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             The 
              first recorded Afghan's in the West was in the latter part of the 
              19th century brought back by British officers and others from the 
              Indian-Afghanistan border wars. 
             There 
              was little interest in the breed until 1907 when Captain John Barff 
              brought from Persia via India his dog "Zardin" in 1925. 
              During WWI the breed literally disappeared in the Western world. 
              
             Today's 
              Afghan Hounds date to 1920 when Maj. & Mrs. G. Bell Murray and 
              Miss Jean C. Manson brought a group of dogs from Baluchistan, formerly 
              an independent state south of Afghanistan and now a part of Pakistan, 
              to Scotland. Most of these dogs were of the "desert" type--racy, 
              fine headed and light in coat. 
             Mrs. 
              Mary Amps shipped to England the first of a group of Afghan Hounds 
              from the kennel she maintained in Kabul. These were mainly the "mountain" 
              type--sturdily built, relatively short-coupled and more or less 
              full-coated.. From these imports came a most successful show dog 
              and sire, English Ch. Sirdar of Ghazni. 
             Though 
              during the 1920s a number of "Bell-Murray" Afghans were 
              exported to the United States and registered in the AKC Stud Book 
              beginning in 1926, the real start of the breed in this country dates 
              to the first "Ghazni" imports in 1931.
               
              Photographer: Pepper Nix
            
   
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