Count Noble
Count Noble (August 1, 1879 - January 20, 1891) was a male Llewellin Setter. He was so well known that when he died in 1891, The New York Times ran an obituary. He was popularly known as the "$10,000 hunting dog." He was described as a "national symbol of what was great in bird dogs." Writing in 1904, Joseph A. Graham gives this description of Count Noble: "A large white-black-tan dog, long in the body and not considered a well proportioned setter. He weighed sixty pounds." A portrait of Count Noble by Edmund Osthaus hangs in the first-floor reading room of the Duquesne Club.
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Count Noble
Count Noble (August 1, 1879 - January 20, 1891) was a male Llewellin Setter. He was so well known that when he died in 1891, The New York Times ran an obituary. He was popularly known as the "$10,000 hunting dog." He was described as a "national symbol of what was great in bird dogs." Writing in 1904, Joseph A. Graham gives this description of Count Noble: "A large white-black-tan dog, long in the body and not considered a well proportioned setter. He weighed sixty pounds." A portrait of Count Noble by Edmund Osthaus hangs in the first-floor reading room of the Duquesne Club.
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Count Noble (August 1, 1879 - ...... site of Wilson's former home.
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Wikipage page ID
30,605,472
Wikipage revision ID
743,624,504
birth date
1879-08-01
birth place
breed
death date
1891-01-20
known
Hunting dog and show dog
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owner
Benjamin Frederick Wilson
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species
Canis lupus familiaris
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Count Noble (August 1, 1879 - ...... ing room of the Duquesne Club.
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Count Noble
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Count Noble
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