Abstract or Keywords
Pigeon sport changed dramatically in Central Europe between 1870
and 1914 due to the rapid development of networks of
poultry-breeding clubs, the expansion of homing pigeon use by
European military forces after the Franco-Prussian War, and attempts
to promote pigeon racing as a modern sport rather than just a
hobby. Although military leaders coordinated closely with pigeon
clubs and encouraged them to align their activities with military
priorities, individual club members also celebrated their status as
independent modern sportsmen, used racing events as loci for
male sociability, and touted their own individual skill and expertise.
In Germany, the Association of German Pigeon Fancier Clubs
became an influential interest group that defended the sport –
including advocating for laws to protect homing pigeons from
farmers and hunters. After 1900, however, as homing pigeon sport
spread to the working class populations of the Ruhr, local farmers
increasingly complained about damage to their crops. In response,
the leaders of the Association of German Pigeon Fancier Clubs
would forge an alliance with Prussian military officials to resist calls
by powerful agricultural interest groups to limit pigeon-keeping
and racing.