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One thing is certain - the innate quality of
the dog we know as the Alaskan Malamute and
its superb adaptation to its environment |
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The Malamute Eskimo |
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There are twenty native Alaskan languages,
four are Eskimo. However, none were written
down until the eighteenth century when
Russian fur traders entered the country. The
name Malamute applies to the regional
dialect of the Alaskan Inupiaq Eskimos. The
Malamute speaking tribe or tribes eventually
settled in the Northeastern area of the
Seward Peninsula. |
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It was here that the dogs we call Alaskan
Malamutes are popularly supposed to have
originated or to have settled after the
great migration. Some early explorers also
described similar dogs in coastal regions
much further South. Obviously men and their
dogs migrated to where there was most food.
Fishing and game possibilities varied
according to the weather and coastal areas
may have had more to offer. This accounts
for the apparent spread of the dog
population to both North and South from the
original settlements around Kotzebue Sound.
Nonetheless, Malamute dogs of excellent type
could be found in that area even up to the
mid-1960's |
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Malamute Eskimos, now known as Kuuvangmiut
or Kobuk people, had a good standard of
life, working hard and developing their dogs
to a high level of strength, intelligence
and reliability. People of the Malamute
region are said to have fed dogs as often as
they themselves ate on the trail. This
humane treatment may account for the rather
better temperament of the Alaskan Malamute
as opposed to certain other Arctic sled dog
breeds. When you consider that many working
dogs were badly mistreated, underfed and
over-used it should not be surprising that
many Arctic dogs had bad dispositions. |
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The Malamute Eskimos bred only the best and
most promising youngsters and treated their
dogs well and evidently did not do a lot of
breeding because of the lack of food. White
men found it difficult to purchase Malamutes
because of the high value placed upon them
which explains the relatively small
foundation to which we trace today's
Malamutes. |
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The Alaskan Malamute's Roots |
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The Alaskan Malamute is a member of the
Spitz group of dogs. This group is well
represented in the world, including the
Akita, Chow Chow, Elkhound, Finnish Spitz,
and Samoyed to mention only a few. We may
have the wandering merchants, explorers, and
roving armies of yesteryear to thank for
their wide distribution across the globe.
However, until recently, the Alaskan
Malamute has remained almost completely
native to Alaska. |
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Some naturalists think that the Alaskan
Malamute is a product of the early dog and
domesticated wolf from centuries ago,
whereas some Eskimo cultural experts and a
number of Eskimo elders dismiss this idea,
pointing out the anatomical differences
between dog and wolf. One of the early
Malamute breeders, Paul Voelker, believed
the Alaskan Malamute to be the oldest breed
on the North American continent and probably
the breed longest associated with man.
According to Voelker, bone and ivory
carvings dated at twelve to twenty thousand
years old show the Malamute essentially as
he is today. Voelker is quoted as saying |
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"Don't forget that the Alaskan Malamute for
untold generations was raised with the
Eskimos, pups and kids on the floor
together. I've seen little babies crawling
in among the pups to nurse off the old
mother dog." |
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The Gold Rush |
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When the Gold Rush began in 1896 prospectors
discovered the need for sleds and dog teams.
Teams became very expensive; it was normal
to pay $1,500 for a small team and $500 for
a good dog. The Alaskan Malamute was the
most prized and respected team dog and his
facial markings were much admired. However,
the Alaskan Malamute breed could have been
lost during this time of inter-breeding with
smaller, faster dogs for racing and also
with larger dogs such as the Saint Bernard
for dog fighting and weight pulling. |
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Despite this cross-breeding, the dogs
quickly began to return to the Spitz type to
which all Northern breeds belong. Even the
first generation of cross-breeds tended to
look more like the Spitz dog than the other
half of their breeding. Within three
generations there would be no sign of
outside blood. Why would this be so? The
Arctic type has been dominant for many
centuries and obviously those dogs not
inheriting the survival characteristics of
the Arctic breeds would not be able to
survive. Additionally, many Arctic dogs are
"easy keepers" and require much less food
than dogs of comparable size. It has been
speculated that those dogs that did not
inherit these qualities may well have
starved on the rations normally given to the
sled dogs. These differences can partially
account for slight variations found in
modern Alaskan Malamutes. They do not
indicate any impure breeding in present day
dogs, nor any departure from true type. |
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The Three Basic Foundation Lines |
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Kotzebue
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The Kotzebue line stemmed from Arthur
Walden's dogs which were taken over by
Milton and Eva Seeley when Mr. Walden went
to Antarctica. The Seeleys' Chinnok Kennels
in Wonalancet, New Hampshire was the
best-known sled dog headquarters in the
United States. Dogs for both of the Byrd
Expeditions and for the United States
Service Expedition (all to Antarctica) were
trained and supplied by Chinook Kennels. The
Seeleys deserve much of the credit for
getting the AKC to recognize the Alaskan
Malamute |
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M'Loot
— Paul
Voelker originated the M'Loot line that
figures strongly in many pedigrees,
including the foundation of Silver Sled
Kennels that is behind most of the Alaskan
Malamutes you may find in the Midwest.
Although Voelker was interested in the same
breed, he came up with a slightly different
type of Alaskan Malamute but did not pursue
AKC registration. |
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Hinman (or Hinman-Irwin) Strain —
This strain involved only a
few dogs but made important contributions to
breed quality. The Hinman line in
combination with the M'Loot strain produced
some of the best representatives of the
breed. The Hinman strain also figured
strongly in combination with M'Loot and
Kotzebue in development of the "Husky-Pak"
line, and produced many champion and
foundation dogs for the breed. |
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AKC Recognition of the
Alaskan Malamute |
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Breed recognition for the Alaskan Malamute
came in 1935, the same year that the Alaskan
Malamute Club of America was formed. The
original registration period for AKC was
very short, just long enough to get enough
dogs registered to provide a base on which
the breed could grow and develop. |
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During World War II, many sled dogs,
including many of the few registered
Malamutes, were loaned for war duty. After
the war many of these same dogs were used on
an expedition to Antarctica. They served and
then, due to some bureaucratic decision,
were chained to an ice floe and destroyed by
an explosive charge (this action nearly
incited a mutiny among the Navy men
involved). |
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Some time after this tragic event, AKC
realized the breed had hardly any registered
Malamutes to support it. They reopened AKC
registration, but on more rigid
specifications. Quality had to be proved by
showing each applicant as a "listed" dog and
attaining ten championship points. During
this time, many early fanciers registered
their dogs under the new rules, adding the
M'Loot and Hinman strains to the Kotzebues
registered earlier. |
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Suddenly, the door to registration was
closed by the AKC despite the protests of
the Alaskan Malamute Club of America. All
registered Alaskan Malamutes today go back
to the original Kotzebues or to dogs
registered during the open period in the
late forties. |
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