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List of Famous Dogs and Dog Names

with images, facts, and breeds

including in movies, TV, comics, books, history

 

page guide   quicklist

All Dogs Famous prior to 1940

Sorted by Dog Name

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Ace the Wonder Dog  Ace the Wonder Dog     
Dog actor in the movie The Adventures of Rusty and many others from 1938-1946 including the 1943 serial The Phantom. (More about Ace.)
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Adolph  Adolph      (Another Adolph)   
In the comic strip Dinglehoofer und His Dog Adolph; by Harold Knerr. (In 1939, the title of the strip became Dingle-Hoofer and his Dog)
BREED: Dachshund   YEARS: 
Alec  Alec      (Another Adolph)   
Subject of several poems in the comic strip Alec the Great; created by one of the first woman syndicated cartoonist, Edwina Dumm.
BREED: Generic small fluffy dog   YEARS: 
Alonzo  Alonzo      (Another Adolph)   
Feisty dog in the comic strip Have You Seen Alonzo; about various comic situations; drawn by several cartoonist including Paul Terry.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Argos  Argos      (Another Adolph)   
Odysseus' faithful dog in the Greek epic poem Odyssey by Homer. (More about Argos.)
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Asta  Asta      (Book Asta)   
The Charles' dog in the book and several films such as the movie The Thin Man; about a murder solving couple; their dog played by Skippy; starring William Powell and Myrna Loy; the book by Dashiell Hammett.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier (Book dog was a SchnauzerYEARS: 
Atlas  Atlas      (Book Asta)   
Marion Kirby's dog in the movie Topper Takes a Trip; about a ghost and her dog who get Cosmo Topper and his wife back together; starring Constance Bennett and Skippy, the dog famously known as Asta.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
Balto  Balto      (Book Asta)   
The dog who led a team on the final leg of the 1925 serum run to Nome. A statue of Balto sculpted by Frederick Roth was erected in NYC's Central Park on Dec. 17 1925. (More about Balto.)
BREED: Siberian Husky   YEARS: 
Bamse  Bamse      (Book Asta)   
The heroic mascot during World War II of the Free Norwegian Forces. (More about Bamse.)
BREED: St. Bernard   YEARS: 

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Bandit  Bandit      (Book Asta)   
The family's second dog in the books and the TV series Little House on the Prairie; based on the memories of Laura Ingalls Wilder's childhood in the Midwest region of the United States during the late 19th century.
BREED: Bulldog (mixed breed in TV series)  YEARS: 
Barry  Barry      (Book Asta)   
The mountain rescue dog who saved 40 lives at the Great St. Bernard Pass. (More about Barry.)
BREED: St. Bernard   YEARS: 
Beans  Beans      (Book Asta)   
Jimmy's dog in the comic strip Little Jimmy; about little boy who was constantly forgetting what he was supposed to do and ended up getting into trouble; created by Jimmy Swinnerton. The comic strip was one of the first continuing features and one of the longest running.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Beautiful Joe  Beautiful Joe      (Book Asta)   
In the book Beautiful Joe; about an abused dog who is rescued; written by Margaret Marshall Saunders.
BREED: Bull Terrier and Fox Terrier mix  YEARS: 
Bello  Bello      (Book Asta)   
A scampy dog in the Dutch comic strip De Avonturen Van Bello (The Adventures of Bello); by cartoonist Marten Toonder.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Betty  Betty      (Book Asta)   
Professor Janet Griswald's dog in the movie Under Cover of Night; a professor is about to announce a great discovery in physics when her jealous husband, who collaborated with her, causes her to have a heart attack by throwing her dog out a window. When he can't find her notebook containing the discovery details, he ends up killing several other people; starring Henry Daniell, et. al.
BREED: Terrier mix   YEARS: 
Bimbo  Bimbo      (Book Asta)   
Betty's companion in the animated movie about Betty Boop; about a curvaceous Jazz age flapper; created by Max Fleischer. (More about Bimbo.)
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Bingo  Bingo      (Book Asta)   
In advertisements for Cracker Jacks, a U.S. brand of snack consisting of caramel-coated popcorn and peanuts.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Bingo  Bingo      (Book Asta)   
One of Rupert's friends in the British comic strip Rupert Bear; about a bear who lives with his parents in a fictional idyllic English village with several anthropomorphic animals friends; created by Mary Tourtel and since 1935 written by others. (See also Pong Ping)
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Blackie and Whitey  Blackie and Whitey      (Book Asta)   
The two mascots in the advertisement for Black and White; a blended Scotch whisky, originally produced by the London-based James Buchanan & Co Ltd.
BREED: Scottish Terrier and a Westie  YEARS: 

 

 

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Blair  Blair      (Book Asta)   
Director Cecil Hepworth'sfirst dog movie star and who played Rover in the movie Rescued by Rover.
BREED: Collie   YEARS: 
Blitzen  Blitzen      (Book Asta)   
Torchy's rented dog who tracks notorious counterfeiters and later leads rescuers to save her in the movie Torchy Gets Her Man; one of nine in the series of Torchy Blane movies. The fast-talking reporter was the inspiration for the Lois Lane character in Superman stories.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Bob  Bob      (Book Asta)   
James Moore's herder in the children's book Bob, Son of Battle; about a boy who is caught in the rivalry of his father and another sheep herder and their sheep dogs; written by Alfred Ollivant. (Also in the story is dog Red Wull.)
BREED: Sheep Dog   YEARS: 
Bob  Bob      (Book Asta)   
Widower Adam's dog in several movies, the latest being Owd Bob; about an old man and his sheepdog who is pulled into a old feud with his neighbor when his orphaned grandson visits for the summer; based on the 1898 novel Bob, Son of Battle by Alfred Ollivant.
BREED: Border Collie   YEARS: 
Bob  Bob      (Book Asta)   
Emily's pet in the book and TV show Dumb Witness; a murder mystery featuring the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot; about a wealthy spinster who believes she has been the victim of attempted murder.
BREED: Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
Bob the Railway Dog  Bob the Railway Dog      (Book Asta)   
A dog in the folklore of South Australian Railways in the later part of the 19th century and was known widely to railwaymen of the day. (More about Bob.)
BREED: Collie mix  YEARS: 
Bobbie The Wonder Dog  Bobbie The Wonder Dog      (Book Asta)   
The dog famous for traveling 2800 milesfrom Indiana to Oreon to return to his owners. (More about Bobbie.)
BREED: Scotch Collie #NAME?  YEARS: 
Bobby  Bobby      (Book Asta)   
The loyal dog of John Gray, also known as Greyfriars Bobby, a dog who became famous in 19th-century Edinburgh for supposedly spending 14 years guarding the grave of his owner until he died himself. (See Greyfriars Bobby.)
BREED: Skye Terrier   YEARS: 
Bolivar  Bolivar      (Comic Bolivar)   
In the animated movies and comic strip Donald Duck; by Walt Disney. (More about Bolivar.)
BREED: St. Bernard   YEARS: 
Bonzo the dog  Bonzo the dog      (Comic Bolivar)   
A comic strip dog famous for branded advertisements created by British artist George E. Studdy in 1924 as an animated film short. The character was crafted in all kinds of merchandise.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 

 

 

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Boots  Boots      (Comic Bolivar)   
The narrator in the book Thy Servant a Dog; about the adventures of a dog as seen through the eyes of a dog; written by Rudyard Kipling. (Also in the book is dog Slippers.)
BREED: Scottish Terrier   YEARS: 
Brownie  Brownie      (Comic Bolivar)   
Film star dog in silent films such as Brownie's Little Venus. His fame was linked to child star Baby Peggy.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Bruce  Bruce      (Comic Bolivar)   
Pet of President Woodrow Wilson. The president also had an Airedale Davie and Geyhound Mountain Boy.
BREED: Bull Terrier   YEARS: 
Brutus  Brutus      (Comic Bolivar)   
Mark's dog in the movie The Ugly Dachshund; about a large dog who grows up with dachshund puppies thinking he is one of them; starring Dean Jones and Suzanne Pleshette; based on a novel by Gladys Bronwyn Stern. (Also in the movie are dogs Danke, Norma, and Pesky.)
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 
Buck  Buck      (2020 movie Buck)   
In the book and in the several movies such as Call of the Wild; about a previously domesticated dog who ends up serving as a sled dog in the Yukon; written by Jack London. (2020 movie titled The Call of the Wild).
BREED: St. Bernard mix   YEARS: 
Bugle Ann  Bugle Ann      (Movie Bugle Ann)   
Spring Davis' dog in the book and the movie The Voice of Bugle Ann; about a farmer's love for his hunting dog and the feud it sparks in the county; in the movie starring Lionel Barrymore and Maureen O'Sullivan; the book written by MacKinlay Kantor.
BREED: Foxhound American   YEARS: 
Bullet  Bullet      (Movie Bugle Ann)   
Snuffy's dog in the comic strip and animated TV series Barney Google and Snuffy Smith; created by cartoonist Billy DeBeck.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Bulletdog  Bulletdog      (Movie Bugle Ann)   
Bulletman's dog in the comic book series Bulletman; about a man who develops powers, great muscle mass, and brain power to fight crime; created by Bill Parker and Jon Smalle for Fawcett Comics.
BREED: English Setter   YEARS: 
Bullseye  Bullseye      (Book Bullseye)   
Bill Sikes's dog in the book Oliver Twist; about a orphan boy caught in the misery of old London; by Charles Dickens and in the many movie adaptations including the movie Oliver.
BREED: Bull Terrier or Bulldog  YEARS: 
Cameo  Cameo      (Book Bullseye)   
Appearing in many early films, she was a dog actor in such films as Penrod and Sam; born as Camisole.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 

 

 

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Captain McTavish  Captain McTavish      (Book Bullseye)   
Philo Vance's dog in the movie The Kennel Murder Case; about a detective who investigates the locked-room murder of a prominent and hated collector whose broken Chinese vase provides an important cluestarring; William Powell and Mary Astor.
BREED: Scottish Terrier   YEARS: 
Caruso  Caruso      (Book Bullseye)   
Pet of President Howard Taft, reportedly a small, white dog who was gifted to Helen by famed opera singer Enrico Caruso.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Cerberus  Cerberus      (Book Bullseye)   
A monstrous multi-headed dog of Greek mythology, often called the "hound of Hades", it guards the gates of the underworld preventing the dead from leaving. (More about Cerberus.)
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Chinook  Chinook      (Book Bullseye)   
An historic dog, first of the sled dog breed of that name derived from Husky and Mastiff and developed by Arthur Treadwell Walden. He led Byrd's 1929 Antarctic Expedition. The dog breed is also the official state dog of New Hampshire.
BREED: Chinook   YEARS: 
Daisy  Daisy      (Movie Daisy)   
The family dog in the comic strip and the movie Blondie; about the Bumsteads, Dagwood and Blondie and their two children; created by Chic Young.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Dash  Dash      (Movie Daisy)   
Pet of President Benjamin Harrison; the president had a fancy dog house built next to the White House for Dash.
BREED: Collie mixed breed  YEARS: 
Dennis  Dennis      (Movie Daisy)   
Larry the Lamb's sidekick in the British radio and animated TV series (stop action) Toytown; about misunderstandings arising from devices created by Mr. Inventor.
BREED: Dachshund   YEARS: 
Devil  Devil      (Movie Devil)   
The Phantom's dog in the comic strip and the movie serial The Phantom; about a masked crimefighter based upon the comics; created by Lee Falk. In the series the dog is played by Ace the Wonder Dog.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Dingo  Dingo      (Movie Devil)   
A dog brought into the ship and offered passage to America in the book Dick Sand, A Captain at Fifteen; about slavery, and the African slave trade; written by Jules Verne.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Diogenes  Diogenes      (Movie Devil)   
A dog befriended by Paul and adopted by Florence in the book Dombey and Son; a wealthy owner of the shipping company whose dream is to have a son to continue his business; written by Charles Dickens.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 

 

 

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Dougal  Dougal      (Movie Devil)   
The Earl of Dorincourt's pet and Ceddie's new friend in the movie Little Lord Fauntleroy about an English earl who's life changes when he takes in the heir to his estate; starring Freddie Bartholomew and C. Aubrey Smith.
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 
Duchess  Duchess      (Movie Devil)   
The party honoree in the book The Tale of the Pie and the Patty-Pan; about cat called Ribby and a tea party she holds for her housemate dog; written and illustrated by Beatrix Potter.
BREED: Pomeranian   YEARS: 
Duke  Duke      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Penrod's dog in the movie Penrod's Double Trouble; about a boy who is replaced by a look-alike by men who are after a reward; featuring the Mauch Twins based upon the books of Booth Tarkington.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Eddie  Eddie      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Lorri's dog in the movie Four's a Crowd; about a newspaper reporter who believes the paper's former editor-in-chief can convince the owner not to shut it down and to resurrect it; starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Eugene the Jeep  Eugene the Jeep      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
A character presumed to be some type of dog in the comic strip and animated movies Popeye; a mysterious animal with magical abilities. The name "Jeep" was adopted by GIs in WW II for their 4-wheel utility vehicle because it was small, versatile and could solve seemingly impossible problems.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Fido  Fido      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Pet dog of President Abraham Lincoln. The dog was assasinated by a drunk shortly after the death of Lincoln. The president also had a dog named Jip. (More about Fido)
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Fido  Fido      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Bobby's dog in the early animated movie shorts about Bobby Bumps in various predicaments. The silent cartoons were the first to be produced using the cel animation process; created by Earl Hurd and released by Paramount Pictures.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Fido  Fido      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Fatty's dog in the short comedy silent movie Fatty's Faithful Dog; a confrontatial setting with many fights; starring Fatty Arbuckle.
BREED: Pitbull   YEARS: 
Fifi the Peke  Fifi the Peke      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Pluto's girlfriend in the animated movies with Pluto, a gregarious dog; by The Walt Disney Studios. (More about Fifi.)
BREED: Pekingese   YEARS: 
Fikske  Fikske      (Book cover & movie poster Duke)   
Rikske's dog in the Flemish comic strip Rikske and Fikske; about the adventures of a boy and his dog; written by Nonkel Fons and drawn by Lionel Graham Croucher.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 

 

 

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Flush  Flush      (Book Flush)   
Elizabeth's dog in the movie The Barretts of Wimpole Street; about the real-life romance between poets Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning; starring Norman Shearer and Fredrick March. Also an imaginative biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's cocker spaniel by Virginia Woolf. (More about Flush).)
BREED: Cocker Spaniel   YEARS: 
Frankie  Frankie      (Book Flush)   
In advertising for the Frankenmuth Brewery, a brewery and restaurant in Frankenmuth, one of the oldest breweries in Michigan.
BREED: Dachshund   YEARS: 
Fritz  Fritz      (Book Flush)   
Koko's dog in the early animated movie Koko the Clown; created by animation pioneer Max Fleischer who invented the rotoscope a device that allowed for animation to be more lifelike.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Fritz  Fritz      (Book Flush)   
Jane's pet in the adult comic strip Jane (originally Jane's Journal); the misadventures of a woman who frequently and often inadvertently lost her clothes; created by Norman Pett.
BREED: Dachshund   YEARS: 
Gelert  Gelert      (Book Flush)   
The dog of legend associated with the village of Beddgelert in Wales made famous in a poem by William Robert Spencer. (More about Gelert. Image shown is a painting by Richard Ansdell.)
BREED: Irish Wolfhound   YEARS: 
Genevieve  Genevieve      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
Madeline's dog in the children's book series, in the movie, and animated TV series for children Madeline; about a girl who lives in Paris and attends a boarding school; written by Ludwig Bemelmans.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
George  George      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
Willy's dog in the movie The Devil to Pay; about a free-spirited but lovable man who returns home penniless and falls in love; starring Ronald Colman and Loretta Young.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
George  George      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
Susan's dog in the movie Bringing Up Baby; about a paleontologist pursued by a flighty heiress and her pet leopard; starring Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
Goofy  Goofy      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
In animated movies such as A Goofy Movie by Walt Disney; originally Dippy Dawg. (More about Goofy.)
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Goopy Geer  Goopy Geer      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
A character in the short animated movies of Merrie Melodies; about a tall, lanky anthropomorphic dog who sings and dances his way through a musical world. (More about Goopy Geer.)
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 

 

 

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Greyfriars Bobby  Greyfriars Bobby      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
Auld Jock's loyal dog in the book and the movie Greyfriars Bobby; about a dog who follows a farm worker who ultimately dies in poverty and is buried in Greyfriar's Kirkyard. Bobby returns to his grave every night; based on the book by Eleanor Atkinson.
BREED: Skye Terrier   YEARS: 
Gyp  Gyp      (Movie poster Genevieve)   
Adam's faithful dog in the book Adam Bede; about a love "rectangle" between beautiful woman, a young squire who seduces her, her unacknowledged suitor, and a fervent, virtuous Methodist preacher; written by George Eliot.
BREED: Generic Terrier   YEARS: 
Hachiko  Hachiko      (2009 movie Hachiko)   
A Japanese dog remembered for his remarkable loyalty to his owner and in the children's book Hachiko: The True Story of a Loyal Dog; written by Pamela S. Turner; and in the movie (2009). (More about Hachiko.)
BREED: Akita   YEARS: 
Ham and Ex  Ham and Ex      (2009 movie Hachiko)   
Twin pups in the short animated movie I Haven't Got a Hat; about a school talent show featuring Porky Pig and other cartoon characters; a Merrie Melodies series.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Harry  Harry      (Comic book annual Harry)   
Wullie's dog in the Scottish comic strip Oor Wullie; about a boy and his friends whose adventures often involve unrealistic get-rich-quick schemes that lead to mischief; created by R. D. Low and drawn by cartoonist Dudley D. Watkins until 1969; then by others.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Homeless Hector  Homeless Hector      (Comic book annual Harry)   
A homeless dog in the comic strip Homeless Hector; about the humorous adventures of a stray dog; created by Harry Hershfield.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Horand von Grafrath  Horand von Grafrath      (Comic book annual Harry)   
The first German Shepherd; developed in Germany by "Captain" Max von Stephanitz. (More about Horand von Grafrath.)
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Huddersfield Ben  Huddersfield Ben      (Comic book annual Harry)   
The first Yorkshire Terrier who won many prizes as a show dog and in ratting contests. (More about Hudderfield Ben.)
BREED: Yorkshire Terrier   YEARS: 
Jack  Jack      (Comic book annual Harry)   
The family's first dog in the books and the TV series Little House on the Prairie; based on the memories of Laura Ingalls Wilder's childhood in the Midwest region of the United States during the late 19th century.
BREED: Border Collie   YEARS: 
Jake  Jake      (Comic book annual Harry)   
Michael Grant's dog in the movie Theodora Goes Wild; about a small-town woman who is the anonymous author of a scandalous novel and, after falling in love with her pursuer, ends up revealing the secret: starring Irene Dunne, and Melvyn Douglas.
BREED: Wire_Fox_Terrier   YEARS: 

 

 

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Jane  Jane      (Comic book annual Harry)   
A pet given to old lady Fortune in the movie The Young in Heart; a family of con artists who are befriended by a rich old woman and from whom they hope to be inherit riches; starring Janet Gaynor and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
BREED: Fluffy puppy   YEARS: 
Jasper  Jasper      (2020 movie Jasper)   
Maxim de Winter's dog in the movie Rebecca; about a self-conscious bride who is tormented by the memory of her husband's dead first wife; starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine, directed by Alfred Hitchcock and based on the book by Daphne du Maurier. Also a 2020 movie starring Lily James.
BREED: Cocker Spaniel   YEARS: 
Jean  Jean      (2020 movie Jasper)   
Dog actor known as the Vitagraph Dog that performed title roles in early silent films. The Vitagraph Studios was the most prolific American film production company in 1907.
BREED: Border Collie   YEARS: 
Jerry  Jerry      (2020 movie Jasper)   
Mister Haggin's dog in the book Jerry of the Islands; about a dog and his master on a whaling ship in the South Seas; written by Jack London.
BREED: Irish Terrier   YEARS: 
Jerry the Tyke  Jerry the Tyke      (2020 movie Jasper)   
British silent animated movie dog of the silent film era, created by Sid Griffiths and inspired by the American animated Felix the Cat.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Jim the Wonder Dog  Jim the Wonder Dog      (Statue Jim the Wonder Dog)   
A dog alleged to have a variety of remarkable abilities, among them, he seemed to have the ability to guess the sex of an unborn baby. A memorial park in his name is in Marshal, Missouri.
BREED: Llewellin Setter   YEARS: 
Jip  Jip      (Book Jip)   
Dog of David's first wife, Dora, in the movies and TV series based on the book David Copperfield; about the life of English chap in the early 19th century; written by Charles Dickens.
BREED: Unkown (Spaniel in the book)  YEARS: 
Jip  Jip      (Book Jip)   
One of the doctor's brood in the several children's books Doctor Dolittle; about a doctor who shuns human patients in favour of animals with whom he can speak; based loosely on the books written by Hugh Lofting.
BREED: Sheep Dog   YEARS: 
Jo-Fi  Jo-Fi      (Book Jip)   
Pet of Sigmund Freud to whom he was greatly attached as the dog frequently stayed in his office during psychoanalytic sessions.
BREED: Chow Chow   YEARS: 
Jock of the Bushveld  Jock of the Bushveld      (Movie Jock of the Bushveld)   
The author's dog in the book Jock of the Bushveld; based on the true story about the author's travels with his dog during the 1880s in South Africa; written by James Percy Fitzpatrick. It later was made into the movie Jock: A True Tale of Friendship and still later a 3D movie, Jock, the Hero Dog (see image).
BREED: Pit Bull   YEARS: 

 

 

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John Joiner  John Joiner      (Movie Jock of the Bushveld)   
The carpenter in the children's book The Roly-Poly Pudding; also know as The Tale of Samuel Whiskers; written by Beatrix Potter.
BREED: Terrier   YEARS: 
Joost  Joost      (Bul Super & Hiep Hiper Joost)   
Bommel's loyal butler in the Dutch comic strip Tom Puss; about a white anthropomorphic cat, and his best friend, Lord Oliver B. Bumble, set in a fantasy world with many characters. (Also in the series are dogs Bul Super, Hiep Hieper, Officer Bulle Bas, and Brigadier Snuf.)
BREED: Labrador   YEARS: 
Josef  Josef      (Bul Super & Hiep Hiper Joost)   
Heidi's dog in the children's book Heidi, about the life of a young girl in her paternal grandfather's care in the Swiss Alps; written by Swiss author Johanna Spyri. The story has been adapted in many media, but the dog is rarely feature (one exception is the 1974 Japanese anime series).
BREED: Saint Bernard   YEARS: 
Judy  Judy      (Bul Super & Hiep Hiper Joost)   
Mascot of the Royal Navy in World War II, only dog to be taken as a prisoner of war by the Japanese.... (More about Judy)
BREED: Pointer   YEARS: 
Junior  Junior      (Bul Super & Hiep Hiper Joost)   
Family dog in the comic strip Muggs and Skeeter; about a couple of youngsters in humorous situations; created by Wally Bishop.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Just Nuisance  Just Nuisance      (Statue Just Nuisance)   
Only dog to be enlisted in the Royal Navy, serving at HMS Afrikander, a Royal Navy shore establishment in Simon's Town, South Africa where a statue honors him.
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 
Kambyses  Kambyses      (Statue Just Nuisance)   
Lukas's alternate form in the German book The Hound of Florence; about an adolescent who has lost his parents and lives in Vienna in poverty... but his wish to be rich living in Florence is granted, except he must be a dog every other day; written by Felix Salten.
BREED: Many types   YEARS: 
Kashtanka  Kashtanka      (Statue Kashtanka)   
A dog who must choose between a circus life or a loving family in the book Kastanka; written by Anton Chekov.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Kazan  Kazan      (Statue Kashtanka)   
Witness to murder in the movie Jaws of Justice; where Sgt. Kincaid of the Mounties comes to the aid of the murdered man's daughter and her mute friend Kickabout; starring Jack Perrin. Kazan starred in several other movies.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Kep  Kep      (Statue Kashtanka)   
A friend of Jemima in the book for children The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck; about a duck who wants to keep her eggs safe; written by Beatrice (Webb) Potter.
BREED: Collie   YEARS: 

 

 

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King  King      (Comic King)   
A Mounted Policeman's sled dog in the radio and the TV series and comic book Challenge of The Yukon; aka Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, about the Monty and his dog fighting evildoers in the Northern wilderness in the 1890s; TV series starred Richard Simmons.... (More about Yukon King)
BREED: Alaskan Malamute   YEARS: 
King Tut  King Tut      (Comic King)   
Pet of President Herbert Hoover. While King Tut was Hoover's favorite dog, there were Fox Terriers Big Ben and Sonnie, Scotch Collie Glen), Malamut Yukon, Setter Eaglehurst Gillette, Irish Wolfhound Patrick, German Shepherd Pat, and Elkhound Weejie.
BREED: Belgian Shepherd   YEARS: 
Kolin Kelly  Kolin Kelly      (Another Kolin Kelly)   
A brickmaker in the comic strip Krazy Kat; about the love triangle between a cat, an antagonist mouse and a protective police dog; created by cartoonist George Herriman.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Lad  Lad      (Real-life dog Lad)   
The author's dog in the movie Lad: A Dog; starring Peter Breck; based on a series of short stories by Albert Terhune about his real-life Rough Collie.
BREED: Rough Collie   YEARS: 
Laddie Boy  Laddie Boy      (Real-life dog Lad)   
Pet of President Warren G. Harding. (More about Laddie Boy). Also in the White House was a Bulldog Old Boy
BREED: Airedale Terrier   YEARS: 
Lady Geryhound  Lady Geryhound      (Real-life dog Lad)   
In advertisements for Greyhound Lines bus company. (More about Lady Greyhound.)
BREED: Greyhound   YEARS: 
Laughing Gravy  Laughing Gravy      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Laurel and Stan's dog in the movie Laughing Gravy; about two men who try to hide their pet dog from their mean-tempered landlord; starring Laurel and Hardy.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Lightning  Lightning      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Companion of horse Warrior in the movie Two in Revolt; about a horse and dog who were born on the same farm the same day, then months later, escape trouble going into the wild where they become close friends.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Lobo  Lobo      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Bobby's dog in the movie Thunderbolt about a man, his son and dog who set out to prove a cowboy innocent of murder.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
McDuff  McDuff      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Betty's dog in the movie Too Many Wives; about a desperate dog walker who lies about being married with children ending in confusion; starring Anne Shirley
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 

 

 

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McTavish  McTavish      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Philo Vance's dog in the book and the movie The Kennel Murder Case; about a private detective who solves a mysterious murder; starring William Powell and based on the 1933 novel by S. S. Van Dine. The remake of the movie in 1940 titled Calling Philo Vance starred James Stephenson.
BREED: Scottish Terrier   YEARS: 
Mike  Mike      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
Ginger Meggs' dog in the Australian comic strip Ginger Meggs; about the escapades of a red-haired young boy; created by Jimmy Bancks and drawn by several cartoonist over the years. The strip remains the most widely syndicated Australian comic strip.
BREED: generic   YEARS: 
Miss Skippy  Miss Skippy      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
The gift Vance gives Abigail (Old Doll) in the movie Midnight Alibi; about a gambler who befriends an old lady who later supplies him with an alibi; adapt from Damon Runyon's 1933 short story The Old Doll's House.
BREED: Wire-Hair Terrier   YEARS: 
Montmorency  Montmorency      (See another Laughing Gravy)   
In the book Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing Of The Dog...); about three young men and a dog who show the humor of roughing it; written by Jerome K. Jerome.
BREED: Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
Moreover  Moreover      (1940 movie Moreover)   
In the movie The Biscuit Eater; about a dog who has a strong relationship with two twelve-year-old boys; a remake of a 1940 film and based upon the book by James H. Street.
BREED: German Wirehaired Pointer   YEARS: 
Mr. Jones  Mr. Jones      (1940 movie Moreover)   
Phyllis's dog in the movie Murder on a Honeymoon; about a school-teacher/amateur-sleuth who suspects foul play when a fellow passenger on a sea-plane gets sick and dies; starring Edna May Oliver.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Mr. Smith  Mr. Smith      (1940 movie Moreover)   
Lucy's dog in the movie The Awful Truth; about a married couple dealing with unfounded suspicions and each other's attempts to find new romance; starring Cary Grant and Irene Dunne. The dog is played by Skippy aka Asta.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
My Little Darling  My Little Darling      (1940 movie Moreover)   
Linda's dog in the movie Shall We Dance; about a ballet dancer who chases after a tap dancer; starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. The movie is famous for its Walking the Dog piece by George Gershwin.
BREED: Cairn Terrier mix  YEARS: 
Nana  Nana      (1940 movie Moreover)   
In the book Peter and Wendy and the original play Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie and in the stage musical Peter Pan.
BREED: Newfoundland in the play and book. In film and on stage St. BernardYEARS: 
Napoleon  Napoleon      (1940 movie Moreover)   
In the comic strip Napoleon and Uncle Elby; about a character based on the creator's uncle Henry Elba Eastman and his dog; created by Clifford McBride.
BREED: Irish Wolfhound probably  YEARS: 

 

 

  Page 13
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Nipper  Nipper      (1940 movie Moreover)   
In advertisements for The Gramophone Company, then RCA. (More about Nipper.)
BREED: Terrier mix  YEARS: 
Offissa Bull Pup  Offissa Bull Pup      (1940 movie Moreover)   
The one whe tries protect Krazy Kat in the comic strip Krazy Kat; about the love triangle between a cat, an antagonist mouse and a protective police dog; created by cartoonist George Herriman.
BREED: Bulldog   YEARS: 
Owney  Owney      (1940 movie Moreover)   
In advertisements for the U.S. Postal Office. (More about Owney.)
BREED: Mixed breed terrier   YEARS: 
Patrasche  Patrasche      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Nello's companion in the Japanese animated TV series A Dog of Flanders and the movie version made in 1999, and earlier films; about a Flemish boy and his dog; based on the book by Marie Louise de la Ramée under the Japanese pseudonym Ouida.
BREED: Bouvier des Flandres   YEARS: 
Patsy  Patsy      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Mrs. Hegarty's dog in the movie Storm in a Teacup; about a politician whose disregard for a dog is publicized by a reporter; starring Vivian Leigh and Rex Harrison.
BREED: English Sheepdog   YEARS: 
Pedro  Pedro      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Faithful companion of private detective Sexton Blake in the British TV series Sexton Blake, about a detective solving many kinds of mysteries.
BREED: Bloodhound   YEARS: 
Peewee  Peewee      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Mr. Blair's dog in the movie Breakfast for Two,about a Texas debutante who tries to reform a bankrupt playboy; starring Barbara Stanwyck.
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 
Penny  Penny      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Sooky's dog in the movie Skippy; about two boys who try to raise money to buy a dog license; starring Jackie Cooper. Skippy the character was based on Percy Crosby's Skippy comic strip.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Peritas  Peritas      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Favorite dog of Alexander the Great who accompanied him during his military exploits. (More about Peritas.)
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 
Pete  Pete      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Pet dog of President Theodore Roosevelt who ripped off the French ambassador’s pants. Also the president had a Chesapeake Retriever named Sailor Boy, a Manchester Terrier Black Jack (Jack), a mongrel Skip, and a Pekingese Manchu.
BREED: Bull Terrier   YEARS: 

 

 

  Page 14
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Petey  Petey      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
The kids' dog in the movies Our Gang; a series of American comedy short films about a group of poor neighborhood children and the adventures; also known as The Little Rascals or Hal Roach's Rascals.
BREED: Pit Bull   YEARS: 
Phiz  Phiz      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Pet of Helen Keller, a blind and deaf American author, political activist, and lecturer (June 27, 1880-June 1, 1968.) Later in life Miss Keller had a French Bull Terrier named Kaiser and an Akita named Kenzan-go, the first in the United States.
BREED: Boston Terrier (some say it was a Pit Bull)  YEARS: 
Pickles  Pickles      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Ginger's partner n the children's book Ginger and Pickles; about two shopkeepers who extend unlimited credit to their customers and end up going out of business; written and illustrated by Beatrix Potter.
BREED: Terrier   YEARS: 
Pilot  Pilot      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Mr. Rochester's dog in the TV series (British) Jane Eyre; about a young governess who falls in love with her brooding and complex master; based upon the book by Charlotte Bronte. In the book the dog is a Newfoundland; in other films other kinds of dogs.
BREED: Landseer Newfoundland (Irish Wolfhound in some portrayals)  YEARS: 
Pip  Pip      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
The assumed father role in the in the British comic strip Pip, Squeak and Wilfred; about an orphaned family of animals who were looked after by a housemaid in a family house on the edge of London; conceived by Bertram Lamb and published in the Daily Mirror.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Pluto  Pluto      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Cartoon dog in the animated movies and several animated TV series appearing as the pet of Mickey Mouse; by Walt Disney. (More about Pluto.)
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Pongping  Pongping      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
One of Rupert's friends in the British comic strip Rupert Bear; about a bear who lives with his parents in a fictional idyllic English village with several anthropomorphic animals friends; created by Mary Tourtel and since 1935 written by others. (See also Bingo.)
BREED: Pekingese   YEARS: 
Poochie  Poochie      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Nancy's dog in the comic strip Nancy; about a typical and somewhat mischievous eight-year-old girl and her friends; created by Ernie Bushmiller.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Prince  Prince      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Clinton Foley's dog in the movie The Case of the Howling Dog; about lawyer Perry Mason who is hired to make a will but ends up solving a murder; starring Warren William and Mary Astor.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Prince Dansker  Prince Dansker      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
The champion in the movie Death of a Champion; about a pitchman who fancies himself as an amateur detective and starts nosing around into the mystery of dog deaths.
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 

 

 

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Puddy the Pup  Puddy the Pup      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
A white dog with a black ear in the various animated movies as a Terrytoons character.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Pudgy  Pudgy      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Betty's companion in the animated movie about Betty Boop, about a curvaceous Jazz age flapper; created by Max Fleischer.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Rab  Rab      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
James Noble's dog in the short story Rab and his Friends; based on a true incident about a dog and his relationship with an Edinburgh doctor and one of the doctor's patients in the 1830s; written by Scottish physician John Brown.
BREED: Mastiff   YEARS: 
Rags  Rags      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Dog serving with the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I who became the mascot of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division
BREED: Mixed terrier   YEARS: 
Ragsy  Ragsy      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Val's dog in the movie Fog Over Frisco; about two half-sisters from a respected San Francisco family whose life styles diverge as one of them takes up with criminals. (Great shots of San Francisco in 1934.)
BREED: Terrier mix   YEARS: 
Rin Tin Tin  Rin Tin Tin      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
A frightened pup found by an American soldier in France during World War I and ended up in Los Angeles where he starred in silent films and became a famous dog actor. He was named for a French child's toy. (More about Rin Tin Tin.)
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Rin Tin Tin  Rin Tin Tin      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
In the movies and the TV series The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin; about a orphan boy and his dog being raised by the soldiers at a U.S. Cavalry post.
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Rob Roy  Rob Roy      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
Pet of President Calvin Coolidge. Also the President had Collie Prudence Prim, Wirehair Fox Terrier Peter Pan and 8 othere dogs.
BREED: Collie White   YEARS: 
Rover  Rover      (1999 movie Patrasche)   
The dog who leads its master to his kidnapped baby in the movie Rescued by Rover; a British silent short; directed by Hepworth who had his family dog Blair in the starring role. As a result, the name became a household name and Blair is considered the first dog film star.
BREED: Collie   YEARS: 
Sandy  Sandy      (1982 movie Sandy)   
Annie's dog in comics Little Orphan Annie on radio, in the Broadway musical Annie, and in the movies (1982, 1999 and 2014); created by Harold Gray.
BREED: Airedale mix  YEARS: 

 

 

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Scraps  Scraps      (1982 movie Sandy)   
Charlie's dog in the movie (silent) A Dog's Life; about a dog who helps a tramp and a dance hall singer survive in the city; starring, written by, produced and directed by Charlie Chaplin.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Seaman  Seaman      (1982 movie Sandy)   
The dog that accompanied Lewis and Clark on their expedition across America at the beginning of the 19th century. (Picture by Anne Mainman.)
BREED: Newfoundland   YEARS: 
Sensation  Sensation      (Another Sensation)   
Representative dog image for the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show. A dog named Don which had won bench championships in England in 1875 and 1876, became the symbolic image for the Kennel Club because of the 1935 steel engraving of “Sensation” by artist J. Wellstood. From 1980-1982, a head study of the dog gained popularity. (More about Sensation.)
BREED: Pointer   YEARS: 
Sheba  Sheba      (Another Sensation)   
The Haines family dog in the movie The Women; about several women and their marital problems. The movie in notable in the it has no male players and stars many known female actors of the time, including Norma Shearer.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Shelly  Shelly      (Another Sensation)   
The family dog in the movie Wiener Dog Nationals; a family who adopts a runt of a dachshund from a shelter enters it in the nation's greatest wiener dog race.
BREED: Dachshund   YEARS: 
Sieg and Kleine  Sieg and Kleine      (Another Sensation)   
Slim and Clovia's dogs in the comic strip Gasoline Alley; about an established family, and residents in the town of Gasoline Alley; created by Frank King. It is the longest-running current comic strip, second after The Katzenjammer Kids
BREED: Great Dane and Doberman Doberman  YEARS: 
Sinbad  Sinbad      (Another Sensation)   
The mascot of the U.S. Coast Guard and in the book written by George F. Foley Jr. Sinbad of the Coast Guard. (More about Sinbad.)
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Sinbad  Sinbad      (Another Sensation)   
A boy's dog in the comic book Sinbad Again!; about about a dog, his young boy owner and the boy's grandmother; created by Edwina Dumm, creator of comic dog Tippie also.
BREED: Terrier   YEARS: 
Snowy  Snowy      (Comic Snowy)   
Tintin's dog in the Belgian comic book, the animated TV series, and the animated movie The Adventures of Tintin; about a reporter and his dog; created by Georges "Hergé" Remi. The earlier TV series was The Adventures of Tintin; the later series Hergé's Adventures of Tintin.
BREED: Wire Fox Terrier   YEARS: 
Snuff  Snuff      (Comic Snowy)   
Jack the Ripper's companion and narrator of the story in the book A Night in the Lonesome October; about a good dog and his master collecting the gruesome ingredients needed for an eerie rite; written by Roger Zelazny.
BREED: Unknown   YEARS: 

 

 

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Sounder  Sounder      (Comic Snowy)   
The family dog in the book Sounder; a sad tale of a poor black sharecropper's family and their dog; written by William H. Armstrong
BREED: Redbone Hound and Bulldog mix  YEARS: 
Sparky  Sparky      (Another Sparky)   
Smokey's firehouse dog (sometimes called Sparks) in the comic strip Smokey Stover; about a foolish firefighter (often riding in his two-wheeled "Foomobile") and his family and friends; created by Bill Holman.
BREED: Dalmatian   YEARS: 
Spot  Spot      (Another Sparky)   
A generic dog in the book Dick and Jane; about a generic boy and generic girl in a generic world; created by William S. Gray a children's reader series.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Spot  Spot      (The HIghlights Spot)   
A wooden dog in the comic strip The Timbertoes; about a wooden family; appearing in 1946 in the children's magazine Highlights for Children; created in 1936 by John Gee Curley.
BREED: Wooden character   YEARS: 
Stickeen  Stickeen      (The HIghlights Spot)   
John Muir's dog in the children's book Stickeen: An Adventure with a Dog and a Glacier; about a trip Muir took in Alaska (1880) with his dog and their outing together on a glacier, as told by Donnell Rubay.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Strongheart  Strongheart      (The HIghlights Spot)   
Dog actor in the movies such as White Fang in 1925. (More about Strongheart.)
BREED: German Shepherd   YEARS: 
Struppi  Struppi      (The HIghlights Spot)   
Tobias' dog in the Viennese comic strip Tobias Seicherl; about a bourgeois man, often drunk, usually strolling the streets of Vienna with his cane, pipe and dog; created by Ladislaus Kmoch.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
Stubby  Stubby      (Real dog Stubby)   
Robert Conroy's companion in the animated movie Sgt._Stubby:_An_American_Hero; about a stray dog who becomes a hero of the World War I; based on the real life of a dog named Stubby, the 1st dog promoted to the rank of Sergeant in the US Army and most decorated in American history. (More about Stubby.)
BREED: Bull Terrier   YEARS: 
Sucker  Sucker      (Real dog Stubby)   
Frankie's companion in the movie They Shall Have Music; about a run-away boy who ends up at a music school for poor children where he meets famous violinist Jascha Heifetz. Sucker is played by Zero, one of the first movie dogs.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Teddy  Teddy      (Real dog Stubby)   
Sue's dog in the movie The Extra Girl; about a small town girl who goes to Hollywood to escape marriage expecting to greeted with open arms but finds disappointment; starring Mabel Normand.
BREED: Great Dane   YEARS: 

 

 

  Page 18
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Tige  Tige      (Advertising Tige)   
In advertising and in the comic strip Buster Brown; about a mischievous young boy and his dog; created by Richard Felton Outcault and on radio and in the TV series. Adopted as mascot by Brown Shoe Company.
BREED: Pit Bull Terrier   YEARS: 
Tippie  Tippie      (Tippie as Bulldog Tippie)   
Cap's dog in the comic strip Cap Stubbs and Tippie; about the daily life of a boy and his dog (later renamed Tippie and Cap Stubbs); created and drawn by Edwina Dumm. The comic started out with the bulldog prior to 1930s, then a terrier. (Also a coloring book issued in 2014.)
BREED: Scottish Terrier   YEARS: 
Togo  Togo      (Tippie as Bulldog Tippie)   
The lead dog in the famous 1925 Serum Run to Nome, also known as the "Great Race of Mercy." (More about Togo.)
BREED: Siberian Husky   YEARS: 
Toto  Toto      (Tippie as Bulldog Tippie)   
Dorothy's dog in the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; about a girl from Kansas and her dog who are off to see the wizard; written by L. Frank Baum; and in the movie The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
BREED: Cairn Terrier   YEARS: 
Towser  Towser      (Tippie as Bulldog Tippie)   
In the book Towser Dog's Story; by Amy Prentis part of a collection called "Aunt Amy's Animal Stories."
BREED: Collie Rough   YEARS: 
Tuffy  Tuffy      (Tippie as Bulldog Tippie)   
Pet with in the British comic strip Tuffy and his Magic Tail; about a dog whose wagging tail results in magical things; by cartoonist Warden Arnold.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 
White Fang  White Fang      (Animated TV White Fang)   
A wolf-dog during the Klondike Gold Rush at the end of the 19th century in the book, the movie and the animated TV series White Fang; about a wild dog's journey to domestication; original story written by Jack London.
BREED: Wolf-dog Hybrid   YEARS: 
Whitey  Whitey      (Animated TV White Fang)   
The flippant detective's dog in book, in movies and in the TV series Boston Blackie; about a reformed jewel thief who solves crimes; in the movies starring Chester Morris, and in the TV series Kent Taylor. The characters of the stories were created by author Jack Boyle in the early 1900s.
BREED: Black Terrier   YEARS: 
Wolf  Wolf      (Animated TV White Fang)   
The old man's dog in the short story Rip Van Winkle; about a man who sleeps for 20 years; by Washington Irving.
BREED: Mixed breed   YEARS: 
Zero  Zero      (Animated TV White Fang)   
Annie's dog in the comic strip Little Annie Rooney; about a young orphaned girl who traveled about with her dog in the 1920s; originated by King Features Syndicate.
BREED: Generic   YEARS: 

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The number of All Dogs Famous prior to 1940 is 179

The contents of this page are available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license and the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL).


Also see: Dogs in ComicsDogs in MoviesDogs in BooksDogs On TVComplete List


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1. Ace the Wonder Dog  (The Adventures of Rusty)
2. Bandit  (Little House on the Prairie)
3. Blair  (first dog movie star )
4. Boots  (Thy Servant a Dog)
5. Captain McTavish  (The Kennel Murder Case)
6. Dougal  (Little Lord Fauntleroy)
7. Flush  (The Barretts of Wimpole Street)
8. Greyfriars Bobby  (Greyfriars Bobby)
9. Jane  (The Young in Heart)
10. John Joiner  (The Roly-Poly Pudding)
11. King  (Challenge of The Yukon)
12. McTavish  (The Kennel Murder Case)
13. Nipper  (The Gramophone Company)
14. Petey  (Our Gang)
15. Puddy the Pup  (Terrytoons character)
16. Scraps  (A Dog's Life)
17. Sounder  (Sounder)
18. Tige  (Buster Brown)

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  Dog Name  (Venue)


1.  Ace the Wonder Dog  (The Adventures of Rusty)
2.  Adolph  (Dinglehoofer und His Dog Adolph)
3.  Alec  (Alec the Great)
4.  Alonzo  (Have You Seen Alonzo)
5.  Argos  (Odyssey)
6.  Asta  (The Thin Man)
7.  Atlas  (Topper Takes a Trip)
8.  Balto  (serum run to Nome)
9.  Bamse  (World War II)
10.  Bandit  (Little House on the Prairie)
11.  Barry  (Great St. Bernard Pass)
12.  Beans  (Little Jimmy)
13.  Beautiful Joe  (Beautiful Joe)
14.  Bello  (De Avonturen Van Bello)
15.  Betty  (Under Cover of Night)
16.  Bimbo  (Betty Boop)
17.  Bingo  (Cracker Jacks)
18.  Bingo  (Rupert Bear)
19.  Blackie and Whitey  (Black and White)
20.  Blair  (first dog movie star )
21.  Blitzen  (Torchy Gets Her Man)
22.  Bob  (Bob, Son of Battle)
23.  Bob  (Owd Bob)
24.  Bob  (Dumb Witness)
25.  Bob the Railway Dog  (South Australian Railways)
26.  Bobbie The Wonder Dog  (traveling 2800 miles)
27.  Bobby  (Greyfriars Bobby)
28.  Bolivar  (Donald Duck)
29.  Bonzo the dog  (advertisements)
30.  Boots  (Thy Servant a Dog)
31.  Brownie  (Brownie's Little Venus)
32.  Bruce  (President Woodrow Wilson)
33.  Brutus  (The Ugly Dachshund)
34.  Buck  (Call of the Wild)
35.  Bugle Ann  (The Voice of Bugle Ann)
36.  Bullet  (Barney Google and Snuffy Smith)
37.  Bulletdog  (Bulletman)
38.  Bullseye  (Oliver Twist)
39.  Cameo  (dog actor)
40.  Captain McTavish  (The Kennel Murder Case)
41.  Caruso  (President Howard Taft)
42.  Cerberus  (Greek mythology)
43.  Chinook  (first of the sled dog)
44.  Daisy  (Blondie)
45.  Dash  (President Benjamin Harrison)
46.  Dennis  (Toytown)
47.  Devil  (The Phantom)
48.  Dingo  (Dick Sand, A Captain at Fifteen)
49.  Diogenes  (Dombey and Son)
50.  Dougal  (Little Lord Fauntleroy)
51.  Duchess  (The Tale of the Pie and the Patty-Pan)
52.  Duke  (Penrod's Double Trouble)
53.  Eddie  (Four's a Crowd)
54.  Eugene the Jeep  (Popeye)
55.  Fido  (President Abraham Lincoln)
56.  Fido  (Bobby Bumps)
57.  Fido  (Fatty's Faithful Dog)
58.  Fifi the Peke  (Pluto)
59.  Fikske  (Rikske and Fikske)
60.  Flush  (The Barretts of Wimpole Street)
61.  Frankie  (Frankenmuth Brewery)
62.  Fritz  (Koko the Clown)
63.  Fritz  (Jane)
64.  Gelert  (Beddgelert)
65.  Genevieve  (Madeline)
66.  George  (The Devil to Pay)
67.  George  (Bringing Up Baby)
68.  Goofy  (A Goofy Movie)
69.  Goopy Geer  (Merrie Melodies)
70.  Greyfriars Bobby  (Greyfriars Bobby)
71.  Gyp  (Adam Bede)
72.  Hachiko  (Hachiko
73.  Ham and Ex  (I Haven't Got a Hat)
74.  Harry  (Oor Wullie)
75.  Homeless Hector  (Homeless Hector)
76.  Horand von Grafrath  (first German Shepherd)
77.  Huddersfield Ben  (first Yorkshire Terrier)
78.  Jack  (Little House on the Prairie)
79.  Jake  (Theodora Goes Wild)
80.  Jane  (The Young in Heart)
81.  Jasper  (Rebecca)
82.  Jean  (Vitagraph Dog)
83.  Jerry  (Jerry of the Islands)
84.  Jerry the Tyke  (silent film era)
85.  Jim the Wonder Dog  (remarkable abilities)
86.  Jip  (David Copperfield)
87.  Jip  (Doctor Dolittle)
88.  Jo-Fi  (Sigmund Freud)
89.  Jock of the Bushveld  (Jock of the Bushveld)
90.  John Joiner  (The Roly-Poly Pudding)
91.  Joost  (Tom Puss)
92.  Josef  (Heidi)
93.  Judy  (World War II)
94.  Junior  (Muggs and Skeeter)
95.  Just Nuisance  (Royal Navy)
96.  Kambyses  (The Hound of Florence)
97.  Kashtanka  (Kastanka)
98.  Kazan  (Jaws of Justice)
99.  Kep  (The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck)
100.  King  (Challenge of The Yukon)
101.  King Tut  (President Herbert Hoover)
102.  Kolin Kelly  (Krazy Kat)
103.  Lad  (Lad
104.  Laddie Boy  (President Warren G. Harding)
105.  Lady Geryhound  (Greyhound Lines)
106.  Laughing Gravy  (Laughing Gravy)
107.  Lightning  (Two in Revolt)
108.  Lobo  (Thunderbolt)
109.  McDuff  (Too Many Wives)
110.  McTavish  (The Kennel Murder Case)
111.  Mike  (Ginger Meggs)
112.  Miss Skippy  (Midnight Alibi)
113.  Montmorency  (Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing Of The Dog...))
114.  Moreover  (The Biscuit Eater)
115.  Mr. Jones  (Murder on a Honeymoon)
116.  Mr. Smith  (The Awful Truth)
117.  My Little Darling  (Shall We Dance)
118.  Nana  (Peter and Wendy)
119.  Napoleon  (Napoleon and Uncle Elby)
120.  Nipper  (The Gramophone Company)
121.  Offissa Bull Pup  (Krazy Kat)
122.  Owney  (U.S. Postal Office)
123.  Patrasche  (A Dog of Flanders)
124.  Patsy  (Storm in a Teacup)
125.  Pedro  (Sexton Blake)
126.  Peewee  (Breakfast for Two)
127.  Penny  (Skippy)
128.  Peritas  (Alexander the Great)
129.  Pete  (President Theodore Roosevelt)
130.  Petey  (Our Gang)
131.  Phiz  (Helen Keller)
132.  Pickles  (Ginger and Pickles)
133.  Pilot  (Jane Eyre)
134.  Pip  (Pip, Squeak and Wilfred)
135.  Pluto  (Mickey Mouse)
136.  Pongping  (Rupert Bear)
137.  Poochie  (Nancy)
138.  Prince  (The Case of the Howling Dog)
139.  Prince Dansker  (Death of a Champion)
140.  Puddy the Pup  (Terrytoons character)
141.  Pudgy  (Betty Boop)
142.  Rab  (Rab and his Friends)
143.  Rags  (World War I)
144.  Ragsy  (Fog Over Frisco)
145.  Rin Tin Tin  (World War I)
146.  Rin Tin Tin  (The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin)
147.  Rob Roy  (President Calvin Coolidge)
148.  Rover  (Rescued by Rover)
149.  Sandy  (Little Orphan Annie)
150.  Scraps  (A Dog's Life)
151.  Seaman  (Lewis and Clark)
152.  Sensation  (Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show)
153.  Sheba  (The Women)
154.  Shelly  (Wiener Dog Nationals)
155.  Sieg and Kleine  (Gasoline Alley)
156.  Sinbad  (U.S. Coast Guard)
157.  Sinbad  (Sinbad Again!)
158.  Snowy  (The Adventures of Tintin)
159.  Snuff  (A Night in the Lonesome October)
160.  Sounder  (Sounder)
161.  Sparky  (Smokey Stover)
162.  Spot  (Dick and Jane)
163.  Spot  (The Timbertoes)
164.  Stickeen  (Stickeen
165.  Strongheart  (White Fang)
166.  Struppi  (Tobias Seicherl)
167.  Stubby  (Sgt._Stubby
168.  Sucker  (They Shall Have Music)
169.  Teddy  (The Extra Girl)
170.  Tige  (Buster Brown)
171.  Tippie  (Cap Stubbs and Tippie)
172.  Togo  (1925 Serum Run to Nome)
173.  Toto  (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz)
174.  Towser  (Towser Dog's Story)
175.  Tuffy  (Tuffy and his Magic Tail)
176.  White Fang  (White Fang)
177.  Whitey  (Boston Blackie)
178.  Wolf  (Rip Van Winkle)
179.  Zero  (Little Annie Rooney)
  


Note:
    For other listings, select  options  where you can choose to list famous dogs from movies, books, comics, TV, or from history. And you can sort by dog name, breed, span of years, or title (venue). Or you can find all dogs with a specific name or start of a name.
    Touching (or cursor over) a dog image produces an enlargement. Touch anywhere else to close the larger image. Selecting dogs that were famous in a particular span of years may include dogs whose initial fame came much earlier. Tapping (or clicking on) any underlined name will link to more information.

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