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Purebred Targhee Sheep
Targhee History
The western range Industry has long demanded a breed of sheep, thick in natural fleshing, producing high quality apparel type of wool, and adapted to rugged conditions.
Such a breed would contribute to breeding stability and simplify marketing problems with uniform body type and fleece grade. Many sheep breeders thought the ideal range breed would be 3/4 fine wool and 1/4 long wool breeding. This was commonly called a “come back” sheep.
To fulfill this need the Targhee sheep was developed by the U.S. Sheep Experiment Station at Dubois, Idaho. In 1926 a group of 210 of the experiment station’s cross-breed ewes, consisting of Rambouillet, Lincoln and Corriedale blood, were bred to nine of the smoothest, thickest experiment station Rambouillet rams. After three years of the program, 201 first generation ewes were carefully selected and bred intensely. These ewes weight around 91 pounds as yearling after sheering. A wide range of variations were produced in the second and third generations, but careful selection reduced the variations in future generations.
The new breed of sheep was named Targhee after Targhee National Forest where the sheep grazed during the summer. The first private individual to breed Targhees was Henry J. Yoppe of Eureka, Montana. He began breeding 3/4 crosses in 1929, and in 1934 bought his first Targhee ram from Dubois.