
Well our(as a family)first GSD(then called an Alsatian)was a nervous wreck with short legs & long back & was PTS as a fear biter. She was a quite successful show dog & of course backing off the judges was the normal in the 1950's.
My(as in owned by me personally)first GSD was bred by Gwen Barrington & totally bomb proof. When I showed her she was often attacked(literally)in the ring by dogs like my family's first one & she looked nothing like the other dogs way back then. She was the daughter of two imports that Gwen bought from Germany & even then was longer legged & shorter bodied with a good firm not dippy back. Her parents were X rayed in Germay for HD a very rare thing in the UK. I never intended breeding from her & she was never X rayed
The "Modern" type are without exception bred from health tested parents with good characters-something that is rarely the case with the 1950's type
She instilled in me a love for extremely good tempered dogs & even now there can be seen poor temperamented dogs winning under judges who prefer the 1950's types
The type you dislike & call modern have evolved over the last 50 years & it is interesting to note that most purpose bred Police dogs are from these "modern lines"(especially the working Germany lines)Few of the gifted dogs pass the hip scoring let alone the character/temperament/attitude test & those that do are much more likely to be from"modern"lines
The majority of the breeders on the 1950's type still
do not health test at all despite the sometimes high hip scores in the dogs they produce. They have also lost sight of the inbreeding they do to known epileptics it can be very very frightenening for a buyer of their puppies to see the dogs go into fits & when the pedigrees are checked the lines to the epileptics are obvious
I have noted there is a certain "arrogance"amougst those that prefer the1950's type dog to see them as "English" The GSD is not English it is a German Shepherd Dog not an Old English Sheepdog, English Springer Spaniel etc The correct type is the type that is seen in Germany the Motherland of the breed.
There are on here critics of the ESS as bred in America which is fine as the ESS is an Egnlish Breed. I critise the Show BC with foreign lines that are TBH quite far removed from the dogs that bred to work & yet they spring from the same bloodlines back in the 1920's(ISDS)with the exception of course to some Australian BC's that have at least one Kelpie in their background. However the critics do tend to be people to have the breed unlike the GSD were everyone & his wife are breed experts & of course know that the old dogs were better & straight backed etc etc I have to smile when they quote the first GSD to go BIS at Crufts as having a lovely straight back, Fenton of Kentwood had a very long soft dippy topline that wobbling up & down in movement like a jelly-he did however have a reasonable temperament-quite unusual in the era in which he was shown
BTW I prefer
working bred Gernan GSDs & my next one will be bred by my friend who is an SV Schutzhund judge, trainer, handler & tattooist It will not be a show bred dog of either side