Breed History
BY THE 19TH CENTURY the right to hunt game in Germany was no longer restricted to the nobility. And while there were still those who maintained kennels of specialist sporting dogs for hunting fur or feather, on land or over water, maintaining dogs in variety was beyond the means of the average sportsman. The need for an all-purpose gun dog was obvious and breeders rose to the challenge. Perhaps the most significant contribution to the group of dogs now known as the "versatile gun dogs" was the German Shorthaired Pointer whose development began in Germany between 1870 and 1880.

Based mainly on dogs of Spanish Pointer origin, crosses to various breeds were tried-with mixed results. The most successful breeders are said to have followed the advice of Prince Albrecht zu Solms-Brauenfels, which was to forget how the dog looked. The breeders' first consideration should be how the dog worked. Once the desired working ability had been achieved, he claimed, good conformation would follow as a natural result. The most significant advance in achieving the goal of the all-purpose dog was the introduction of English Pointer blood, which added dash and superior scenting ability.

For a time this also added the Pointer's upturned nose, as evidenced by early photographs. But by the 1880s two outstanding specimens had been bred: Nero v Hoppenrade and Treff, who were to become the pillars of the emerging "Kurzhaar" or the German Shorthaired Pointer, as it is known in this country. By 1911 type had been standardized and the new breed did everything that was expected of it. News of the Kurzhaar spread and in 1925 the first imports began arriving in the United States. By 1928 there was sufficient interest in the breed to warrant its official recognition by the American Kennel Club. Three years later the breed was also registered in Canada. Since its introduction the German Shorthaired Pointer has accounted for a growing number of Dual Champions-dogs that have qualified in Field Trials as well as in the show ring. The breed continues to give the lie to those who claim that brains and beauty can't be found in the same dog. This breed states loud and clear-"yes, they can."
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