In the winter of 1925, Nome, Alaska, was hit by an unexpected and deadly
outbreak of diphtheria. Officials immediately quarantined the town, but
the only cure for the community of more than 1,400 people was antitoxin
serum and the nearest supply was in Anchorage-hundreds of miles of
snowbound wilderness away. The only way to get it to Nome was by
dogsled.
Twenty teams braved subzero temperatures and blizzard conditions to run
over 600 miles in six days in a desperate relay race that saved the
people of Nome. Several of the dogs, including Togo and Balto, became
national heroes. Today their efforts, and those of the courageous
mushers, are commemorated every March by the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog
Race.
Jon Van Zyle's stunning oil paintings capture the brutal conditions,
pristine wilderness, and sheer guts and determination demonstrated by
the heroic mushers and dogs.