By Jon Bastian
If current news reports are to be believed, pit bulls have been
attacking and biting humans left and right—to the point that many
communities are considering breed-specific bans on pit bulls.
Would it surprise you to learn that pit bulls used to be America’s
darlings? Before the mid-80s, stories of pit bull attacks are
practically non-existent. There is even some confusion over exactly
which breed of dog is a pit bull — the definition includes the American
pit bull terrier, the Staffordshire terrier and, at times, the bulldog.
This confusion seems to have dogged the breed from the beginning, as
there is some disagreement over the origin of pit bulls.
Where do pit bulls come from and how did they get such a bad rap?
Two possible histories of pit bulls
In one theory, pit bulls began during antiquity as the so-called
Molossus, a now-extinct breed that was used by the Greeks as shepherds
and guard dogs. In times of war, they marched off to battle with their
humans. Eventually, so the theory goes, the Molossus made it to early
Britain, where it became known as the Mastiff. In the first century CE,
Rome discovered the breed after defeating the Britons, and the dogs
spread all over the empire. For the next four hundred years, they were
used as war dogs, and intermixed with various local breeds all over the
European continent, becoming the forerunners of the modern pit bull.
A competing theory places the origin of the pit bull in England at
the time of the Norman Conquest in 1066, when butchers would use large,
Mastiff-type dogs as “bullenbeissers,” which translates as “bull biter.”
Trained to latch onto a bull’s nose and not let go until the animal was
subdued, these dogs were the only way that humans could regain control
when a bull became agitated. Unfortunately, this practical if dubious
use eventually led to the “sport” of bull-baiting, where dogs were put
in a pit with an intentionally riled-up bull and spectators placed bets
on which dog would hold on the longest, or bring the bull down. You’ve
probably guessed it by now, but this is also the origin of the terms
“pit bull dog” and “bulldog.”
Still not a specific breed, the bullenbeissers were bred with
Terriers, combining their intelligence with the strength of the
Mastiffs. As bull-baiting came to be banned in the 19th century, dog
fighting became popular as an underground and quasi-illegal activity in
the UK. British immigrants to the U.S. at that time brought dog
fighting, as well as their dogs, to the New World. However, as the breed
spread to Americans and Americans spread across the continent, pit
bulls began to be put to their original use, as general purpose herding
and working dogs. Because of their fighting history, though, the
American Kennel Club would not recognize the breed until 1936, although
they defined it as a Staffordshire terrier, distinct from the American
pit bull terrier.
Early perceptions of pit bulls
Far from being considered a killing machine on legs, pit bulls seem
to be an American favorite in the early half of the century — indeed,
during World War I, the country itself is personified as a pit bull on
army recruitment posters, and several pit bulls go on to become famous
in the American military. Referring to an athlete as a pit bull is a
very common sports metaphor through the 1930s, and it is meant as the
highest compliment. There is also a famous racehorse in the late 1930s
named Pit Bull, as well as a number of pit bull stars of early motion
pictures. Frequently, pit bulls are associated with children, as in the Our Gang comedies, as well as with Buster Brown,
both in short films and as the corporate mascot for a shoe company. The
famous RCA Victor image of a dog and a gramophone also featured a pit
bull terrier.
From the turn of the century until the early 1980s, there is exactly
one dog attack story to make the national papers and mention pit bulls,
but that’s probably because it involved a man intentionally siccing a
pack of 26 dogs on a young woman. According to a 1947 article in The Independent
(St. Petersburg, Florida), “Attorneys said they believed it was the
first time the state had invoked a statute which would find the owner
guilty of manslaughter if it were proven that he permitted vicious
animals to run free and they attacked and killed a human being.” There’s
no mention of pit bulls as vicious and no call for a ban of the breed,
just a human who is held responsible for inducing the dogs to attack.
Ironically, though, it is in Florida forty years after this incident
that the first breed-specific ban is enacted. In the intervening
decades, “pit bull” continues to be a popular description for athletes
and when the breed does turn up in newspapers, it’s more often than not
in a classified ad for puppies.
The only mention during the 1960s that isn’t an ad is a rather
amusing bit from gossip columnist Earl Wilson, who reported in his
August 22, 1969 column, “Sonny and Cher, who used to scare people, have
now been scared by people. ‘Totally horrified’ by the Sharon Tate murder
case, they bought a big dog — ‘a pit bull terrier’ — to protect them
and their little daughter Chaste [sic] at their Hollywood Home...” It is
at about this time that using large dogs for personal protection
becomes popular, but pit bulls are still not singled out as particularly
dangerous. In 1971, a new law allows the U.S. Postal Service to bill
people for injuries caused to letter carriers by their dogs, but it
applies to all dogs, and the general attitude is still one of human
responsibility. In a syndicated New York Times story from 1977
on dog bites, opening with the story of a seven year-old boy receiving a
very minor injury from a Great Dane, author Jane E. Brody advises,
“(S)imple precautions on the part of the dog owners and potential
victims could prevent most of these attacks.”
Change in perception and ban on pit bulls
Less than a decade later, that had all changed, and by New Year’s Day
1986, over thirty communities are considering breed specific
legislation and bans on pit bulls. What changed?
For one thing, despite being illegal in all fifty states, dog
fighting made a comeback in the 80s, and the pit bull is the dog of
choice. It is also the preferred guard dog for drug dealers and gangs,
with a hugely publicized attack in 1987 in which a pit bull guarding a
marijuana crop in California mauls and kills a two-and-a-half year-old
boy.
By the summer of that year, every single proposed ban has become law,
but not necessarily with the support of animal professionals. Kent
Salazar, head of Albuquerque’s animal control division, commented at the
time of their proposed ban on pit bulls that he didn’t think a ban on
pit bulls was necessary, saying, “We have all the means to protect
people with clauses about vicious dogs.” He also noted that, a few years
previously, Doberman pinschers were the target of such bans. His words
went unheeded, and Tijeras, New Mexico, just outside of Albuquerque,
passes the toughest pit bull ban of the time, allowing animal control
officers to seize and destroy them on sight without compensation to the
owner.
The various pit bull breed bans are decried by animal control
officials as “the most concentrated legal assault on a pit bull they can
recall,” as well as “canine racism.” The Houston Chronicle
quotes unnamed officials as placing the blame for the problem squarely
on humans. “(M)any of the pit bull attacks are due to a skyrocketing
number of poorly bred and badly trained dogs raised by backyard
breeders, who are trying to cash in on the pit bull’s growing reputation
as a cheap, but deadly effective guard dog, particularly in urban
areas.”
Nearly thirty years after the beginning of this anti-pit bull
hysteria, the tide seems to be turning a little bit, but every step
forward is followed by a step back. Even as Florida is attempting to
overturn all breed-specific legislation, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin is
considering imposing a new ban. Yet it only takes a brief look at the
history of pit bulls to realize that the dogs are not the problem; the
humans who misuse them are. For over a hundred years, holding the owners
personally responsible was enough to prevent attacks, and the breed was
perceived as very child-friendly. With outreach and education, it may
be possible to restore that image and rehabilitate the pit bull’s
reputation, restoring an iconic American dog to its rightful place among
mankind’s best friends.
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