DeeDee Jonrowe

Musher
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroMusher
PlacesUnited States of America
isAthlete Musher
Work fieldSports
Gender
Female
Birth20 December 1953, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Age71 years
Star signSagittarius
ResidenceAlaska, USA; Bethel, USA; Willow, USA
Education
University of Alaska Fairbanks
The details

Biography

DeeDee Jonrowe at the ceremonial start of 2013 Iditarod

DeeDee Ann Jonrowe (née Stout; born December 20, 1953) is an American kennel owner and dog musher who is a three-time runner up in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, and holds the fastest time ever recorded for a woman. She is a very popular figure in the sport, and her completion of the 1,049-mile+ (1,600+ km) race in 2003 just three weeks after completing chemotherapy for breast cancer received widespread publicity.

History

Jonrowe was born on December 20, 1953, in Frankfurt, Germany. Her father, U.S. Army officer Kenneth Oliver Stout, was stationed there at the time. She went to school in Virginia, and in 1971 her family moved to Alaska where she received a B.S. in Biological Sciences and Renewable Resources from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. In 1977, she married Mike Jonrowe.

Jonrowe has also been the spokesperson for the Winter Special Olympics, and the National Girl Scouts Council, and was awarded the Young Women's Christian Association's Alaska Woman of Achievement Award. She co-wrote the book Iditarod Dreams about prepping for the 1993 and 1994 Iditarods, with Lew Freedman.

Jonrowe lives in Willow, Alaska with her husband. She is a kennel owner, and continues racing. By 1979, she had a kennel with 25 dogs. She is a founder of Mush with P.R.I.D.E. (Providing Responsible Information on a Dog's Environment). She is active in her church.

A dog kennel owned by Jonrowe in Willow was destroyed by the 2015 Sockeye fire. Jonrowe also lost her home, several pets and a flock of chickens in the fire. Neither DeeDee Jonrowe or her husband were injured in the fire.

YearPositionTime (h:min:s)
198024th17 days, 07:59:24
198131st16 days, 05:05:43
198315th13 days, 18:10:25
198430th15 days, 19:18:13
198722nd13 days, 02:58:15
19889th13 days, 16:29:06
19899th11 days, 37:14:16
19904th11 days, 14:41:31
19917th13 days, 13:44:10
19925th11 days, 09:05:00
19932nd10 days, 16:10:50
19949th11 days, 04:25:15
19954th9 days, 11:24:07
19962nd9 days, 20:18:00
19974th9 days, 18:26:10
19982nd9 days, 08:26:10
1999(Scratched)
200020th10 days, 04:24:04
200110th11 days, 14:33:15
200216th9 days, 22:07:20
200318th10 days, 23:45:39
200415th10 days, 08:40:49
200510th10 days, 01:42:55
20064th9 days, 16:25:50
2007(Scratched)[2]
200815th10days, 1:07:46
200913th10days, 22:56:10
201022nd10days, 2:47:44
201112th9days, 10:24:17
201210th9 days, 14:43:15
201310th9days, 13:24:39
2014(Scratched)[3]

Racing

In 1978, DeeDee Jonrowe competed in her first dog sled race, the Women's Fur Rendezvous World Championship in Anchorage. She has competed in many dog sled races, including the Copper Basin 300 (which she won in 2001), the Klondike 300, and the John Beargrease Dog Sled Race.

Jonrowe competed in her first Iditarod in 1980, and again in 1981, 1983, 1984, and then in every race since 1987 for a total of 23 races and 22 finishes. In 1988, she placed in the top 10 for the first time (9th), and has placed in the top 10 a total of 15 times. While she has never won the race, she was the 2nd-place finisher in three races (1996, 1993, and 1998). Her 1998 finish in second place with a time of 9 days, 8 hours, 26 minutes, and 10 seconds is the fastest time recorded for a woman. She is the only musher who competed in both the Iditarod and the Alpirod for three straight years (1992, 1993, and 1994). She has won a total of USD $335,804.

She is most widely known because of the publicity surrounding three setbacks. In 1996, an automobile accident outside Fairbanks, Alaska killed her grandmother, and both Jonrowe and her husband were hospitalized. She trained while recovering from her injuries, and placed 4th in the 1997 Iditarod. A more minor incident was a dog mutiny on the Yukon River in 1999. While racing the Iditarod, her dogs refused to go into a strong headwind and she was forced to scratch for the first time. She was forced to scratch in the 2007 Iditarod after suffering from hand and other injuries after sustaining a fall near the Rainy Pass checkpoint.

In July 2002, Jonrowe was diagnosed with breast cancer. Three weeks after completing chemotherapy, she competed in the Iditarod, placing 18th. The story was widely publicized, and in 2003 she won the Most Inspirational Musher Award, and was named the honorary chair of the American Cancer Society's Relay for Life.

Dog mushing in Alaska can be hazardous. According to Women Warriors (2004) Jonrowe said, "I've had back surgery, frozen my shoulder, broken my hand…I think I've had every single cold related injury. I haven't had any amputations, but I have had severe frostbite on my fingers, cheeks and nose. I even frostbit my corneas some years ago".

YearRaceAchievement
1981IditarodSportsmanship Award (chosen by other mushers)
1991IditarodDorothy G. Page Halfway Award (1st to Iditarod)
1991IditarodLeonhard Seppala Humanitarian Award (best dog care in top 10)
1993IditarodMost Inspirational Musher Award (chosen by other mushers)
1997IditarodJoe Redington, Sr. Award (drawing)
2001Copper Basin1st place
2003IditarodMost Inspirational Musher Award (chosen by other mushers)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.