Edgar Nollner wearing a parka
Photo courtesy of Larry Hausmann
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Edgar Nollner

 

Click here for Edgar Nollner's BiographyEdgar Nollner's Biography by Wendy Arundale and Yukon-Koyukok School District, 1985. (pdf - 66 pages, 5.3mb)


This story was recorded by Orville Huntington and Jessie Demientieff-Huntington and produced at the public radio station KIYU-AM in Galena, Alaska.
Thanks to Edgar's son-in-law, Larry Hausmann, who wrote the following biography and provided the photograph.

EDGAR PAUL NOLLNER SR. was born November 11, 1904 to Alfred Redmon Nollner, a Gold Rush Stampeder from Missouri, and Cecelia Frank, Morondoyedat/no was her Koyukon Athabascan name, in the village of Old Louden on the Yukon River.

Edgar's early years were spent learning the skills he used all his life including hunting, trapping, fishing, and reading. He loved school but only completed the third grade because the government closed the school.

Edgar won his first sled dog race in 1919, the Ruby Derby, six minutes ahead of the next team. His teams were always well behaved. He would turn them all loose at once and then call them one by one to get hooked up in harness. Once he hooked up his team, no one else could move them.

Edgar was well known for being the last living musher of the Diptheria Serum Run of 1925. He also saved the lives of two downed Air Force pilots in the 1950's. He built a fire in fifty degrees below zero and brought them to safety.

Edgar never smoked or drank alcohol. He enjoyed sawing wood and shoveling snow by hand. Working in the garden, cutting and drying fish, hunting ducks and moose, driving his little truck, snow machine, and boat, dancing to the fiddle, playing pool, and reading for hours each day were some of the enjoyments of his life.

Edgar worked as a woodcutter for the steamboats. Two hundred cords a winter was not unusual for him to cut and haul out to the riverbank. “Two trips to the Cord,” he would say. He was very proud of his dog's strength. He also helped build the Galena Air Station runway, he was a pilot on the river barges, and he also worked for the U.S. Air Force.

He raised over 28 children, but when asked, how many children or grandchildren do you have? He would shrug his shoulders, as he was a humble man and had never counted them. He had a smile and an old story for anyone that would listen and was affectionately know as “Grandpa” to all.

The goal of Raven's Story is to record elders' stories, observations, and experiences relating to wildlife, fish, and subsistence in the Koyukuk and middle Yukon areas of interior Alaska. This story was recorded by Orville Huntington and Jessie Demientieff-Huntington and produced at the public radio station KIYU-AM in Galena, Alaska.

Click on an audio link below to listen to a story.
H2004-01-28
1) Working with and Caring for Dogs (4:22)
 
 

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