Gunnar kaasen biography sample
Short biography sample.
Gunnar Kaasen
Norwegian-American musher (1882–1960)
Gunnar Kaasen (March 11, 1882 – November 27, 1960) was a Norwegian-born musher who delivered a cylinder containing 300,000 units of diphtheriaantitoxin to Nome, Alaska, in 1925, as the last leg of a dog sled relay that saved the U.S.
city from an epidemic.[1][2]
Background
Gunnar E. Kaasen was born the son of Hans and Anna Kaasen in Burfjorddalen, in Troms county, Norway.
Gunnar kaasen biography sample
He went to the United States to mine for gold in 1903, in the wake of the discovery of gold-bearing sands on Cape Nome in 1898, which triggered one of several gold rushes in the state between 1891 and 1898. Kaasen became an experienced musher and a resident of Nome.
While the boom was spent by 1905, the port of Nome sits on Norton Sound, which is usually ice locked and inaccessible by ship between October and June. Dog sledding remained the primary transportation and communication link to the outside world during the winter mont