The Labrador Retriever’s journey from the rugged coast of Newfoundland to the most popular dog in multiple countries is one of the more interesting breed histories in the canine world — and it’s not the story most people expect. Despite the name, Labradors didn’t come from Labrador. They came from the island of Newfoundland, and they owe their existence to a combination of working fishermen, English aristocrats, and the particular demands of cold-water retrieval. For the full picture of the modern breed, see our complete Labrador Retriever guide.
Origins: the St. John’s Water Dog
The Labrador’s ancestor is the St. John’s Water Dog — a type of working dog developed in Newfoundland in the early 1700s by Portuguese, Irish, and English settlers and fishermen. These dogs were working dogs in the most literal sense: they pulled fishing lines, retrieved fish that escaped from hooks, and hauled small loads. They were typically black, medium-sized, with a short, water-resistant coat and a strong swimming ability.
Two types of dog developed in Newfoundland: a larger, heavier dog (which became the modern Newfoundland breed) and a smaller, shorter-coated working type — the St. John’s Water Dog. It’s from this smaller type that the Labrador Retriever descends.
How they reached England
In the early 1800s, ships trading between Newfoundland and Poole in Dorset (a major cod trade port) brought the St. John’s Water Dog to England. British sport hunters, particularly in the Scottish shooting estates, recognised the dogs’ exceptional retrieving ability and began importing them systematically.
The second Earl of Malmesbury is credited as one of the first to deliberately breed these dogs in England for shooting purposes, in the early 1800s. His son, the third Earl, is recorded as describing them as “Labrador Dogs” in correspondence — the name that stuck, despite the geographical confusion (it’s thought the name may have referred to the Labrador Sea, or simply been a general term for things from the region).
The Dukes of Buccleuch were also instrumental in establishing the breed — their breeding programme in the 1880s, using dogs imported from Newfoundland and the Malmesbury line, is considered foundational to the modern Labrador. Two dogs from this line, named Ned and Avon, are ancestral to many pedigree Labs today.
Kennel Club recognition and standardisation
The Kennel Club in the UK formally recognised the Labrador Retriever as a distinct breed in 1903. The American Kennel Club followed in 1917. Breed standards were written that emphasised the working qualities: a short, dense, water-resistant double coat, strong swimming ability, a gentle mouth (essential for retrieving game undamaged), and a tractable, biddable temperament.
Interestingly, only black Labs were accepted for a long time — yellow was not officially recognised by the UK Kennel Club until 1899, and chocolate was not standardised until the mid-20th century.
From working gun dog to family pet
Through the early-to-mid 20th century, Labradors were primarily working and field trial dogs. The transition to one of the most popular family pets in the world happened gradually through the post-war decades, driven by the breed’s combination of trainability, gentle temperament, and adaptability. Their use as guide dogs (from the 1930s onwards), service dogs, and search-and-rescue dogs brought them into public consciousness as the ultimate versatile working companion.
By the 1990s, the Labrador had overtaken all other breeds in registration numbers in both the UK and the US — a position it held for over three decades. In the US, the Lab was America’s most registered dog for 31 consecutive years before being overtaken by the French Bulldog in 2022. We explore the reasons behind that enduring popularity in detail — see why Labs remain one of America’s favourite breeds.
The St. John’s Water Dog: an extinct ancestor
The original St. John’s Water Dog became extinct in the mid-20th century, partly due to Newfoundland’s dog tax and quarantine regulations that dramatically reduced dog numbers in the early 1900s. The last known St. John’s Water Dogs were photographed in the 1980s — elderly dogs on the island with no remaining breeding population. Their descendants — Labradors, Chesapeake Bay Retrievers, and other retriever breeds — live on, but the original type is gone.
My take: a breed shaped by purpose
What strikes me about the Labrador’s history is how directly its working origins explain the modern pet. The food motivation that makes Labs difficult in the kitchen was selected for in dogs who worked all day and needed strong drive. The people-orientation that makes them shadow their owners came from dogs bred to work in constant partnership with a human. The biddability that makes them trainable is the same trait that made them useful gun dogs. The Lab didn’t become popular by accident — it became popular because centuries of purposeful selection produced a dog that genuinely fits human domestic life. That selective history also explains how the breed split into two distinct types — English and American — with meaningful differences for owners today.
People also ask about Labrador history
Why are they called Labrador Retrievers if they’re from Newfoundland?
The exact origin of the name is disputed, but the most likely explanation is that the English breeders who developed the breed used “Labrador” as a general geographic term for the region — possibly referring to the Labrador Sea rather than the Labrador mainland. By the time the name was established, changing it would have been impractical regardless of its accuracy.
When did yellow and chocolate Labs appear?
Yellow Labs occurred naturally in black litters (as recessive genes) throughout the breed’s early history, but were often culled as “off-colour.” The first recorded yellow Lab to survive and be registered was “Ben of Hyde” in 1899. Chocolate Labs were similarly present but not standardised or consistently bred until the mid-20th century.
Are Labradors still used as working dogs?
Extensively. Labs remain one of the most common working dog breeds globally — as guide dogs for the visually impaired, hearing dogs, medical alert dogs, detection dogs (explosives, drugs, disease), search and rescue, and assistance dogs for a wide range of disabilities. Their combination of trainability, food motivation, gentle mouth, and stable temperament makes them exceptional working dogs across a remarkable range of roles.
My Take on the Labrador’s History
What strikes me most about the Labrador’s origin story is how accidental and unglamorous it was. These weren’t aristocratic hunting dogs bred for status — they were working dogs on fishing boats, hauling nets and retrieving lines in freezing Atlantic water. The fact that such a rough-and-ready beginning produced the world’s most popular family dog is genuinely remarkable.
The other thing I find interesting is how close the breed came to disappearing entirely. The St. John’s Water Dog, the direct ancestor of the modern Lab, is now extinct. If English aristocrats hadn’t taken a fancy to importing them in the early 1800s, the Labrador as we know it wouldn’t exist. That’s a narrow margin for one of the most successful breeds in history.
FAQ
Where did the Labrador Retriever actually come from?
Despite the name, Labradors originated on the island of Newfoundland, not in Labrador. The St. John’s Water Dog, a working fishing dog developed there in the early 1700s, is the breed’s direct ancestor. English importers developed the modern Labrador from this foundation.
When was the Labrador officially recognised as a breed?
The UK Kennel Club formally recognised the Labrador Retriever in 1903. The American Kennel Club followed in 1917. Before that, the breed existed and was widely used but wasn’t formally standardised.
Why are they called Labrador Retrievers if they’re from Newfoundland?
The most likely explanation is that the dogs arrived in England on ships from Labrador and were named accordingly by English breeders. The exact origin of the name isn’t definitively recorded, but the Labrador Sea connection is the most widely accepted theory.
