Legendary St Bernard dogs find a home (2024)

Legendary St Bernard dogs find a home (1)

A museum has opened in the town of Martigny, in canton Valais, celebrating the past and present of Switzerland's most famous dog breed, the St Bernard.

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The institution also takes a look at the Great St Bernard Hospice high in the Alps, where the dogs earned their legendary status as lifesavers of travellers lost in the snow.

At the end of 2004, the friars at the hospice said a lack of manpower meant they would have to give up their world famous rescue dogs. The biggest fear was that this would mean the end of the animals’ breeding programme.

The breed is in no danger of becoming extinct, but if the decision had been followed through, it would have been the end of an era. Only dogs bred at the hospice or in Martigny, in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, are classified as coming from the Great St Bernard.

Fortunately the Barry Foundation, named after the most famous of the rescue dogs, stepped in and took over the kennels in early 2005, ensuring that the canines will still be keeping watch over the St Bernard pass.

At that time the idea of a museum on the history of the animals was also mooted. It was accepted and the museum has been opened in a former arsenal building.

“It was an old dream,” museum director Bernadette Pasquier told swissinfo. “But thanks to a SFr5 million ($4 million) donation from the Bernard and Caroline de Watteville Foundation, the dream has become reality.”

The breeding programme has also been included in the museum, bringing the permanent exhibition to life.

Although the dogs are the centre of interest, the role of the hospice sitting on the alpine road between Switzerland and Italy has also been explained.

Spiritual guidance

Friars have been living on the 2,500-metre-high pass for nearly 1,000 years, and have been dispensing spiritual guidance for the past three centuries. The hospice itself was built on the pilgrim route between Canterbury in England and Rome. According to legend, it was founded by Saint Bernard of Montjou.

The dogs – originally a crossbreed – are first believed to have appeared on the pass in the middle of the 17th century. Their presence was recorded in paintings and drawings dating back to 1695 and has been attested by official documents since 1703.

The hospice was built in a place were extreme weather was the norm. Apart from July and August, visitors can expect a rough welcome from the elements.

Early pilgrims had a tough time, with little more than a steep, narrow and poorly maintained road to take them across the mountains. They had worry about avalanches, snowfall, clouds and wind before they could seek refuge at the hospice.

The friars often knew when someone was on the way, and when night fell, would go out looking for travellers who had failed to arrive. The dogs would accompany them, helping uncover those who were lost.

Whether the dogs used their own initiative to go out and look for missing travellers by themselves carrying a barrel of rum around their necks is highly unlikely, even if it is part and parcel of the legend. There is no mention of the barrels in hospice chronicles.

Barry, the rescue dog

But the legend of the St Bernard dog lives on. A short film shown at the museum gives an idea of the extent of the rescue work carried out by these animals.

The most famous of them all, Barry, is on show in all his mounted glory. On loan from the natural history museum in the Swiss capital, Bern, he will eventually be replaced by a copy.

Barry, who died at age 14 in 1814, is supposed to have saved 40 people – with or without a barrel of rum. He did not die on the job in a snowstorm either, but in the relatively comfortable surroundings of the Swiss capital.

The rescue dog’s reputation lives on. At the museum, books, paintings, advertisem*nts, stamps, bottles and chocolate are testimony to the hound’s enduring image.

And like the crossbow, Barry has come to symbolise all things Swiss.

swissinfo, Urs Maurer in Martigny

The Great St Bernard Hospice has honoured Barry by always having one dog with the same name.

The mounted Barry shows a large and strong dog, but much smaller than the modern St Bernard.

He was acclaimed for his rescue work, having saved around 40 people, although this number is disputed since detailed records of successful rescues were not kept.

The hospice dogs’ work was recognised far and wide. Chronicles, as well as verbal reports by Napoleon’s soldiers who crossed the pass with him in 1800, tell of the many lives saved by these dogs in the face of “the White Death”.

The fame of the St Bernard then known as the “Barry-dog”, spread throughout Europe in the 19th century, and Barry himself became the epitome of the rescue dog.

Legendary St Bernard dogs find a home (2)

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Legendary St Bernard dogs find a home (3)

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This content was published on “We are still called on to search for people who have lost their way, says Father Frédéric Gaillard, a member of the St Augustine religious order, “even though this rarely happens today.” “We are here to talk to the people who stop here, people who have lost their spiritual way, so to speak.” Bernard of…

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Legendary St Bernard dogs find a home (2024)

FAQs

What is the most famous St. Bernard dog? ›

The Foundation is named after the most famous and heroic St Bernard of all. Barry, who was born in 1800 and died in 1814, is credited with over 40 rescues, and stories about him abound!

What happened to Barry the dog? ›

Barry retired to Bern, Switzerland and after his death his body was passed into the care of the Natural History Museum of Bern. His skin has been preserved through taxidermy although his skull was modified in 1923 to match the Saint Bernard of that time period.

What is the story of Barry the Saint Bernard? ›

Say “Barry” to a Swiss, and they will probably think of a barrel-wearing St Bernard who saved 40 lives as a mountain rescue dog (including a half-frozen boy whom he flipped onto his back and carried to safety) before being bayonetted to death by one of Napoleon's soldiers who mistook him for a wolf.

Do St. Bernards still rescue people? ›

Modern activities – Great St Bernard Pass and Little St Bernard Pass. St. Bernards are no longer used for Alpine rescues, the last recorded instance of which was in 1955. As late as 2004, the Great St Bernard Hospice still retained 18 of the dogs for reasons of tradition and sentiment.

Will my St. Bernard protect me? ›

Their sheer size and the sound of their barks can make Bernies a really good watchdog. They are also fiercely protective of those they love. Their intense desire to please their owners usually makes them easy to train and ideal house protectors.

Why do St. Bernards carry a barrel? ›

It is said that the iconic wooden barrel hung with a leather strap around San Bernard´s neck contained Brandy and this served to provide warmth to travelers who were crossing through the snow and gave time for humans to arrive at their destination, normally the dogs were the first to approach.

What is the most famous rescue dog? ›

Mancs became famous when he helped rescue a 3-year-old girl who spent 82 hours under the ruins after the Izmit earthquake of 1999 in Turkey.

Is Barry based on a true story? ›

Bill Hader's Barry isn't based on a real person, but the show and character were inspired by the comedian's feelings when he was on Saturday Night Live. And while the inspiration is somewhat dark, perhaps it's comforting to know that there isn't a professional assassin who's crash acting classes out there in the world.

Which movie has a Saint Bernard in it? ›

A slobbering St. Bernard becomes the center of attention for a loving family, but must contend with a dog-napping veterinarian and his henchmen.

Why do Saint Bernards sit on you? ›

Your dog might sit in your lap to show affection.

They might think you're inviting them to play.

How long do St Bernards live to? ›

As is the case with other very large breeds, Saint Bernards live relatively short lives. Life expectancy is generally 8 to 10 years.

Do St. Bernards carry alcohol? ›

The monks of St. Bernard claim that their dogs never carried wine or brandy (though some were trained to bring milk from cowsheds, which is where the myth may have begin).

What is the famous Saint Bernard dog movie? ›

Beethoven (1992) - IMDb.

What is Saint Bernard famous for? ›

St. Bernard of Clairvaux (born 1090, probably Fontaine-les-Dijon, near Dijon, Burgundy [France]—died August 20, 1153, Clairvaux, Champagne; canonized January 18, 1174; feast day August 20) was a Cistercian monk and mystic, founder and abbot of the abbey of Clairvaux and one of the most influential churchmen of his time ...

What dog is Cujo? ›

Characters. Cujo: a friendly Saint Bernard that becomes murderous after contracting rabies from a bat bite.

What was the biggest Saint Bernard? ›

The heaviest dog is a Saint Bernard named Benedictine, who weighed 366 pounds in 1981. but, the average weight for this breed is round a hundred and forty-one hundred eighty pounds.

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