Today these big, beautiful cats are among the world’s most popular breeds. Things took a turn for the better in the 1960s, and the Maine Coon Breeders and Fanciers Association was formed in 1968. But the invasion of glamourous Persian and exotic Siamese cats from England around the turn of the century spelled the end of the Maine Coon’s popularity for about five decades. In Boston and New York, the home-grown felines were popular exhibits at cat shows, and when the Cat Fanciers Association was formed in 1908, the fifth cat registered as a Maine Coon named Molly Bond.
A female Maine Coon was named Best Cat in 1895 at a cat show held in Madison Square Garden. The first published reference to a Maine Coon comes from 1861 and was about a black-and-white cat named Captain Jenks of the Horse Marines. In fact, Maine Coons who didn’t have the brown tabby coat were called Maine Shags. The resemblance is, however, how the cats got the “Coon” part of their name. One thing is for sure–the Maine Coon is not the result of a mating between a cat and a raccoon, even if their brown tabby coat and furry ringed tail suggest that biological impossibility. Sea captains may have brought back longhaired cats that then mated with local shorthaired cats. Others say that they’re the descendants of longhaired cats belonging to Marie Antoinette, sent to America in advance of the doomed queen, who had hoped to escape there. Some say the Vikings brought them to North America, centuries before Columbus sailed the ocean blue. They’re a natural breed and little is known of their origins.
The Maine Coon, as the name implies, hails from Maine, where the breed was known as a popular mouser, farm cat, and ship’s cat, as far back as the early 19 th century.