In 1988, Joe Redington finished fifth in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. It was the best he would ever do, and while it was a solid accomplishment it didn't seem like such a big deal until you stop to consider that he was 71 at the time.
That is only one of the remarkable things Redington did in connection with the Iditarod, a connection that lasted until his death in 1999 at the age of 82. For example, he thought up the race.
"Father of the Iditarod, as they say," wrote nominating committee member Frank Gerjevic in 1997. "Tireless, willing worker to get the race going and keep it going. A solid musher, tough old hombre. I don't think there would have been an Iditarod without his work."
The story of how the race began is an oft-told tale. Redington, a dog musher since coming to Alaska after World War II, told anyone who would listen about his idea of a race to Nome. By 1973, enough people had listened to make a race happen. Redington's dogs ran the race, but he didn't. During the leisurely 20 days it took the winner to reach Nome, Redington was in Anchorage, trying to raise the money to pay the prizes.
"When I guaranteed a purse of $50,000, we didn't have a dime," Redington said.
In the years that followed, the race had its ups and downs. But none of its problems stemmed from a lack of hard work by Redington. He promoted the race tirelessly, trained other mushers, leased dog teams to racers and ran the race every year from 1974 to 1992. One of the mushers he trained, Susan Butcher, won four times. Redington never finished higher than fifth. But as many people associated with the race will tell you, the Iditarod isn't just about winning. And neither is the Hall of Fame.
"His hard work and dedication to the fund-raising and promotion of the race, plus being a great competitor for many years, should earn him a place in the Hall of Fame," wrote reader David F. Schwantes.
Inducted 1997
Greatest accomplishment
Father of the Iditarod
Vital stats
Born: near Kingfisher, Okla.
Hometown: Knik
Died in 1999, age 82
Best finish
5th -- 1975, '77, '78, '88
Fastest time
1989 -- 12 days, 2 hours, 57 minutes
Race record
197411th
19755th
1976Scratched
19775th
19785th
197910th
1980Scratched
198114th
198217th
19847th
1985Scratched
1986Scratched
198733rd
19885th
19899th
199025th
199131st
199241st
199736th
Awards
Halfway -- 1988
First to Yukon -- 1988
Most Inspirational -- 1988, '89, '97
Sportsmanship -- 1990




