Alaska-Yukon Pioneers Committee presenting a key to the city to sled dog Balto at Pier 52, Seattle, March 22, 1925

Balto was the lead sled dog on Gunnar Kaasen’s 1925 Serum Run team, delivering diphtheria antitoxin serum to doctors at Nome, Alaska on the last leg of the relay. Balto and Kaasen arrived in Seattle on the Alaska Steamship Company’s steamship Alameda, and they were honored at a ceremony on Pier 2 in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/imlsmohai/id/4351
Description
Summary:Balto was the lead sled dog on Gunnar Kaasen’s 1925 Serum Run team, delivering diphtheria antitoxin serum to doctors at Nome, Alaska on the last leg of the relay. Balto and Kaasen arrived in Seattle on the Alaska Steamship Company’s steamship Alameda, and they were honored at a ceremony on Pier 2 in Seattle by a committee representing the Alaska-Yukon Pioneer Society and the Boy Scouts on behalf of the city. This photo shows Balto being presented with a bone shaped key to the city by Ben Ferguson, Northern Chief of the Alaska-Yukon Pioneers. The curly-haired children in the photograph are Balto’s “escort,” twin sisters Betty Ann and Shirley Gene Quackenbush, daughters of Mrs. Grace Quackenbush of the Olympic Hotel. Handwritten on photo: A.Y.P. Committee at Pier 2, Seattle giving key to city to Kasson’s Lead Dog “Balto” Left to right: Dr. [Benton] Woods-[William] Brown-[Adolph] Behren[s]-[Henry W.] Powell-Goddard-[Ben] Ferguson-R.[Ringwald] Blix-in background Boy Scouts Caption information source: Seattle Daily Times, March 23, 1925. 1 photographic print: b&w; 8 x 10 in.