Ragdoll cat
information

Ragdoll kittens - photo copyright Helmi Flick
Introduction
This page on ragdoll cat information expands on the areas
touched upon on the main Ragdoll
cats page and focuses on origin and the myths. The main page
covers all the rest.
There is a bit of mystery and controversy surrounding the Ragdoll cat.
This probably has something to do with the founding breeder, the late
Ann Baker, who seems to have been an individual with very definite
ideas. It might be useful to talk about her for a while. After Jean
Mill, the founder of the Bengal
cat in the early 1970s, Ann Baker is
perhaps one of the best known cat breeders in the history of the cat
fancy.
Ann
Baker - the founder - ragdoll cat information
If there is a bit of mystery and uncertainty surrounding the Ragdoll
cat breed's early days the same can be said perhaps about Ann Baker.
In fact, the slightly mysterious Ann Baker provides an element of
mystery to
this breed itself. So, what was she like?
One person who met her personally is one of the longest serving Ragdoll
cat breeders, Dave Chambers of the Ragnarok
Cattery. David also worked with her at her cattery from
Nov. 1977 to March 1979. David's cattery must be a long running one
because their website URL is www.ragdoll.com. You couldn't get that
sort of URL nowadays. They have been running since 1977. The breed was
started in the early 1960s. Ragnarok Cattery is run by David
with Georgann Chambers.
David's personal view (taken from his website) is that she was a "weird
cat lady". He implies that others, who met her, felt the same way. He says
that
she made claims that defied logic and was inclined to change her
thoughts from day to day. OK, this squares up with the general view,
perhaps. Although we should respect any individuals right to
be an
individual.
David and Georgann Chambers regularly visited Ann Baker's cattery over
the period 11-77 to 3-79. Ann Baker would charge for a tour of her
cattery (seems commercial enough and why not). David
with Georgann Chambers started their Ragdoll breeding cattery with no
less than 36 cats from Ann Baker's cattery. Ann baker died in Jan. 1997.
Conclusion: She
was an individual, with her own personal views, possibly eccentric. She
seems to have been commercially minded but perhaps not that good at
translating that into making money. I would have thought that she loved
cats and started what has become a very well established mainstream cat
breed, in the
top 10 of all breeds in terms of popularity (the top 10
breeds ranked as voted for - opens in new window).
The
cat breed - ragdoll cat information
Dave Chambers who knew Ann Baker says this about the very
beginning of the breed:
A free roaming (feral or semi-feral) and free breeding (unneutered) cat
called "Josephine",
owned (kept) by a Mrs Pennels was discovered (noticed I suspect) by Ann
Baker. Mrs Pennels lived in the Riverside area of Southern California.
Dave Chambers lives near this area and so did Ann Baker.
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Map
Josephine was a Persian Angora type cat but not a purebred cat. She had
what Dave Chambers calls "remarkable" kittens. Josephine was involved
in a traffic accident. This was nothing exceptional to a free
roaming cat but it seems to have put more focus onto her attractive
kittens.
The myth would seem to be that Josephine was hit by a car (whilst
pregnant). The kittens when born were exceptional in character due to
the accident. It is not clear from Dave Chamber's narrative if
Josephine was pregnant with the kittens when hit by a car or after
birth (I suspect the former). Either way there appears to have been no
effect on the kittens.
Another myth recounted by the author of the book, "Ragdoll Cats" by
Karen Leigh Davis was that Josephine was "genetically altered" in a
gevernment facility after the accident whilst undergoing treatment. The
kittens born after the treatment demonstrated an immunity to pain, were
extremely passive and went limp when picked up.
David Chambers says that Josephine's kittens grew large, had lovely
blue eyes and great
characters. Ann Baker spotted something special. Mrs Baker selected
some of the kittens and breed from them. Ann Baker had a
Birman
type
(see below, Daddy War Bucks) and Burmese type cats which I presume that
she used in this breeding
program.
David also says that no outcrossing with purebred Persian, Birman or
Burmese cats took place.
The foundation cats are all from this starting point. A splinter group
developed another breed, the RagaMuffin,
later.
Karen Leigh Davis in her book says that Ann Baker used cats that were
related to Josephine to begin the breed. These cats were called, Daddy
War Bucks (a Birman type cat that I presume is the cat that David
Chambers refers to), Buckwheat, Fugianna and Tiki. She says that Ann
Baker attributes the docile nature of the breed to Josephine and the
appearance is credited to Daddy War Bucks.
Conclusions - ragdoll cat information
All the fanciful information is pure myth. A myth is a "a fictitious
story, person, or thing". The truth is less interesting. Josephine was
a docile cat. Daddy War Bucks had the looks. Ann Baker knew how to
bring it all together.
Ragdoll
cat information - all the rest
This page was built after the main page. The main page on the Ragdoll
cat can be seen here: Ragdoll
cats.
The link takes you to lots more on this popular breed of cat.
From
Ragdoll cat information to Household Pets (mixed breed cats
or domestic shorthair cats).
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