Balto
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Template:For Image:Statue of Balto in Anchorage.jpg Image:Balto.jpg Balto was the lead dog on the final leg of the 1925 serum run to Nome, the transport of diphtheria antitoxin from Anchorage, to Nome, Alaska in the United States by dog sled, to combat an outbreak of the disease. The run is commemorated by the annual Iditarod dog sled race.
In January 1925, doctors realized that a potentially deadly diphtheria epidemic was poised to sweep through Nome's young people. The only serum that could stop the outbreak was in Anchorage, nearly a thousand miles (1,600 km) away. The two aircraft that could quickly deliver the medicine had been dismantled for the winter. After considering alternatives, officials decided to move the medicine by sled dog.
The serum was transported by train from Anchorage to Nenana, where the first musher embarked from Nenana as part of a dog-sled relay aimed at delivering the needed serum to Nome. More than 20 mushers took part, facing a blizzard with −53 °C temperatures and strong winds. News coverage of the race was worldwide.
On February 2, 1925, the Norwegian Gunnar Kaasen drove his team, led by the husky Balto (named after Samuel Balto), into Nome. Balto and Kaasen became celebrities, even though more than a dozen mushers and their teams participated. The longest and most hazardous stretch of the run was actually covered by another Norwegian, Leonhard Seppala and his dog team, led by Togo. They left Nome towards the end of the run, picked up the serum, and turned back. Balto was not considered by the mushers a particularly good lead dog, but he proved himself on the Iditarod trail, saving his team from certain death in the Topkok River.
When Cleveland, Ohio residents raised $2,000 to purchase him from a vaudeville sideshow operator (the likes of whom mistreated the heroic huskies), Balto and six companions were given a permanent home at the Cleveland Zoo in March 1927, where they received a hero's welcome. Their first day in the zoo more than 15,000 people visited the dogs. After Balto's death in Cleveland on March 14, 1933, at 11 years old, he was mounted and placed on display in the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.
A statue of Balto was erected in New York City's Central Park in 1926.