![Turning the Book Wheel](https://cdn.statically.io/img/64.media.tumblr.com/61ef59e2cce0142c4a0c974e0357911c/a965f49e718919c1-59/s128x128u_c1/a199f36bfb34473959947d2843098f06ace947fb.jpg)
It’s National Pet Day! If you can’t hug a big Irish Wolfhound, you can at least peruse the pages of The Book of Dogs, an Intimate Study of Mankind’s Best Friend by Ernest Harold Baynes and Louis Agassiz Fuerted, published by the National Geographic Society in 1919.
Because every dog is a puppy.
See more in The book of dogs; an intimate study of mankind’s best friend by Ernest Harold Baynes and Louis Agassiz Fuertes, published by The National Geographic Society in 1919. It is fully available in the @biodivlibrary
Today is National Dog Day! Continue celebrating our furry friends next week with two free films: Old Dog on September 4 and Stray Dogs on September 5.
When you find a dog marriage picture, you must take it to its logical end.
Mr. Bates from Downton Abbey may be familiar with this Victorian illustrated weekly magazine covering the Anglo-Boer war from 1899 to 1903.
Perhaps these are Union Jack Russel Terriers?
From Black & White Budget, Sept 22, 1900 p.786
For the dog days of August we bring you these pups from Forest and Stream, Volume XXII from 1884.