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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Count_Noble
rdf:type
yago:Dog102084071 yago:Carnivore102075296 yago:Whole100003553 yago:Animal100015388 yago:Placental101886756 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:Organism100004475 yago:Chordate101466257 yago:Object100002684 yago:DomesticAnimal101317541 yago:LivingThing100004258 yago:Mammal101861778 yago:WikicatMaleMammals yago:Canine102083346 yago:Vertebrate101471682 dbo:Person yago:WikicatIndividualDogs
rdfs:label
Count Noble
rdfs:comment
Count Noble (August 1, 1879 – January 20, 1891) was a dog English 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.
dbp:name
Count Noble
foaf:depiction
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dbp:birthPlace
dbr:Sewickley,_Pennsylvania
dcterms:subject
dbc:1879_animal_births dbc:Individual_taxidermy_exhibits dbc:Culture_of_Pittsburgh dbc:1891_animal_deaths dbc:Individual_dogs dbc:Male_mammals
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dbo:thumbnail
n9:Count_Noble.jpg?width=300
dbp:restingPlace
dbr:The_National_Bird_Dog_Museum dbr:Grand_Junction,_Tennessee
dbp:birthDate
1879-08-01
dbp:deathDate
1891-01-20
dbp:gender
Dog
dbp:owner
Benjamin Frederick Wilson
dbp:parents
Nora Count Windom
dbp:species
Domestic dog
dbo:abstract
Count Noble (August 1, 1879 – January 20, 1891) was a dog English 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." His owner, Captain Benjamin Frederick Wilson, was a banker and coal barge operator. While he was well known for his hunting prowess and show skills, it was his prepotency, the ability to pass on his best traits to his progeny, that made him the most famous. In 1880, he won the national amateur Derby dog show. He was so famous that owners of other setters refused to compete in shows with him. Other shows offered special inducements in order to encourage his owner to compete. 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. Following his death, his preserved body was displayed in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in a scene showing him hunting quail. The display was moved to The National Bird Dog Museum in Tennessee. In 2011, American Kennel Club judge Richard LeBeau began an effort to raise $2,000 to establish a historical marker honoring Count Noble outside Osborne Elementary School, which stands on the site of Wilson's former home.
dbp:breed
dbr:English_Setter
dbp:known
Hunting dog and show dog
gold:hypernym
dbr:Setter
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Count_Noble?oldid=1111843043&ns=0
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wikipedia-en:Count_Noble