Dog’s Best Friend: Mr. Bojangles and the close shave
[click "Play" for Ted's story about Bojangles]
When the breed first crossed the pond, it went straight to the top, entering aristocratic families such as the Goulds, Guggenheims, Morgans, and Vanderbilts. The Old English held their place at the top of the food chain until the late 1950s, when a champion named Fezziwig Ceiling Zero became Top Dog in the show world and everyone wanted Nana. The breed's popularity peaked in the 1970s, when an average of 15,000 Old English Sheepdogs were registered each year with the AKC. However, as besotted owners soon realized: Old English are high maintenance.