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A HISTORY OF THE ORIENTAL
The Havana is the oldest
of the Orientals and first appeared in the early 1950's though in the 1920's
and 30's, and even before, 'self-coloured chocolate Siamese' were known.
In 1939 Mrs Cox-Ife noted that "In the early days of the breed
(Siamese) many chocolate coloured Siamese appeared on the Show bench - that is
the same colour all over." Chocolate Point Siamese were recognised by the GCCF
in 1950 largely due to the work of Brian Stirling-Webb and this stimulated the
thoughts of a self-chocolate coloured cat of Siamese body type in the minds of
Mrs Armitage Hargreaves and the Baroness Edit von Ullmann.
By 1951 they
had been joined by other breeders and "The Havana Group" came into being. The
Havana Group later became "The Chestnut Brown Group" and during the time my
mother Betty Harrison was on the committee became the 'Havana Cat Club' and
finally whilst I was the Chairman became the Havana & Oriental Lilac Cat
Club!
In 1952 the first 'Havana' kitten was born, this being Mrs Munro
Smith's Elmtower Bronze Idol, he was from 'Susannah'; a black
shorthair who was the result of a mating between a Seal Point and a Black Long
Haired moggy; and Tombee, a Seal Point Siamese. In August 1953 a repeat
mating of Bronze Idol produced the first female 'Havana' Elmtower Brown
Study.
GCCF granted recognition to the variety in 1958 with the
name Chestnut Brown Foreign, Breed No 29. In its wisdom Council did not grant
the name 'Havana' because of the risk of confusion with the rabbit of that name
and its use in the fur trade! In 1958 Mrs Joan Judd bred Ch Crossways
Honeysuckle Rose who in 1960 became the first GCCF Havana Champion.
There was considerable divergence of opinion amongst breeders in the
degree of 'Foreign Type' required in the Havana and there was certainly a
considerable difference in type between the cats from 'Susannah', and those
from the other lines bred from Siamese and Russian Blue, the former being
considerably more cobby in type. Because of this, and the fact that his
grand-sire was a long haired cat, several of the early breeders chose not to
use either Elmtower Bronze Idol or his offspring in their breeding programmes,
a fact which was to be of profound importance in later years.
By 1960
other breeders had joined the ranks of the Chestnut Brown Foreign breeders
including Mrs Sybil Warren, whose well known Senlac line was descended from a
half-pedigree Black SH mated to a Chocolate Point Siamese and, a fact of great
importance, was unrelated to the other lines of Chestnut Brown.
The
first Havanas exported to the USA from England during the 1950's were of cobby
type and the early USA breeders developed their 'Havana Browns' from these,
preferring the cobbier type rather than the elegance which the majority of
British breeders were aiming for. This is the why today the 'Havana Brown' of
the USA is a cobby cat complete with a distinct nose break, and is a separate
variety to the Oriental!
In 1961 news filtered through from the USA of
a high incidence of foot deformities in kittens from the original UK stock.
After some investigation and discussion amongst breeders in Britain, it became
clear that these deformities were not unknown here in some lines. The deformity
called "Split-Hand" only affects the front feet and is inherited as a dominant.
It shows a very wide range of affection, from severe abnormality to visual
normality, with the result that many affected cats looked perfectly normal.
By the mid 1960's interest in the variety, which had been developing in
such a promising way, had all but gone and was kept alive only by a dedicated
handful of breeders using cats who were unrelated to the defect, primarily
these were the 'Senlac', 'Crumberhill' and 'Sweethope'
lines of Sybil Warren, Pat Kirby and Jim & Beryl Stewart.
In the
mid 1960's, after looking at an over-exposed photograph of one of her Lilac
Point Siamese, Miss Patricia Turner, now Mrs Pat Newton, set out to create a
self-white Siamese which of course we have come to know as the Foreign White.
In 1967 as part of her program to produce 'White Siamese' Pat mated
Scintilla Chu Pao, a second generation Foreign White female, to
Scintilla Croesus, a Lilac Point Siamese. One of the resulting kittens
was a self chocolate kitten of distinct Siamese body type. This kitten was
registered as a Chestnut Brown Foreign under the name of 'Scintilla Copper
Beech'.
The importance of this chance kitten in the development of
the 'Oriental' varieties cannot be overstated and there can be few, if any
Orientals alive today that do not have Ch Scintilla Copper Beech way
back in their pedigrees. In 1967 her importance to the Chestnut Brown Foreign
was immense for 'Copper' was free from all 'taint' of defect and a cat of
greatly improved type and good rich coat colouring. 'Copper' passed into the
hands of Mrs Pam Wilding.
Two of Ch Scintilla Copper Beach's Chestnut
Brown Foreign offspring, Ch Dandycat Hula Dancer and Ch Dandycat Zulu
Warrior, went to Mrs Angela Sayer and formed the basis of the famous
'Solitaire' line. In 1970 co-incidental with the upsurge of interest in
the Chestnut Brown Foreign the GCCF amended the varietal name of Breed No 29 to
the Havana, though by this time most of the originators of the breed were no
longer involved.
During the 1950's the mixture of chocolate and blue
colouring had produced 'lavender' or 'lilac' coloured kittens and by 1957 Mrs
Hargreaves had developed a line of 'Lavender Self Short Hairs'. The Lilac Point
Siamese was not recognised at this time, and many of the first Siamese to be
recorded in this colour were also bred by Mrs Hargreaves. Accordingly very many
modern Siamese can be traced back to the 'Laurentide' matings which
produced the first Havana.
There was renewed interest in the Lavender
and in the late 1960's the Foreign Lavender Group was formed to co-ordinate the
development of the variety, it was spearheaded by Angela Sayer and Betty
Harrison. In 1973 thanks to the good offices of the Colourpoint, Rex-Coated
& AOV Club an application was made to GCCF for recognition of the 'Foreign
Lavender'. GCCF thought differently and the variety was recognised as the
'Foreign Lilac, five years later in June 1977 it was granted Championship
status. The first Foreign Lilac to gain a title in early 1978 was Mrs Val
Gane's female Ch Burdach Cartagena, closely followed by Mrs Andrea
Martyr's male Ch Mannequin Titus.
The Foreign White, so
important in the history of the Havana & Foreign Lilacs, also gained
Championship Status in June 1977, and in November 1977 the first Foreign White
Champion was made up, this being my own Ch Scintilla Jou-Lin who was of
course bred by Miss Pat Turner. The first male to take a title was Ch Ryanna
Everest owned & bred by Mrs Connie Ryder.
From the beginning of
1970 it is difficult to separate the development of the Havana and the Foreign
Lilac; and after the mid 1970's impossible to separate the Havana and Lilac
from the other emerging varieties - the Black and the Blue. As time passed more
and more owners of Siamese females mated them to 'Oriental' males and all
colours and patterns were being produced.
The GCCF granted Championship
status to the 'Foreign' Black in 1980 and to the 'Foreign' Blue in 1985 -
before finally changing their names to 'Oriental' in 1991. The first Foreign
Black champion was John Shewbridge's Ch Tamruat Black Night; and the
first Foreign Blue was Gr Ch Reydau Cyrolite Sika.
In the 1970's
Angela Sayer's numerous cats included Siamese in all colours, as well as the
Havanas. Matings of Havanas and other full coloured cats to Tabby Point Siamese
produced many Spotted and Classic Tabby cats which were initially referred to
as 'Egyptian Maus', not to be confused with the breed of that name! In the late
1970's Betty Harrison who was by this time the Oriental Cat Association GCCF
Delegate prepared the application for recognition of the Spotted Tabby; and in
1980 the GCCF granted Championship Status to the Brown, Blue, Chocolate, Lilac,
Red & Cream Oriental Spotted Tabby. The first Oriental Spotted Tabby
Champion and Grand Champion was Gr Ch Folklore Moonwolf, and the first
female Champion Ch Folklore Iced Mink. These cats were bred by Mrs Marie
McAdam from one of my queens Megrim Cloudie Chrystalles, a Lilac Silver female
which today would have been registered as a Lilac Silver Shaded - the
unfortunate result of this became obvious in many of her descendants. Gr Ch
Folklore Moonwolf finally ended up living with Ted & Pam Wilding!
The Classic Tabby has never been a popular variety, though it is one
which always attracts interest. There has been little determined attempt to
develop it, and generally is has been seen as by-product of Spotted Tabby
breeding. Fortunately there have always been one or two breeders who have kept
the variety going. I can certainly name a considerable number of Classic
Tabbies in the early 1970's, yet it took a further 20 years before it achieved
championship status in 1997. The first champion was Gd Ch Jasrobinka
Perridot owned by Mrs P L Hutchinson and bred by Phyllis & John
Choppen.
IIn the early 1970's there were numerous reds, creams and
torties produced from various matings, though it's fair to say they received
very little attention or interest. I can recall breeding a litter of four cream
females in 1975 and giving them away, unregistered, to pet homes! Torties
always attracted more attention and in 1989 the Oriental Torties achieved
championship status, the Reds followed in 1995 with the Creams in 1999.
The first Tortie Champion was Ch Sayonara Origami, bred by
Glenda Worthy and owned by June Hutchinson, Phil & Jo Auden's Gd Ch
Filanjo Topaz was the first Oriental Cream Champion, and went on to be the
first Cream to achieve the title of Grand Champion. The first Red to win a
Grand title was Gd Ch Summerdown Pure Genius ownede and bred by Sue
Jackson.
In the early 1970's a litter of kittens resulted from a
mis-mating between a Chocolate Point Siamese and a L H Chinchilla. Fortunately
Pat Turner heard of the litter, saw the kittens, and took two females which she
registered as Scintasilva Sue and Scinta Celeste and started a
breeding programme not only to develop the potentially beautiful Smokes, Silver
Tabbies and 'Pastels' (now Shaded), but also to study the inheritance of the
responsible alleles. Pat Turner, ever a lady of foresight, quickly realised the
importance of Scintasilva Sue and her daughter Scintilla Serene Sunset,
a Black Tortie Silver Shaded; they inherited from their Chinchilla ancestry not
only the Melanin Inhibitor gene responsible for Silver and Smoke, the Wide-band
gene responsible for the 'Chinchilla' coat, and also a new colour range!
Pat became aware that Scintilla Serene Sunset was producing 'odd
coloured' kittens which she dubbed 'apricot' and 'caramel'. Scintilla
Dresden Rose was the first cat to be registered as Caramel, she was a
Siamese with points the colour of 'caramel toffee', hence the colour name
'Caramel'. The first 'Oriental' in caramel was Scintilla Kaffy Ole who
was described as a 'Dark Phase Caramel Pastel' - today she would have been a
Caramel Silver Shaded. She was a very pretty cat though her type definitely
left much to be desired! When she was 16 weeks old Pat took her to an OCA
meeting at the RHS so that other people could see her colour
.. I saw her
. and took her home with me to North Wales! Sadly she produced only
one litter of kittens, sired by the Havana Ch Harislau Flying Fox,
producing four chocolate kittens of various patterns. Our understanding of the
inheritance of both Caramel and Apricot was a little vague but eventually the
mode of inheritance and the concept of 'Dilute Modifier' were recognised.
Pat Turner produced very many kittens that were either Caramel or
Apricot, and many more that carried the hidden Dilute Modifier, these kittens
were scattered across the United Kingdom, and indeed to most of the World, and
quite innocently the colour was being spread throughout the Orientals. Though
Caramel was recognised as a colour in Oriental Non-Self Varieties by the GCCF,
and is a very common and popular colour, the Caramel Self still languishes in
Provisional Status, and will be the last Self Oriental to gain full status
under GCCF Rules.
The Apricot self was recognised along with the Cream
and gained Championship status in 1999. The Silver Tabbies were granted
Championship status by the GCCF in 1996 and joined their 'standard' coloured
cousins in the same Open class. The Smoke, being the non-agouti version of the
Silver Tabby, was finally granted full status in 2000. The first Oriental Smoke
title holders were Miss Hemmings Ch Bosscats Theladyofshallott, Mary
Parkinson's Gd Ch Smaug Minnie Theminx, and Katie Rose's Gr Pr
Onapromise Total Eclipse.
The Oriental Shaded though bred in small
numbers since the early 1970's has always been seen as a 'specialist' variety
and was granted Championship Status by the GCCF in 1997, nearly 30 years after
it first appeared. The first Champion was UK Gd Ch & Gd Pr Chelanca
Pentlandite, a Caramel Tortie Silver bred by Barbara Fellows from two cats
of my breeding both of which have ancestries tracing back through Scintilla
Kaffy Ole and so to Scintasilva Sue.
If we return to the early 1970's
we find that another "new" line of Havanas was being developed, a line which
was greeted by the Cat Fancy with very mixed reactions! The line was to have
tremendous effects on the 'Orientals' and introduced factors resulting in the
creation of no less than four Oriental varieties! The first Havana of the line
was Ch Southview Unacassiopeia bred in 1969 by Mrs Maureen Silson, and
later passed to Tony & Sheila Clayton along with her Havana son Ch
Southview Duakylin. Roy and Maureen Silson were no strangers to
'experimental' breeding having played a major role in the development of the
Red Point Siamese.
Ch Southview Unacassiopeia was from a mating
between a female imported from American called Anarts Miiko and
Kernow Gerza. Anarts Miiko was registered here as "Siamese, Any
Other Colour" and it was some time before it became common knowledge that she
was in fact registered in the USA as an Albino Siamese - something which we
came to know as 'Recessive White". Kernow Gerza, bred by Mrs Pam
Everley, was sired by Tranby Red Tutankhamen a Sorrel Abyssinian which
in those, now far off, days was known as 'Red' Abyssinian and his dam was
Annelida Fair Lady a Seal Point Siamese bred by Mrs Alison Ashford.
As cats with pedigrees containing Anarts Miiko spread the GCCF,
following considerable debate, introduced a Registration endorsement on Miiko's
descendants. Eventually many lines based on these superb Havanas were cleared
as being free from the recessive white allele - to 'clear' a line one merely
had to mate a potential carrier to a Siamese and continue to breed from the
coloured offspring, for any self coloured kittens were in possession of the
Siamese allele, and therefore by definition free from the recessive white gene.
In 1971Kernow Gerza a Chocolate ticked cat of medium Foreign
type was mated to his Black ticked litter sister Kernow Koptos and
produced Southview Pavane who though obviously different to a normal
Havana was registered as that breed, she was a Pale
Havana, and the first recorded Light Brown non-agouti cat. The
colour of the Sorrel Abyssinian is recessive to normal Chocolate colour, and is
known as 'Light Brown', Ch Southview Unacassiopeia inherited this gene
from her sire and passed it on to many of her offspring who, when mated
together, produced the colour varieties we now call the Oriental Cinnamon and
it's dilute the Oriental Fawn. The Oriental Cinnamon was granted Championship
status by the GCCF in 1996, and the Oriental Fawn is at Provisional Status, and
surely must soon qualify for Championship status. The first Cinnamon champion
was Ch Mewzishun Sinfonia owned and bred by Ann Greatorex.
Many
of the Oriental Longhairs can also trace their origins through the Southview
cats to Kernow Gerza for not only did he inherit the sorrel / cinnamon
colouring from his father but also the longhair gene which was known to be
carried by many Abyssinians and subsequently gave rise to the recognition of
the Somali.
In addition to light brown colour and longhair Kernow
Gerza also inherited the Ticked gene from his father Tranby Red
Tutankhamen which eventually resulted in the creation of the Oriental
Ticked Tabby. Tabbies of 'ticked' pattern had been bred before, but had never
been developed. Betty Harrison had a line of Chocolate Tortie and Cream Ticked
in the late 1960's and early 1970's which for various reasons was discontinued,
they were bred from Tabby Point and Red Point Siamese and various Tabby feral
cats.
In 1985 Angela Morse mated her Havana female, a descendant of
Kernow Gerza, to an Oriental Spotted Tabby and produced Orissa
Champagne Charlie, a Lilac Ticked Tabby. Within the UK today most lines of
Ticked Tabbies can be traced back to this origin. The Ticked Tabby was granted
Championship status by GCCF in 1993 and the first Champion was Gd Ch
Lynfield New Moon, a superb Caramel Ticked. If my memory serves me
correctly I believe he was also the first Caramel champion.
In 1974 a
meeting was held in London to draw up Breed Standards for all the as yet
unrecognised varieties. This was not as daunting as may seem, for it was easy
enough to base the type requirement on the Siamese Breed Standard; the coat
length & texture on the Havana Standard; and the individual patterns on
standards of recognised varieties of British Short Hair or Persian. The meeting
was chaired by the Late Mrs Lesley Pring, recent past President of the GCCF,
and benefited from the presence of the late Roy Robinson who did so much
pioneering work on cat genetics. The meeting was well attended and both our
President Mrs Patricia Newton (then Turner) and our Vice President Mrs Betty
Harrison where there. Sadly I believe that I am now the only person who
participated in this meeting still actively involved in the Cat Fancy.
During the early 1970's the Oriental Cat Association, with Miss Pat
Turner as Secretary, was very active in promoting the 'new' varieties and
disseminating information. The club was seen as an 'umbrella' club catering for
all colours and it was envisaged that as the individual varieties became
established separate specialist clubs would be formed.
The earliest
club for the 'Oriental' was of course the Havana Cat Club which though it
pre-dates the OCA by many years did not achieve affiliation until after the
OCA! The interests of the coloured cats were also looked after by the Tabby
Point Siamese & Progressive Breeders Cat Club, and of course the Short
Haired Cat Society.
Today these have been joined by the Foreign White
Cat Society, the Oriental Black & Blue Cat Society, the Oriental Cinnamon
& Fawn Group, the Caramel & Apricot Federation, the Trans-Pennine
Oriental & Siamese Cat Club, and most recently by the Oriental Shaded,
Smoke, Tabby & Tortie Society and the Oriental Bicolour Group
From
the mid 1980's it is very difficult to identify any separate lines in Great
Britain and today almost all Orientals will have pedigrees containing cats
bearing the 'Scintilla' and 'Solitaire' prefix. Over the years many cats were
exported from Great Britain and as the result of the increased movement of cats
most Oriental cats around the world can be traced back to a White House Hold
Pet called 'Orchid Lilias' (the great grandmother of Ch Scintilla Copper
Beech) and to Scintasilva Sue.
IThough the Bicolour was only
re-introduced to Great Britain in 2004 Miss Pat Turner started a breeding
program for Oriental Bicolours and Seychelloise in the 1980's, though interest
in the variety petered out when Pat gave up breeding. Elsewhere in the world
other people were aleady on the path to breeding Oriental Bicolours and in
Europe amongst others Catharine Bastide (El Shaklan) and Yvonne Kleijn
(Felides Vivres) were breeding down from a Morrocan feral cat, Cornish
Rex and an American line. Because there was more interest elsewhere in the
World other registration bodies recognised them far more quickly than the GCCF.
Whereas for example in FIFe an Oriental Bicolour can win many titles, under the
GCCF scheme they are only be eligible for 'Merits' and championship status is
still some years away.
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