Possibly Robert Mongold? I'm not sure if that is who Bob had in mind, perhaps the other guy, but I've seen pictures of Robert Mongold's birds on Feathersite. I believe he has started a Sussex club?
Hi,
The new club now is the American Sussex Association. Started by at Cherokee Exotics.
The best names in LF and bantam SQ Speckled Sussex are , as you say, Judge Overton, Plus Rev. Ashbrook in Bantam SS;
and Tony Albrittion LF SS (ID) Also Walt Reichert (KY) has been tearing up the ring in his area with his LG SS hen.
Skytop Bantam in PA did a wonderful job of melding Overton and Mongold Bantam SS and are APA Master Breeders in Bantam SS. I don't know if they have them any more but several folk have their strain. Some are melding it back with Overton ( essentially a loose line-breeding) . Cassie Streitmeyer(Sp?) at Painted Feathers Farm has both Overton and Skytop strains. They are both top SQ Bantam SS but differing body types.
Personally, I think Albrittion's LF are a stain unto themselves and shouldn't be crossed to other LF SS lines, but that's just my opinion. Tony did an outcross a couple of years back and has brought the flock back from it. So much diversity there and no reason to outcross again.
Now there are a couple of guys down south. One has picked up a coveted line when the guy sold out. The other has pure Skytop. Oh, names escape me. I'll have to look them up. Great breeder's directory listed over at the American Sussex Association website. Lists only the colors and varieties, but a quick call will reveal which strains the members have. Nothing like it here on BYC that I know of. No SQ LF or bantam Silver Sussex strains in the US, that I know of. Only SQ strains of Sussex I know of in the US are Speckled Sussex and LS. There are Red Sussex and Greenfire brought in Brown Sussex to release next year. There are some Buff Sussex somewhere I saw on the Net. These will all take time. If one wants to shows and win
now with Sussex fowl, then the SS and LS are the varieties to use. Esp. in SS (because they are a tri-colored variety) , get the vintage strains and never cross them outside of the related gene pools. In Bantams, that is Ashbrook; Mongold ;Skytop; and Overton. In LF I think.. the lines are more separate and much caution should be used and counsel divined before crossing them. They're Albrittion, Overton, and Reichert. Don't quote me, but I think Mongold only had bantams.
There's also another book out there on Sussex that's really worthwhile getting. One of the 3 great Secretaries of the english "Sussex Poultry Club" was Leo Outram ( The other two were Sharpe and Clem Watson). Anyway,
Outram wrote a wonderful book on Sussex Fowl ( died in 1951). I have the 1926, a great little book. Then there is a 1936 edition. Never found it for sale but... Country Books in NZ reprinted it. Wow, what a gold mine! Oversized with stiff cardboard and colors in on high quality paper. Truly respectful of the volume. Includes full color prints reprints of the Feathered World series on Sussex Fowl. And the text of the 1936 edition. Plus... wait for it... the series of letters by Clem Watson on the Sussex. These letters are ultra rare. Checking OCLC reveals they are only in 2 libraries worldwide and
they aren't loaning them out.
Per the
Peter Smith Sussex book from Australia? I found it interesting but unhelpful as their breeding parameters and color genes are different from ours. For instance, they value size so highly in the Light Sussex to the point it compromises the breed type. I think there is a copy for sale on
eBay
Batty's book on the Dorking and Sussex Fowl is interesting. Kinda cute, he says on the opening page, he mean to write about the Dorking but quickly decided n the Sussex instead. Excellent info and illustrations. Available for cheap on
eBay.
Best,
Karen
PR Director, Amer. Sussex Assoc.