if he was bred by bobby Maddox they just stuck a paper on him. Looks to me like David gilger bred the dam who was out of a cow bred by Wallace Wilkinson in ky. Baileys probably bought the cow bred to sdr monument in a g&f sale. Don't think monument was ever collected and sdr and g&f were partners in Goliath cattle co that owned the grove cattle. From the pedigree it is hard to see where phc came from
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We will likely never know the founder animal of PHA in the Maine breed - this is however whatever we do know
Originally PHA calves were identified as Maine-Anjou, Shorthorn or their crosses. The apparent link was three popular bulls: two registered Maine-Anjou bulls (Draft Pick, born 1989; AMAA # 165,744 and Stinger, born 1985; AMAA # 111,205) and a bull registered with the American Chianina Association (Payback, born 1992; ACA # 232,907). Subsequent genetic testing suggested a common ancestor of the three bulls. Because Draft Pick had the most complete pedigree and the largest number of samples available, an informative pedigree was developed and used to identify the defective gene. In that regard, PHA is the result of a single mis-sense mutation common to Draft Pick, Stinger, and Payback, and identified in modern Shorthorn, Maine Anjou, and composite cattle.
Draft Pick’s maternal great grand sire, Paramount (AMAA # 77; born 1973), a full-bood Maine-Anjou bull exported from England to Canada, was a PHA carrier. Due to incomplete or inaccurate pedigrees or inability to obtain samples from older full-blood Maine-Anjou cattle, the origin of the mutation in Stinger and Payback has not been positively identified. Molecular markers surrounding the gene suggest the French import Dalton (AMAA # 15; born 1970) as a common source for Stinger and Payback.
Since the DNA suggests that Stinger acquired the mutation from Dalton and I find no Dalton in his pedigree it is likely that his pedigree is incorrect