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Character Sketches: How many of the Claire Rudolf Murphy Characters can you identify?
(Place your mouse over the words "Who am I?" to read the answer. Click on the words "Who am I?" to go read the page about the book)

 


I was 15 years old. My family lived in Fairbanks, Alaska. I played T-Ball & Little League, moving up in the ranks through the Minors, Majors, and Juniors, and finally had a chance to be on the postseason All Star team, but I lost the game. I had a friend with a physical disability. In my life there were two kinds of free radicals: My mom had a 31-year-old secret: she was a Radical fugitive. Another type of ‘free radicals’ are the bad things in your body that cause you to be sick.

Who am I?


When I was born into the Shoshone tribe my name meant “one who carries a burden.”. At the age of 12 I was taken away from my people by the Hidatsa, who sold me to Charbonneau, a French Canadian trader.

I was the only woman member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. My baby Pompy, the Shoshone word for hair, was born during this journey. I was vital to the journey, using skills, such as food gathering, translating and bartering for horses with the Native Americans along the way.

Charbonneaou was paid $500 for the expedition; I received nothing. The golden dollar features my image and Pompy’s.

Who am I?


I was 8 years old in 1910, when my family lived in Iditarod, Alaska. My dad lived away from us in a mining camp. My mother, my 4-year old sister and I lived in a big canvas tent, which my mother operated as a hotel. Soon the tent was replaced with a wood-frame building. There were twice as many dogs as people in our town because they pulled the freight to the mines. My sister and I went to a one-room school. We enjoyed sledding, fishing, reading books and listening to music on a Victrola for fun.

I cut and hauled wood every day to keep the hotel warm. When the snow melted our streets were filled with mud. I collected newspapers from Seattle and sold them for $1.00. I caught fish to sell to the restaurants. By 1916 the gold boom in Iditarod was finished and we moved to California. Two years later my father quit prospecting for gold and left to join us, but his ship grounded on a rock near Juneau and sank. All 350 passengers died.

Who am I?


I may not look much like my breed, because I am unique, but I am a Norwegian Reindeer Dog. I started out as a working dog, carrying freight and pulling the big gold dredges out on the creeks for a Nome mining company. I was not a racing dog.

But in 1925 the call went out for more dog teams to relay diphtheria serum to the town of Nome. I led my dogsled team 674 miles through blinding snow, with the life-saving serum packed inside a caribou hide (since the temperature outside was twenty-eight below 0). In a race that lasted 127 hours we saved the town of Nome!

Afterwards my team was cheered in parades in the Lower 48 states. School children in Cleveland, Ohio saved pennies to bring me to live in their zoo til I died 6 years later and my body was preserved in a Cleveland Museum, where you can still see me today. A statue honoring me is also in Central Park in New York City.

Who am I?


I am an Inuit girl who lived long ago in the far north. I lived on the Arctic tundra. When my people cannot find the caribou that feeds us, I embark on a journey, changed into the form of a caribou to meet my great-grandmother, a shaman who lives on the moon with Moon Man. I travel with the caribou spirit to live and learn the ways of the herd, surviving wolf attacks. Finally my journey is complete and I return to my people to explain how they can live in harmony with the herd.

Who am I?


Caribou Girl
(Sung to the tune of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star")

Come and listen, won't you now
To this story of just how
Once a girl but now no more
As a caribou she does explore
Running through the hills so vast
This girl's dream no longer past

Watching tundra turning green
Blooming wildflowers, what a scene
Though with beauty, sadness lives
Fire destroying what nature gives
Caribou Girl's the book to read
Hear the message and take heed.

Mrs. Cierley & Mrs. Erickson
2nd/3rd grade
Elk Plain School of Choice


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