24th December 1940
Dachshunde e.V. (FSD)
Official cover for the 'Fachschaft für Dachshunde e.V.' sent to the Office of the Public Prosecutor in Düsseldorf. Ref: 24.12.1940 - 14/73
Fachschaft für Dachshunde e.V.
In 1906, the Teckel Club joined the umbrella organisation 'Cartel of special clubs for hunting and working dogs that kept studbooks' founded in Frankfurt am Main, which from 1925 became the 'German Cartel for Dogs' (DKH).
As the second German representative, alongside the delegate Commission (DC), the cartel in Paris was a founding member of the Fédération Cynologique Internationale (FCI ) in 1911.
Due to the political-cultural synchronisation from 1933, the DC and the DKH as well as the 'Association of Associations for the Testing of Working Dogs for Hunting' (JGV, later JGHV), which was split off from the DC in 1899, were dissolved and became the 'Reich Association for the German' with all other dog breeding clubs. The Teckel Club was also dissolved in 1935 and 3 associations kept family registers for Teckels: the DC, the Teckel-Club and the Nutzckel-Club.
There were also 3 clubs that kept breeding registers for dachshunds: the rabbit dachshund club, the club for long-haired dachshunds (which, according to the assumption at the time, developed through cross-breeding with quail dogs) and the club for rough-haired dachshunds (which, in particular, through cross-breeding Wire-haired Pinscher (Schnauzer) and Dandie Dinmont Terrier emerged).
With the formation of the 'Fachschaft für Dachshunde eV' (FSD), the organisational plurality was ended and the testing and breeding system was centralised.
The FSD was subordinate to the RDH, and from 1937 to the 'Reichsbund Deutsche Jägerschaft' (RDJ). However, club life came to a standstill in 1939 due to a ban on gatherings.
After the RDH and RDJ were dissolved in 1945, the exhibition, testing and breeding system for Dachshunds was reorganised.
Source: www-dtk--nord-de (loose translation)
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