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Wednesday, January 4, 2023

50 years of Iditarod Champion Highlight - Carl Huntington

With 2023 marking 50 years of the Last Great Race, and the 51st running, it's high time we look back on the mushers who had that magic ride into Nome in first. For the next few weeks as we count down to March 4, we'll highlight the 24 Champions of Iditarod. That's right, 50 races with 24 names on the Champion list. Just as more folks have climbed Everest than have run Iditarod, the Champions list is surprisingly short.  

The Sprint Mushing Champion

Carl Huntington
Photo from Iditarod Archives.
The second ever Iditarod Champion was the first Native Alaskan to win the race. Born in 1947, Carl Huntington came from Galena, Alaska. Huntington's Athabascan roots gave him generations of mushing experience, and he was known as a competent sprint musher. In fact, Carl is the only musher to be champion of Iditarod, the Fur Rondy sprint races, and the Open North American Championships (ONAC). Ironically, while Carl would go on to win those sprint races, he holds the record for slowest champion time!

Carl grew up in a large family, and dog mushing was a part of his childhood. With only one sled to carry everyone, the older boys (one being Carl) would often have to run behind the sled on their way to "beaver camp" according to his younger brother Tom. Beaver camp was about a 20 mile run, talk about toughness.

Carl Huntington was a rookie heading to Nome in March of 1974. Not a rookie in the sport, but this was his first time on the still incredibly new Iditarod Race Trail. The 1974 race was a brutal one weather wise. Dick Mackey would write in his autobiography that on one leg he camped with Huntington and several other teams during an overnight windstorm where they piled the dogs together and the mushers hunkered down and kept each other awake all night because it was so cold. They would later find out that with the wind chill the temperature reached a lovely -130 degrees. 

Like many champions who would come after him, Huntington at age 27 came limping up Front Street. He had injured his knee along the trail and at one point was worried he wouldn't be able to finish the race. Huntington would credit his lead dog Nugget - who was eleven years old - with much of his success in getting to the finish line. Nugget was a dog from musher Emmitt Peter's kennel and Carl had borrowed her in 1973 for the Fur Rondy sprint races, which they won. Carl was so impressed with the dog that he asked to take her on the Iditarod the following season. Nugget, at eleven years old, became an Iditarod champion.

Huntington would sign up for the 1975 race, but did not finish. He went back to racing sprint and in 1977 would win the Open North American Championships. In the following years, as Iditarod would pass through Galena, Carl would come down to the teams to give them a once over. Iditarod Champion Joe May would write in 2014: "Carl Huntington came down to the checkpoint, marched up and down the teams and passed 'judgment'...usually with a cursory nod or shrug. With Carl, who had never been known to be wrong about a dog, a “judgment” was as from God to Moses from the Burning Bush.

One year, after scrutinizing my team, he walked to where the checker and I waited with bated breath. I was a mess..bloodshot eyes, ruined nose, peeling cheeks, torn and filthy parka. The checker asked, “what you think Carl?”. Carl looked me up and down and said, “dogs will make it—he won't”, turned and walked away."

Little is publicized about Carl's passing in 2000, but he is remembered fondly by many mushers who knew him. He left his mark in the sport.


For a little bit more on Carl's 1974 race you can read an article archived by the New York Times. Joe Runyan wrote about lead dog Nugget in a blog post for Iditarod insider


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