0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views1 page

Comprehension Passage

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 1

In the early 1920's, settlers came to Alaska looking for gold.

They traveled by boat to the coastal towns of


Seward and Knik, and from there by land into the gold fields. The trail they used to travel inland is known
today as the Iditarod Trail, one of the National Historic Trails designated by the Congress of the United
States. The Iditarod Trail quickly became a major thoroughfare in Alaska, as the mail and supplies were
carried across this trail. People also used it to get from place to place, including the priests, ministers,
and judges who had to travel between villages. In the winter, the settlers’ only means of travel down this
trail was via dog sled. Once the gold rush ended, many gold-seekers went back to where they had come
from, and suddenly there was much less travel on the Iditarod Trail. The introduction of the airplane in
the late 1920’s meant dog teams were no longer the standard mode of transportation, and of course
with the airplane carrying the mail and supplies, there was less need for land travel in general. The final
blow to the use of the dog teams was the appearance of snowmobiles. By the mid 1960's, most Alaskans
didn’t even know the Iditarod Trail existed, or that dog teams had played a crucial role in Alaska’s early
settlements. Dorothy G. Page, a self-made historian, recognized how few people knew about the former
use of sled dogs as working animals and about the Iditarod Trail’s role in Alaska’s colorful history. To raise
awareness about this aspect of Alaskan history, she came up with the idea to have a dog sled race over
the Iditarod Trail. She presented her idea to an enthusiastic musher, as dog sled drivers are known,
named Joe Redington, Sr. Soon the Pages and the Redingtons were working together to promote the
idea of the Iditarod race. Many people worked to make the first Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race a reality in
1967. The Aurora Dog Mushers Club, along with men from the Adult Camp in Sutton, helped clear years
of overgrowth from the first nine miles of the Iditarod Trail. To raise interest in the race, a $25,000 purse
was offered, with Joe Redington donating one acre of his land to help raise the funds. The short race,
approximately 27 miles long, was put on a second time in 1969. After these first two successful races, the
goal was to lengthen the race a little further to the ghost town of Iditarod by 1973. However in 1972, the
U.S. Army reopened the trail as a winter exercise, and so in 1973, the decision was made to take the race
all the way to the city of Nome—over 1,000 miles. There were many who believed it could not be done
and that it was crazy to send a bunch of mushers out into the vast, uninhabited Alaskan wilderness. But
the race went! 22 mushers finished that year, and to date over 400 people have completed it.

Questions

1) The primary purpose of this passage is to


2) A. recount the history of the Iditarod trail and the race that memorializes it
3) B. describe the obstacles involved in founding the Iditarod race
4) C. outline the circumstances that led to the establishment of the Iditarod Trail
5) D. reestablish the important place of the Iditarod Trail in Alaska’s history

You might also like