LADY MAYNARD. 



43 



Lady Maynard's produce is thus recorded : 



Thus it appears that Young Strawberry, which Colling purchased 

 with the cow, was her first calf, and she was bred by Maynard. As 

 the pedigree of the cow Young Strawberry is already given under the 

 produce of Lady Maynard, the pedigree of her (Young Strawberry's) 

 son Bolingbroke (86) is found as her produce, under her record in 

 Vol. i, E. H. B., as calved November 12, 1788, red and white, bred 

 by Mr. Colling, and got by- Foljambe (263). Foljambe is entered in 

 the Herd Book as bred by Colling ; other authorities contend that he 

 was bred by Mr. Hall, of Haughton-hill, got by Richard Barker's bull 

 (52), out of the cow Haughton, by Hubback. Colling afterwards 

 bought the cow Haughton of Mr. Hall. The pedigree of the cow 

 Haughton runs thus : 



"Got by Hubback (319), dam by a bull of the late Charles Col- 

 ling's (which he bought of Mr. John Bamlet), gr. d. by Mr. Waistell's 

 bull (669), g. gr. d. Tripes, bred by Mr. C. Pickering." 



By other authority Tripes is said to be by Studley bull (626), and 

 her dam bred by Mr. Stephenson, of Ketton, in 1739. 



So it will be seen that Foljambe was of stranger blood to the Lady 

 Maynard family. Thus, with Foljambe, and his Lady Maynard, and 

 other tribes, Colling went on with his new course of breeding ; but 

 we do not find that Foljambe was directly used to any of the Colling- 

 Duchess, or Stanwick family, as their pedigrees enter into the first 

 volume of E. H. B. only in Mr. Bates' Duchess ist, calved in 1810, 

 got by Comet (155), and the fifth in descent from the Stanwick 

 cow. Yet as Duchess ist was descended through Comet and Favor- 

 ite, who had the blood of Foljambe in them, the Duchess tribe had 

 his blood also. 



With the basis of the two tribes, Duchess, and Lady Maynard, in 

 his hands, as well as with other cows which he had selected, Charles 

 Colling began his remarkable in-and-in system of breeding, and 

 pursued it with untiring pertinacity to the end of his Short-horn 

 career in 1810. He bred comparatively few animals of his Duchess 

 tribe, although equally in-and-in bred as the Lady Maynards. Fol- 

 jambe, as an early sire, begat the bull Bolingbroke (86), in the cow 



