While I agree with you that the RIR's development was in the works way before the Buckeye, I respectfully disagree that a RIR is a far superior bird (and that is "just history). I know it's a bit annoying when one is an aficionado of a breed, but all of the best breeds have the block-type that the Buckeye doesn't have: Rocks, Reds, Dorkings, Leghorns, Anconas, Minorcas, Houdans. It is the type both associated with the best egg-production and the best meat production. Although for years the Buckeye was omitted from the SOP when it fell to near extinction, I refuse to allow the Buckeye to simply be a footnote in the American Class breeds. But it was. If it weren't for the work of the ALBC to revive it, who knows where it would be today. I enjoy seeing them today at the shows, but that doesn't mean that they were a strongly impactful breed in the past. My favorite novel by James Baldwin is Giovanni's Room. It' not his most noted work, but it's my favorite, but being my favorite doesn't forcibly make it what it was not.The Buckeye serves its role as a dual purpose fowl well. Of course it does. At no point did I say it didn't.I have the advantage of the creator of the Buckeye own words. The creator of the Buckeye was a single individual, Ms. Nettie Metcalf. She never aspired to show the breed but her objective was utility qualities -- this objective I believe Metcalf fully achieved. Yes, but those qualities do not equal the typical potential of the Rock or the Red, which is why they were overlook for the Rock and the Red. Metcalf admitted that the Buckeye's "great beauty . . . in the future more show birds will be produced yearly." Again though, showing was not her objective.
She obtained, raised and showed RIRs too. In fact, Metcalf was the first to introduce RIRs into Ohio. However, Metcalf knew nothing of the RIR development back East when she created the Buckeye and in the beginning called her birds, "Buckeye Reds."
When Metcalf learned of the RIRs in late 1896 in an article in the American Agriculturist, she corresponded and exchanged eggs with some of the RIR breeders of the day. She found that the RIR were "bred to a lighter shade of red." She even described the RIR at the time of APA admittance as being "sorrel" in color. At the time, she had Buckeyes that were both pea comb and single comb. The RIRs were rose and single comb. She tossed her single comb (SC) Buckeyes and bred them to the RIR. The first Buckeye had superior color to the RIR, and Metcalf "never liked [the RIR] well enough to mix them" in her Buckeye breed. Particularly, she was keen on keeping the slate bar in the back of her breed. She put some of her SC Buckeyes/ RIRs in the shows back East. "All my single comb Buckeyes scored well under their [RIR] standard in the shows and were made use of in leading yards down East." Metcalf's rose comb RIRs scored well in shows too (92.5 to 95.5), but she said her 95.5 point RIRs "were almost buff to my thinking." Metcalf said, "I did think inasmuch as I had helped make the RIRs by an infusion, however slight, of Buckeye blood, I would undertake to get them admitted to the Standard at the same time as the Buckeyes, so fitted up some fine birds for the Cleveland show in 1902, both Buckeyes and S.C. RIRs, which was the first official showing of either breed." RIR color was in flux for a long time. Her description of Reds reflects what she was seeing in the birds she procured, but it would be inaccurate to claim them as an authoritative statement about RIR color at the time. Because of the way RIRs were developed, the fluctuated in color for decades upon decades.
The RIR has changed color drastically over the years since their creation and are no longer the lighter color they were originally. Again, it would be more accurate to think of early RIR flocks as being a patchwork that went from buff-ish to dark brick-red. Contrastingly, the Buckeye is still the color it was originally created & has not changed one iota. Actually, I don't know if I've ever seen a Buckeye cock that has proper tail coloring. Those that I've seen are solid black in the tail creating a strong contrast between tail and body which is distinctly contrary to standard. This may be the connection to the past that inspires Buckeye breeders today. Today's RIR is a darker bird than the Buckeye, but this was not always so.
Did Buckeye color influence RIR color in the early years? Although Buckeyes are still supposed to be the color they were originally, but RIR is no longer a lighter color, but darker than the Buckeye, then how is this fact impacting the SOP interpretation of the color of the Buckeye today?
The Buckeye has never been wildly popular nor did it sustain the U.S.'s populace with meat for dinner, but how many rare breeds did? However, the Buckeye has survived as a breed and against great odds virtually unchanged since its creation. Today, the breed is flourishing. This is due in large part to the focus of the ALBC (now Livestock Conservancy) for the breed's recovery and to some very dedicated new breeders. This last statement is exactly the point I was making--100%. Again, I know when one has taken a fancy to a breed, one often gets defensive, but if you actually go back to what I wrote you'll find that this is exactly what I meant. Personally, I think that the Buckeye is enjoying the most positive attention that it ever has.