
About the Ottawa Kennel Club
The Ottawa Kennel Club is Canada's oldest, authenticated Club in
Canada and was founded by Perley George Keyes and his partner
Alfred Geddes in an agreement dated August 4, 1887. Documentation
to this effect is kept on file with the Club's Archivist, Squibs Mercier.
Initially the Club was known as The Rideau Kennel Club but was later
re-named around 1889 as The Ottawa Kennel Club.
 The first dog show sponsored by The Ottawa Kennel Club, took place over
Graham's Feed Store on Sparks Street, site of today's well-know Sparks
Street Mall, a block from Parliament Hill. An official catalogue dated 1893,
marking the 5th. Annual Dog Show, sold for five cents and remains today
within the Archives of the Club. It is interesting to note that this particular show
was held at the Ottawa Exhibition grounds, later to be named Lansdowne
Park after an early Canadian Governor General.
The first century was one of growth and
progress. The Club has been involved in many "firsts". For example, the
first Canadian dog to win at the prestigious Westminster, N.Y.
dog show was Ottawa bred, Champion Haymarket Faultless, a white
Bull Terrier, owned by Club member, Humphrey Elliott.
The first
Puppy Sweepstakes competition held in Canada took place here in
1965. Another milestone, is the Ottawa Junior Kennel Club, a direct
offshoot of it's parent Club, which held the first official Sanction Shows
as recognized by the Canadian Kennel Club.
The development of the Internationally recognized Show of Shows competition, held annually in
conjunction with the three day all-breed dog show, has been a crowning accomplishment for The
Ottawa Kennel Club. Originating in 1967, to mark Canada's centennial, this event continues to draw
top winning dogs whom have garnered a Best In Show in Canada to compete for the coveted Show of
Shows Award. It is with pride that this event was given the prestigious Pedigree Canine Event of the
Year Award in 1997.
Other honors bestowed on this Club include a Commemorative plaque presented by Mayor Jim Durrell
in 1987, acknowledging The Ottawa Kennel Club as a Centennial Club. And in 1997 the Canadian
Kennel Club granted The Ottawa Kennel Club a Life Membership Award. Further accolades also
include an Award Winning Website which was voted one of the best 500 dog related sites.
The Club has given generously over the years to numerous organizations such as the Canadian Guide Dogs For The Blind, the physically
challenged, the Heart & Stroke Foundation, the Canadian Cancer Society, the Children's Hospital of
Eastern Ontario, the Canadian Diabetes Association as well as scholarship funding to the University of
Ottawa.
Photos: Mr. Perley George Keyes and Family, 1893 *Official Catalogue, Ch. Haymarket Faultless
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