Dominique has a lot of potential in a low input homestead type setting. We tend to favor the heavy hitters (big eaters), and as a result more grain dependent. There is value in the medium sized large fowl. The large dual purpose breeds became the standard with the mechanization of agriculture and cheap grain. Meat production followed along with the masses moving to the city.
Dominique in their earliest years were game mixes. The name is actually the color pattern, and only the game breeders use the name to describe that color now. They become more standardized along the way, and the standardization that called for single comes in the Rocks and rose comb in the Dominique killed the breed. The shift was to the single combed Rocks, where before it could have been hard to distinguish between the two (earliest years in a more crude form).
For whoever does not know, I will let them guess where the name comes from.
Dominique can certainly be called the earliest American breed, but is does help to understand that their type was not as refined as it is now.
I do like this breed and think they are still overlooked. A very practical option.
There's a neat project that someone did using Doms. I think they're Centraorchid? He set up a flock to live completely off the grid so to speak, calls them the Missouri Dominique's ; not sure whatever the outcome was but Doms are most certainly a homesteading fowl. The name Dominique has Haitian origin....I think they contributed a bird to the Dom makeup.
@mithious who's line did you find that is reliably broody? How cool would it be to have a flock of broodies in 2 years time~ properly managed you would never have to buy another chicken!! They are a neat bird.
M