Leicester Longwool
Leicester Longwool is an English longwool breed developed in Leicestershire by Robert Bakewell in the eighteenth century. Also called the Dishley Leicester or Bakewell Leicester in older sources, it helped shape modern livestock breeding through deliberate selection for a large, level, productive animal. The breed carries a heavy frame, calm presence, and long, lustrous locks that hang in curls.
Today it is usually kept in heritage, fiber, and conservation flocks rather than as a mainstream commercial sheep. The fleece rewards careful shearing, clean pasture, and good storage because handspinners and mills value the shine and lock structure. Leicester Longwools also require thoughtful breeding plans: rare-breed numbers make genetic breadth important, and their size calls for sensible nutrition and lambing oversight. Their influence on later longwool and crossbred sheep is large, but living flocks still need ordinary shepherding discipline to stay useful.
Colors: Badgerface, Black, Blackbelly, Brown, Gray, Gulmoget, Katmoget, Moorit, Occasionally Blue-Gray, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Tan, White, White with Black Points, White with Brown Points