






Towards the end of 1933, a group of Southern enthusiasts,
including Mrs Nadine George
‘Beulah’, Miss Clare Molony
‘Westcarrs’, and Mrs M. I. (Zoë) Rhys ‘Hughley’, considered
the
time was right for a new National Collie Breed Society with a southern base.
An application to register the Collie Association, complete with the necessary
21
shilling [£1.05] fee was received by The Kennel Club on 2 December 1933, with approval
granted on the 16 January 1934. With founding members coming from both the Rough
and Smooth Collie worlds the club as was then customary,
catered for both varieties.
In the Collie Association’s original application for registration, the stated
aims
were given as:
“To try and again make the collie one of the popular British breeds”
and true to their intentions the Collie Association supported all Collie
varieties,
including the Bearded Collie throughout its early struggles for acceptance during
the 1950s, as well as working disciplines scheduling
obedience classes at some of
the early post-
Championship status came in 1946 when the club was awarded two
of the four sets of
Challenge Certificates offered to the Rough Collie,
both shows held at the London
Scottish Drill Hall, Buckingham Gate,
London SW1, the first in May and the second
in September. 1947 saw
a repeat of this arrangement, although these shows were held
at the Corn Exchange, Leeds, and Portland Street, London.
In an effort to encourage the regeneration of the General Championship Show
the Kennel
Club withdrew championship status from all breed clubs in 1948, but
by 1950 common
sense had prevailed and championship status returned to the Collie Association. Just
why it was withdrawn in 1952, when Rough Collies were limited to a single Breed Club
Championship show is no longer apparent, but whatever the reason it was resolved
within the year, and Championship status
from 1953 when the Collie Association engaged
its only foreign judge to
officiate at its June show, since when it has become an
annual event,
anchored to November at the end of the show calendar since 1955.
With the election, in 1951, of Miss Margaret Osborne ‘Shiel’ to the secretarial post
the Collie Association provided itself with an indomitable champion who, over her
twenty-
famous Handbook,
published in 1952, and the first club sponsored quarterly newsletter issued free
to members.




Today the Collie Association is dedicated to promoting of the Rough Collie, with committee members, officers or representatives throughout the United Kingdom, it aims to achieve its objective by:
Promoting the breeding and exhibition of pedigree Rough Collies.
Giving help and encouragement to novice and hobby breeders.
To do all possible to further the progress and health of the Rough Collie as a whole.
Membership and inclusion in the Judging Lists (subject to acceptance)
is open to all.
For more details about what the Collie Association has to offer
visit our web-