North Country Beagle
The North Country Beagle, also called the Northern Hound in some histories, was a British hunting hound type associated with northern England. It is generally described as larger, faster, and more open-running than the smaller southern beagle types used in enclosed or slower country. The breed no longer exists as a separate modern registry population, but it appears in accounts of how British hounds developed before more standardized beagle and foxhound lines took shape. Its importance is historical, especially for people studying scent-hound ancestry.
Human context for the North Country Beagle belongs to pack hunting, kennel selection, and regional terrain. Hounds needed endurance, voice, cooperation, and enough speed to work open country with mounted or foot followers depending on local custom. Modern buyers should be wary of anyone offering the name as a straightforward living breed without explaining the reconstruction or strain behind it. For researchers and breed historians, the useful questions are where the label appears in old records, how it influenced later hounds, and what traits were selected before kennel-club categories narrowed the story.
Colors: Albino, Apricot, Bicolor, Black, Black and Tan, Black and White, Black Mask, Blue, Blue and Tan, Blue Merle, Blue Roan, Blue Tick, Brindle, Brown, Brown and Tan, Brown and White, Chocolate, Cream, Dapple, Domino, Fawn, Fawn and White, Gold, Gray, Grey, Harlequin, Irish Marked, Leucistic, Liver, Liver Mask, Mantle, Mask, Melanistic, Merle, Mottled, Parti-Color, Piebald, Red, Red and White, Red Merle, Red Roan, Red Tick, Reverse Brindle, Roan, Sable, Saddle, Silver, Speckled, Spotted, Tan, Ticked, Tricolor, Tuxedo, White, Yellow