HOW TO DEFINE an Old English hound? I put the question to Martin Scott, who is acknowledged as the leading hound breeding authority of our time. The former Master and current breeder of the Vale of the White Horse (VWH) pack in Gloucestershire is something of a walking encyclopaedia when it comes to The Foxhound Kennel Stud Book, in which successive generations of foxhounds have been recorded ever since its inception in the mid-18th century. The casual observer might suggest Old English hounds are best identified by their uniform Belvoir tan but, as Scott points out, it’s really all about bloodlines. “A true Old English hound is one without a drop of outside blood,” he says. “That’s no American, fell, Welsh or heritage of any other kind in a foxhound pedigree going back to the late 19th century and beyond.”
It is true that a smooth black-and-tan coat is often the hallmark of an Old English hound; however, the Belvoir tan that predominates today is the consequence of a fashion that took hold in the late 1800s