Over the past couple of months I have had the
opportuity to be a Farm Programs Intern, and one of my favorite things to do is
watch our sheep on the farm. While on hot days they lay in the shade keeping
cool, on milder days you’ll find them lazily grazing, the lambs jumping and
playing. Look closely and you might notice that the sheep in our flock don’t
all look the same. In fact, there are three different breeds of sheep in our
flock, and each has very distinctive features as well as a unique history.
The one breed that is perhaps the
most obviously different from the others is the Tunis sheep. These sheep have
reddish colored heads and legs with cream or white colored wool. When the lambs
are young they have a reddish tinge all over, but as they grow their wool
changes to the same creamy white color of their mothers. As with many animal
breeds the Tunis sheep did not originate in the United States. They were transported
from their home country of Tunisia in North Africa when the Consul to Tunisia
sent a number of Tunis sheep (also called Barbary or Mountain Tunis sheep) to the United States in 1799. It was a tough
journey for the sheep, and only one pair survived. They were sent to Judge
Richard Peters, who resided near Philadelphia. He soon became an advocate for
these sheep, and the breed spread quickly through Pennsylvania, and up into New
York, though the majority of the breed spread south down to South Carolina.
It soon became apparent that the
Tunis sheep were an excellent and well-rounded
breed, providing top quality mutton as well as decent wool. Tunis mutton
dominated the Philadelphia market, and while Tunis wool was not as high quality
as Merino wool, it often used to make blankets. Even Thomas Jefferson had a few
Tunis imported and bred them for the quality of the meat as well as for the
wool.
Tunis sheep are very hardy and can handle both
hot and cold weather relatively well. This was one reason that the Tunis became
one of the more popular sheep breeds to raise in southern states. During the
Civil War the breed was nearly wiped out, eaten by hungry soliders on both
sides. If it wasn’t for the actions of Maynard Spigener from South Carolina the
breed may not have survived. He hid the last flock of Tunis sheep on his
property by the Congoree River and managed to preserve the breed! Even today
the Tunis are listed in the watch list of the American Livestock Breeds
Conservancy, meaning that less than 2,500 Tunis sheep are registered in the
United States. After the Civil War the breed was mostly found in the northern
states, though recently the breed has been making a comeback in the southern
states as well.
While the Tunis sheep may not have
been one of the most popular sheep breeds to have an upstate New York farm in
the 1840’s, it was one of the options a farmer would have had. This is why you
can come out this summer to meet our two lovely Tunis ewes, Louise and Lillian
as well as their quickly growing lambs! Maybe they’ll wander up to the fence so
you can see, and appreciate this historic sheep breed.
Stay tuned for more information
about the other sheep in our flock!
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