The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

McCombie a royal figure in Aberdeen-Angus history

- PeTer small

The World Angus Forum visit to the breed’s homeland in the north east gave delegates a great insight into the history of the Aberdeen-Angus breed.

The work of William McCombie, of Tillyfour, Alford, has long been recognised as a key to the Aberdeen-Angus breed’s history and the forum’s visit to Tillyfour brought part of the breed’s heritage alive with a dramatisat­ion of Queen Victoria’s visit to the Donside farm in 1863.

The event where McCombie paraded his prize-winning stock around the house at Tillyfour for the monarch was re-enacted.

For those with an interest in Aberdeen-Angus cattle, McCombie is regarded as royalty.

Born at Tillyfour in 1805, his father Charles and his grandfathe­r were both in the cattle trade. At that time much of this trade meant driving lean cattle out of Aberdeensh­ire to the trysts in central Scotland for selling to English dealers.

Indeed, Charles McCombie is recorded as having sold 1,500 beasts at the Michaelmas tryst at Falkirk and his shrewd bargaining allowed him to purchase Tillyfour.

His eldest son, also named Charles, went into the ministry and served the parish of Lumphanan for 30 years.

For William, however, it was to be cattle he turned to after leaving university education early.

He learned farming and the lean cattle trade from his father and knew what to look for in animals to turn a profit.

Both favoured the local black polled cattle, the Buchan Hummlies, and in future years William would use this type in his breeding exploits.

He leased Tillyfour from his father in 1824, and subsequent­ly his elder brother, and began his career in his own right.

Not long after, he started to breed his type of cattle which were needed for the changing face of the cattle trade.

By now the importance of turnips was being discovered as a cleaning crop, but more importantl­y as winter feed allowing animals to be kept through the winter and be fattened rather than driven south for fattening in England.

With steam transport at sea and later on rail, beef could be transporte­d quickly in mass to mass markets.

McCombie saw the potential of breeding for beef and waved goodbye to the droving trade.

His eye for cattle and for profit meant that he was determined in the type he was breeding for.

It was his purchase of black polled cattle known as Doddies from that great Angus breeder Hugh Watson of Keillor at Newtyle, known as the founder of the breed, that really set McCombie off as the builder of the breed.

Aberdeensh­ire was well known as the area where the Shorthorn breed was developed into a beef type separating it from the differing dairy types.

McCombie’s skill as a great breeder and also as great showman saw him take major honours at Birmingham, Smithfield and Paris in 1862. This all helped put the blacks in pole position.

Remarkably, he was also to become the Liberal MP for West Aberdeensh­ire becoming the first tenant farmer to sit in the House of Commons in 1868.

 ??  ?? Tillyfour House at Alford, the McCombie family home.
Tillyfour House at Alford, the McCombie family home.
 ??  ?? William McCombie plays a key role in the history of the AberdeenAn­gus breed.
William McCombie plays a key role in the history of the AberdeenAn­gus breed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom