worked them lightly to recoup their keep until the age of four, at which time the youngsters were strong enough for sale in the London markets. Retaining sufficient numbers of mares and fillies for work on the farm, the breeders sold the two-year-old colts. Worked in a team of four to the plough by the farmers closer to Town, the youngsters learned to ‘draw’ without suffering exhaustion before being sold for a considerable profit.

These horses in general turn out noble looking creatures; but certainly, from the high feeding and fat produced by the soft food, are not able to compete with the lighter horses used in waggons, which are fed on hard and dry food.

The Irish Draught

The Irish Draught developed from indigenous stock through imported French and Flemish horses around 1172 when Ireland was invaded by the Anglo-Normans. When crossed with a Thoroughbred, the large, roomy Irish mares produce horses up to weight with strength and bone, good limbs and the ability to gallop and jump over all kinds of country.

The Shire

The Shire, bred in the English Shires, descends from the medieval war-horse known as the Great Horse, which was later named the English Black by Oliver Cromwell. (See the Large Black above.) Flemish and Flanders horses had a big influence on the breed in the sixteenth century when Dutch engineers, involved in draining the fens, brought Friesians with them. This influence continued into the early seventeenth century. The Shire is the greatest of the heavy breeds, both in height and weight, a stallion making as much as eighteen hands and weighing anything over a ton. The name first appeared in the middle of the seventeenth century, with records beginning to be kept, if not fully completed, by the late 1700s. A stallion by the name of the Packington Blind Horse is now accepted as the foundation sire of the Shire Horse breed and is in the initial edition of the Stud Book, published in 1878. He stood in Leicestershire, at Ashby-de-la-Zouch, from 1755 to 1770 as well as travelling about the county as was the common practice in those days. Throughout the nineteenth century, the Shire was in demand for the transport of various commodities from the coast or docks to both city and rural destinations. A commanding, powerful horse, the Shire has a broad, muscular body with a wide chest and legs set well beneath, yet possesses remarkable docility. Colours are generally bay, black or grey.

Suffolk Punch

Every Suffolk Punch can trace its’ descent from one stallion, Horse of Ufford, owned by Thomas Crisp and foaled in 1768. Although it originated in Suffolk, it is now considered native to East Anglia. The earliest reference dates to 1506 and the breed’s forebears may have descended from Viking stock. There are marked similarities between the Suffolk and the Jutland horse. The Suffolk Punch is particularly docile, possesses strength, endurance and longevity, and is a remarkable ‘good doer’. Muscular and powerful, it stands about sixteen hands with a deep, round body. It is short-legged and bears little feather. There are seven accepted shades, but Suffolks are always chestnut.

THE SUFFOLK PUNCH HORSE
THIS hardy and excellent breed has become now nearly extinct. They seldom exceeded sixteen hands in height. Their colour was almost invariably chestnut, or sorrel. They had rather large coarse heads, their ears were generally too long for modern taste, and placed very distant from each other, although, in some instances, they were short, pricked, and well-shaped. The carcass was deep, capacious, and compact. The shoulders were wide and thick at top, and somewhat low, with the rump more elevated, from which it is supposed they were enabled to throw so much of their weight into the collar. They were large and strong in the quarters, full in the flanks, and round in the legs, with short pasterns.
     These horses were celebrated on account of their speedy walking. They also trotted well, and were remarkably sure-footed; and, as draught horses, for steady drawing, and great physical power, might be said to have generally excelled all other horses. In the Sportsman’s Repository, we are told, that “they were the only race of horses which would, collectively, draw repeated dead pulls, namely, draw pull after pull, and down upon their knees against a tree, or any body which they felt could not be moved, to the tune of Jup, Jill and the crack of the whip, (once familiar, but abominable sounds, which even now vibrate on our auditory nerves,) as long as nature supplied the power; and would renew the same exertions to the end of the chapter.”
     The old Suffolk breed of horses brought very high prices, but of late a larger breed has become fashionable in that county and neighbouring districts, which, for largeness and beauty, certainly excel the old breed. They have been produced from a cross with the Yorkshire half and three-part bred horses of the coach kind, and are particularly beautiful and lofty in the forehand. 

The Percheron

The Percheron comes from the region of Le Perche in Normandy. Following the first Crusade in 1096-9, Eastern blood was introduced and by 1760, Arab sires were available at the stud at Le Pin. Mares of the basin around Paris were crossed with Norman, English, German and Danish horses. Sometimes standing over seventeen hands, the Percheron is broad-bodied and very muscular, with a deep chest and strong, hard limbs. The colour is generally dapple-grey or black. No doubt similar horses came to this country with the Normans, for the Percheron has been a war-horse as well as being used for farm work, as a coach horse and for heavy artillery.

The Clydesdale

The Clydesdale as a breed was not known until the late nineteenth century, when the Clydesdale Horse Society was formed in 1877. It was the first draught horse in Britain to have its’ own society. The first volume of its’ stud book was published the following year, with one thousand stallions listed. However, the breed has its’ origins in the mid-eighteenth century. It is said to have been developed from hardy ‘gig mares’ by the introduction of Belgian and Flemish stallions, the 6th Duke of Hamilton further improving the breed in the 1720s by importing six Flemish Great Horses. At this stage they were known as the Clydesman’s Horses by the local people. The modern Clydesdale stands about seventeen hands, has a kind nature and is active and almost elegant. Dark brown or black, the Clydesdale is renowned for its’ extensive feather, which accentuates the lively paces. It is short-coupled, with legs well set under its’ body and an honest head.

THE CLYDESDALE HORSE
THESE horses are strong, active, and steady, generally from fifteen to sixteen hands high, and not unfrequently sixteen and a half hands; and, as horses of husbandry, are perhaps superior to any in the kingdom.
     The Clydesdale horse is lighter in the body than the Suffolk Punch, and more elegantly formed in every respect, with an equal proportion of bone. His neck is also longer; his head of a finer form, and more corresponding to the bulk of the animal: he has a sparkling and animated eye, and evinces a greater degree of lively playfulness in his general manners than either the Cleveland or Suffolk horses. His limbs are clean, straight, and sinewy. The tread of this horse is firm and nimble: he is capable of great muscular exertion, and in a hilly country is extremely valuable. He is a very hardy animal, and can subsist on almost any kind of food. The equanimity of his temper, and steadiness of his movements, peculiarly adapt him for the plough. Not being too unwieldy in his size, he is no burden to the soil, while a pair are equal to the task of drawing a plough through a full furrow, with great ease. The horses of Clydesdale are not only celebrated on account of their value for agricultural purposes, but are also adapted for the saddle, and useful as carriage horses.

The Dray Horse

THE DRAY HORSE
THE Dray Horse should have a broad breast, a low forehand, deep and round barrel, with broad and high loins, and ample quarters, and his shoulders ought to be thick and upright. The forearms and thighs should be thick, the legs short, the hoofs round, with the heels broad, and the soles not too flat. These horses are frequently seventeen hands high, and upwards; and, from the slowness of their movements, are only fit for the drays and slop carts of the metropolis.
     This variety is better adapted for show than great physical power. With their fine harness, and sleek carcasses, they are particularly qualified to gratify the vanity of their owners. But the plea urged by those who use them is, that their great bulk fits them better for the shafts of a dray, in the ill-paved streets of London. Certainly they are to be pitied, for they suffer sad jolting, and many hard blows against their ribs from the dray shafts; and it must be admitted, that a light horse would be upset in so ponderous a machine, where the streets are so irregular.

Clydesdale Horses (Public Domain)

Notes from The Horse: An Author's and Reader's Guide, with italicized sections from Captain Thomas Brown's Anecdotes, 1830.


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(C) Heather King