Livestock & Horse Sale Schedule

Livestock Show Schedule

Junior Results

2008 Angus
Show Schedule
Premium Book
2007 Angus

Show Champions
Show Results


2007 Results
Breeding Cattle
2007 Grand Champion Bull
G13 Stand Out
Cherry Knoll Farm, W. Grove, PA
2007 Reserve Grand Champion Bull
Werner Wild Fire 96
Werner Angus, Rapids City, IL
2007 Grand Champion Female
Freys Arkpride of Cherry Knoll
Cherry Knoll Farm, W. Grove, PA
2007 Reserve Grand Champion Female
EXAR Princess 6414
Brooklyn Bell, Delaware, OK
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Pen Show
2007 Grand Champion Pen of 3
Rolling R3 Ranch, Edmond, OK
2007 Reserve Champion Pen of 3
Rolling R3 Ranch, Edmond, OK
2007 Grand Champion Carload Class
Whitestone Krebs, Gordon, NE
2007 Reserve Champion Carload Class
Express Ranches, Yukon, OK
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Past Champions

Angus History:

When George Grant transported four Angus bulls from Scotland to the middle of the Kansas Prairie in 1873, they were part of the Scotsman's dream to found a colony of wealthy, stock-raising Britishers. Grant died five years later, and many of the settlers at his Victoria, Kans., colony later returned to their homeland. However, these four Angus bulls, probably from the herd of George Brown of Westertown, Fochabers, Scotland, made a lasting impression on the U.S. cattle industry.

When two of the George Grant bulls were exhibited in the fall of 1873 at the Kansas City, Mo., Livestock Exposition, some considered them freaks because of their polled (naturally hornless) heads and solid black color. Grant, a forward thinker, crossed the bulls with native Texas Longhorn cows, producing a large number of hornless black calves that survived well on the winter range. The Angus crosses wintered better and weighed more the next spring, the first demonstration of the breed's value in their new homeland.

Early Importers and Breeders

The first great herds of Angus beef cattle in America were built up by purchasing stock directly from Scotland. Twelve hundred cattle were imported, mostly to the Midwest, in a period of explosive growth between 1878 and 1883. Over the next quarter of a century these early owners helped start other herds by breeding, showing and selling their stock.

The American Angus Association

The American Aberdeen-Angus Breeders' Association (name shortened in 1950s to American Angus Association) was founded in Chicago, Ill., on November 21, 1883, with 60 members. The growth of the association has paralleled the success of the Angus breed in America. In the first century of operation, more than 10 million head were recorded. The Association records more cattle each year than any other beef breed association, making it the largest beef breed registry association in the world.
http://www.angus.org