Delaware Gallinas

Delaware

Gallus gallus domesticus

Dato Curioso

The Delaware was once the backbone of America's 'Broiler Belt' — the Delmarva Peninsula that produced the majority of US commercial chicken meat in the 1940s and early 1950s. When the Cornish Cross hybrid arrived around 1960, Delawares declined so catastrophically that by 1970 fewer than 50 pure breeding birds remained anywhere in the United States.

An American dual-purpose breed developed in 1940 by George Ellis of Delaware by crossing Barred Plymouth Rock males with New Hampshire Red females, selecting offspring with fast early feathering and a clean white plumage with limited black barring. Delawares are white chickens with distinctive black barring restricted to the neck hackle, tail, and primary wing feathers — a clean, attractive pattern that camouflages well in farmyard conditions. Originally developed for the commercial broiler industry of the Delmarva Peninsula, Delawares produced most of America's commercial chicken meat throughout the 1940s before being almost entirely replaced by the Cornish Cross hybrid in the early 1960s.

🏷️ Raza

Delaware

💭 Temperamento

Calm, curious, active, friendly, easy to handle

📏 Tamaño

Large (2.7-3.6 kg)

Esperanza de vida

5-8 years

🎨 Colores

White body with black barring on neck hackle, wings, and tail

🌍 Origen

USA — Delaware; developed by George Ellis, 1940; APA standard 1952

🏠 Hábitat

Free-range or enclosed run; adaptable and cold-hardy

🍽️ Dieta

Layer pellets; good free-range forager

🎯 Propósito

Dual Purpose

🥚 Color del huevo

Brown

👑 Tipo de cresta

Single

🏅 Clase EE

Large Fowl