- The Eglinton and Caledon Hounds have had an interesting history that has involved a number of changes. The original hounds were culled from the Toronto Hunt pack located in Aurora, Canada in 1919. The ECH hounds were formed as a drag pack to hunt the newly purchased property at Avenue Road and Eglinton Avenue in Toronto, Canada. This was a convenience for the local business men who could ride to the hounds in the morning and still have time to go to work in the afternoon.
- By 1929 this this establishment had become known as the Eglinton Hunt. The early Eglinton pack consisted of what is currently referred to as 'old English foxhounds'...wide chested with an upright shoulder and knuckled over feet. In the 1950's the English hound, for many packs, became much more streamlined, with a swan neck, a sloping shoulder, well let down hocks and good feet. These hounds were able to travel over the countryside at a much faster pace.
- Through his connections in England Maj. Kindersley was able to obtain both stallion hounds and bitches in whelp as the Eglinton pack began to change over to this more modern English hound. Further blood was obtained through the courtesy of sharing hounds brought from England to U.S. packs. The Eglinton pack remained totally English until the 1980's by which time the kennel had been moved to the Caledon hills and the name of the pack changed to Eglinton and Caledon Hunt .
- Large swamps in this country meant that huntsmen had a harder time staying with hounds, and therefore good cry was a necessity. At the same time coyotes, which traveled longer distances at speed, invaded the countryside. In the 1990's Legend from The Curre in Wales provided a line that had both toughness and voice. You can still pick out his descendants by their rough coats.
- The addition of the Penn-Marydel Hound blood developed a rich deep toned voice into the pack. Using Fell hounds from that steep and rugged country in England, where hounds are often left to hunt the line on their own, introduced a more tough type which also proved to be biddable, a trait they passed on to their progeny.
- ECH Diplomat, a first cross with these hounds, has descendants in a good number of packs. Records of hound breeding or acquisitions in the 1930's were lost due to a fire. Terry Morton kept the Eglinton pack alive during the World War II years with a minimal number of hounds which he hunted in the area north of Toronto. When he suffered a badly broken leg, Charles Kindersley took over the job of hunting hounds.
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