Balto Statue
The Balto Statue in Central Park commemorates the heroic sled dog who played a crucial role in the 1925 "Serum Run to Nome," a life-saving mission to deliver diphtheria antitoxin to the remote town of Nome, Alaska. Balto, a Siberian Husky, led the final leg of the treacherous journey through blizzards, subzero temperatures, and whiteout conditions, ensuring the medicine reached the town in time to prevent a deadly epidemic.
In 1925, after news of Balto's bravery spread, New Yorkers raised funds to commission a statue honoring him. Sculpted by Frederick George Richard Roth, the statue was unveiled on December 17, 1925 just ten months after the mission. The statue depicts Balto standing proudly, symbolizing courage, resilience, and teamwork, with the inscription: Dedicated to the indomitable spirit of the sled dogs that relayed antitoxin six hundred miles over rough ice, across treacherous waters, through Arctic blizzards, from Nenana to the relief of stricken Nome in the winter of 1925.