05/03/2026
“We went no further afield in our search for our first bull than we had for our foundation females. Blakeford Buxton (AAA.543628), the first male acquired, came from Blakeford Farm, only about 7 miles from Wye Plantation on the other side of Queenstown…Owned by George Moffet, an executive of the Corn Products Company, Blakeford Farm was managed by my friend, Guy Harmon…Blakeford Buxton…dropped in the summer of 1937, he was the result of a blending of Blackcap Revolution and Earl Marshall blood, being by Andelot Pride Lad (AAA. 481213) and out of Andelot Blackcap 18th (AAA. 489190), by Glencarnock Buxton. This was the Blackcap family…Buxton was a big bull weighing over 2,000 pounds, a circumstance that enabled us to get him for only $150. There was little place in a 1938 show herd for a bull of that size, so off he went to these neighbors who were so intent on raising big, unfashionable cattle…”
- James B. Lingle, The Breed of Noble Bloods.
Blakeford Buxton was described by Mr. Lingle as “very black , with well-sprung ribs and a fine covering of flesh. His top and tail setting were perfectly straight; his legs were well-placed, straight, and faultless. While his head was plain, massive, and a bit Roman-nosed, it was undeniably masculine. He had a good middle and an excellent…length of quarter. He walked like a good horse.” He recounted stories of an unruly bull. However, in contrast to my research, Mr. Lingle stated that no sons of Blakeford Buxton were used at Wye Plantation. Pedigree records suggest otherwise. For example, Caliban Pride—sired by Capearl, a full brother to Pearl of Wye—appears in the lineage of Lovely Petunia of Wye, and subsequently in Lavonne of Wye, the dam of Landrover.