Hampshire pig
The Hampshire is an American breed of domestic pig. It derives from saddlebacked pigs imported to Kentucky from about 1825 from the English county of Hampshire. It has a black body with a white band or sheet over the shoulders and extending down the front legs; the ears are erect. HistoryThe Hampshire derives from pigs imported to Massachusetts between about 1820 and 1830 by a Captain John Mackay of Boston, a ship-owner. They were said to originate in the county of Hampshire in south-east England, and were initially known as Mackay Hogs; it is not certain that they were belted.[3]: 55 [4]: 520 Some of these were taken in 1835 from Pennsylvania to Kentucky by a Major Joel Garnet, where they came to be known as the Thin-Rind. A breed society, the American Thin-Rind Record Association, was formed in 1893, and in 1904 changed its name to become the American Hampshire Swine Record Association.[3]: 55 [5]: 132 The American Hampshire was not widespread at this time: a census in Indiana in 1907 found 337 head in a total of over 65000 in the state, while an estimate of the numbers of pure-bred pigs nationwide reported 3000 Hampshires in a total of just under 164000, in fifth place behind the Poland-China, the Duroc-Jersey, the American Berkshire and the Chester White.[3]: 31 In the twenty-first century it is among the most numerous pig breeds of the United States, where approximately three quarters of all registrations are of Duroc, American Yorkshire or Hampshire stock.[6]: 184 [7] It has been exported to almost sixty countries, in all five inhabited continents. The total population reported world-wide is approximately 160000, of which over 20000 are in the United States;[2][8][9] the largest population is in Argentina, where there are more than 125000 head.[8] Its conservation status world-wide is "not at risk".[8][9] CharacteristicsIt has a black body with a white band or sheet over the shoulders and extending down the front legs; the ears are erect.[10]: 609 UseHampshire hogs are noted for being well-muscled and rapid growers, and for exhibiting good carcass quality when used as meat animals.[11] When used as breeding stock, the sows of this breed have been praised for their capacity as mothers, having "extra longevity in the sow". Hampshires are good-tempered; they do not grow as fast as many cross-breds, but they do grow faster than American Yorkshires.[7] ReferencesWikimedia Commons has media related to Hampshire pig.
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