176 A HISTORY OF SHORT-HORN CATTLE. 



heifers Lady Munday, Miss Motte and Sylvia 

 to San Martin, and Lady Alice by Tecumseh, 

 besides five bulls. The Durham Cow was also 

 prolific, dropping eleven calves five heifers 

 and six bulls her last four being sired by her 

 own son Napoleon 1899, by San Martin. The 

 Teeswater Cow gave birth to four heifers and 

 two bulls. The leading Kentucky and Ohio 

 farmers of that period availed themselves 

 largely of this opportunity for improving their 

 herds, among those who purchased progeny 

 from the three Sanders cows being Gen. Gar- 

 rard, Dr. S. D. Martin, Maj. Gano, Dr. Warfield, 

 Judge Haggin, Walter Dun, T. P. Dudley and 

 the Ohio Shakers. Mrs. ' Motte's daughters 

 Lady Kate, Lady Munday and Sylvia inherited 

 the fecundity of their dam, producing in the 

 aggregate thirty calves, more than one-half of 

 them through Lady Munday and Sylvia, the 

 property of Gen. Garrard. The Durham Cow's 

 daughter Lady Durham left five heifers and 

 three bulls, two of the former going into the 

 hands of Benjamin Warfield. It thus appears 

 that the importation of 1817 became an im- 

 portant element in the breeding operations of 

 those enterprising men who laid the founda- 

 tion for the subsequent popularity of the breed 

 in the States bordering upon the Ohio River; 

 and the cattle derived from that source were 



