I have been a full time pet detective for over 10 years since 2009 covering all of California. This blog covers all aspects of preventing a pet from becoming lost and what to do if your pet becomes lost.

Feel free to call or text me at 510/415-6185 or email me at jackie@thesocialpet.com. I look forward to hearing from you!

Chessie as a Puppy in Oakland, 1985

Chessie as a Puppy in Oakland, 1985

Friday, October 18, 2019

History of Dog Licenses In the World

History of Dog Licenses In the World

The earliest known documentation of dog licenses was in 1446 in Utrecht, Holland, and the fee for the license was to be paid in salt. Salt won’t cut it anymore for these valuable treasures that give collectors a slight glimpse into dog ownership hundreds of years ago. In the past, pets were a relative luxury, reserved for the wealthy. 

A crossbred stray named Owney is a “poster dog” for dog licenses. Owney was lucky enough to be adopted by postal workers and to travel the world on various trains carrying mail sacks. His frequent travels began in Albany, New York, around 1888 and he became a popular, regular visitor on postal routes all over North America and even to the Far East. The postal clerks purchased a collar for him on which to place his identification tag and employees of the Railway Mail Service began adorning his new collar with metal tokens and tags. During a trip to Washington, D.C., a postmaster presented Owney a harness and jacket so that his collection of medals could be proudly accumulated and displayed. 

His collection reached an exceptional 1, 017 tags, including several pre-1900 dog licenses from cities in Nebraska, Kentucky, Wisconsin and Washington. So beloved by the Postal System, Owney’s body was preserved along with his unique harness, and is now on display at the National Postal Museum in Washington, D.C. 

The oldest known American dog license is an 1853 Corporation of Fredericksburg, Virginia, tag with the die maker’s name, W.H. Bell, stamped on the front. Tags vary from city to city - some more elaborate and others were rather standard. Chicago, Illinois, Baltimore, Maryland and Washington, D.C., created ornate and attractive older metal dog tags. Shapes of tags range from round disks to cutout dog figurals, intricate numerical shapes, butterflies, doghouses, Maltese crosses, state shaped planchets, acorns, bells, hearts, shields, stars, bee hives, locks, octagonal and scalloped bordered medallions. Events of the day had an impact on dog licenses, like everything else. During WWII, fiber composition tags were issued because brass and aluminum metals were needed to make shell casings and other military supplies for combat. 

Originally, dog licenses were intended to be disposable and annually renewed. Many have been discarded years ago; however, dog tags are frequently being unearthed through the use of metal detectors. Such discoveries are met with excitement, as even a buried, corroded or damaged tag has value to a collector if it is a rare specimen. Some particularly coveted tags were ornate or sentimental which were kept by the dog’s guardian and withstood the passing of time. Dog tags that were mounted on or hung from dog collars were often preserved as a memorial to a beloved family pet.

Historically, the fees collected from dog licenses have been earmarked for good causes. The tax money that was generated from licensing canines went toward orphans, the poor and livestock owners. Currently, John Weinstein, treasurer of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania has created a fund called AAARF for neglected and abused animals that can be donated to when sending in yearly licenses forms and fees. This fund is connected to the annual licensing requirements, but is an additional option for county residents to heighten awareness and facilitate prosecution of animal abuse.

Antique dog licenses are gaining value and popularity. Many pre-1900 dog tax tags are so rare that only a single specimen is known to exist. Early paper dog licenses came in a variety of colors, with or without a lithograph/wood engraving of a dog, the dog’s sex, age, breed, color and name on the front. The signature of the town clerk or county treasurer was also listed. On the backs of many, were detailed symptoms of hydrophobia (rabies) and advice to owners. 

These bowser-baubles are easy to acquire on eBay internet auctions, boasting between 50-100 listings at any given time. Individual, common tag prices range from $1.00 to $9.99 dollars, while unique figurals, early 1900’s, numerals or circular dog cutout patterned tags may rein in a price tag of $40.00 to $50.00 dollars. The highest price paid for a dog tag on eBay was $555.55 in 2002 for a rare, star shaped Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1894 territorial tag. A relatively rare, pre-1900 tag in good condition will fetch from between $120.00 to $350.00 dollars on average. 


This hobby will always remain unique and exciting. Each tag retains a certain wear pattern, patina, its own serial number.....and an untold story behind it. 

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