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ECHO Club, Inc. --
U.K.C.'s First Obedience Club |
Reprinted from U.K.C. (r) United Kennel Club,
1989-1997 The First 100 Years, Copyright 1997
In July, 1966, dog lover Elizabeth Halsell was the
catalyst for what would become one of the U.K.C.'s oldest and most
diversified dog obedience clubs -- E.C.H.O. -- the Elkhart County
Humane Obedience Club, located in north central Indiana. She acted on
the idea of forming such a group by writing to about 120 graduates of
the Elkhart County Humane Society's dog obedience classes to
determine the interest level in starting a small training club for
mixed breed as well as purebred dogs.
News traveled fast on the canine grapevine and interest grew from
obedience class graduates in Elkhart and St. Joseph counties.
Finally, on October 7, 1966, a small, eager group of people,
including some Humane Society personnel, met in the basement of an
Elkhart, Indiana bank for the first of ten planned weeks of training.
Each person made a $5.00 donation to the Elkhart County Humane
Society and later dropped quarters into a coffee can for each
training session. A list of about 20 charter members and a
constitution were established. The idea for the club's name was
unanimously accepted and quickly shortened to ECHO Club. Through the
ensuing years, ECHO met at banks, roller rinks, meeting rooms, fire
stations, park buildings, schools and malls.
The first fun match for all types of dogs was held in May of 1968 at
the Elkhart County Fairgrounds. It was a great success and was
followed by a total of seven such matches during the club's first ten
years of operation. At training sessions and in competitions, most of
ECHO's sizeable collection of equipment was designed, built, painted,
hauled, lifted, set up and torn down by members. From the beginning,
ECHO. members have been active participants in a wide variety of
community events. These included obedience demonstrations, pet
therapy, story hours, Be Kind to Animals Week programs, appearances
on radio and TV and visits to nursing homes, senior centers, schools,
scout groups, civic groups and shut-ins. For many years, a drill team
worked along with the above programs.
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Promoting a quality,
caring relationship between you and your canine companion.
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Throughout the club's history, two-and four-legged
members have enjoyed picnics and other gatherings at members' homes.
Even in the midst of these social gatherings and extensive community
service, members found plenty of time to experience the joy of
training and showing their dogs for obedience degrees and titles. An
annual dinner and awards banquet marks member accomplishments.
As early as the late '60s, ECHO members were interested in tracking.
The first group included a variety of dogs ranging from Papillons to
Newfies along with handlers dressed in delightfully old "odorous"
shoes and clothing wandering through all types of fields for tracking
lessons and fun. Members have earned various tracking titles.
In 1970, a commercial artist who joined the club donated his time and
talent to design the official club logo as well as many
professional-looking signs. The first ECHO Club newsletter appeared
in January of 1980.
In December of 1987, ECHO. applied to U.K.C. for permission to hold
U.K.C. licensed events. This meant the group could hold sanctioned
trials -- instead of just "fun" matches. In 1988 ECHO fulfilled its
long-standing dream when the club held an official U.K.C. obedience
trial. ECHO. also held the first "double" (2 days/2 trials) and the
first "quad" (2 days/4 trials) in U.K.C. history and was first to
offer a combination obedience and agility trial. One of the many
interesting aspects of ECHO had always been that the club included
mixed breeds as well as purebred dogs in the fun of earning awards
and competing. Club members were delighted when U.K.C. and AMBOR
joined forced to accept mixed breeds into participation at U.K.C.
events.
In the early 1990's, two ECHO members developed an interest in
agility training. Their enthusiasm was so contagious that in living
rooms, basements and unheated garages (in January!), a merry band of
bravehearted members could be found building and painting equipment.
Agility took off like wildfire. A very open-minded board of directors
decided to take a chance on an agility trial as a way of keeping part
of a local fairground building from sitting idle during fall
obedience trials. Even though several members had no idea what
agility was, they demonstrated the unfailing spirit of ECHO by
serving as timers, equipment haulers and course builders to pull off
the club's first successful agility trial.
Search and Rescue work was another point of interest in the early
'90s. Several ECHO. members worked and trained with Northern Indiana
Search and Rescue to help their dogs learn to find and possibly save
the lives of lost people. In 1995 a member's Rottweiler was certified
as a Wilderness Search and Rescue dog. In 1996 the handler/dog team
went to Atlanta as standbys for the Olympics. This dog is now a
certified Disaster Search and Rescue Dog at Level 2 of FEMA (Federal
Emergency Management Agency). He is one of only 34 dogs in the United
States to carry this designation and is the first in Indiana.
Additional ECHO member are expected to follow suit in the near
future.
Other interesting activities ECHO handlers and dogs are participating
in are carting and water trials -- particularly among the
Newfoundlands of the club. Several owners of herding group dogs have
attended herding trials and tried out their dogs for herding
instinct. An ECHO Bearded Collie is currently working toward her AKC
herding trials by driving, fetching and penning.
ECHO members are also active in Assistance Dog work. One handler, a
special education teacher, has a Jack Russell Terrier who attends
elementary school each day in a classroom of Children with autism.
Another member serves as training director of Midwest Assistance
Dogs, Inc., a group that trains hearing dogs for the hearing impaired
and service dogs for the physically impaired. The group also places
retired service dogs as companions. Most of these dogs come from area
humane societies.
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Encouraging an atmosphere
of friendship and the free exchange
of experience and ideas with fellow dog lovers.
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ECHO has a number of skilled dog groomers and
obedience and agility instructors who gladly share their knowledge.
Many members have donated countless hours of teaching 4-H dog
obedience classes. The 4-H work elbow to elbow and paw to paw at ECHO
obedience and agility trials with their 4-H leaders. When they grow
up, 4-Hers often join the ECHO Club. Members realize the value of
sharing their interests in dogs with young people and go the extra
mile to make ECHO a family oriented group. As a result, the
organization has one of the strongest junior programs in northern
Indiana.
During the past three decades, ECHO members have enjoyed virtually
every activity related to dog training including seminars, dog camps,
flyball and lure coursing. Hard-working canines and handlers have
earned accolades in hunting/retrieving field work, breed showing,
U.K.C., A.K.C., USDAA, NADAC agility, go to ground terrier trials and
many other activities that are both fun-filled and fulfilling for the
dogs and their human companions. ECHO members and their dogs have
also graced the pages of such publications as Dog Fancy,
Bloodlines, Front and Finish and many breed-related newsletters,
books and calendars. Several times a year members or their dogs smile
from the pages of daily or weekly newspapers in northern Indiana.
ECHO membership includes a wealth of highly experienced stewards,
show personnel and judges. Through numerous generations of puppies,
puddles and paper towels, ECHO has a proud 30-year history of
obedience, agility, conformation, showing and winning.
Special thanks to: Delcia DeGroff, ECHO Club
Historian, and Jeane DeShone, Editor,
for your contributions to the original club history submitted for the
U.K.C. 100 Years Book.
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