Älgen Stolta

Stolta pulls men in a horse-cart, c.1908. Anders Jansson at reins with Johan Blad
Stolta's commemorative coffee service award 1907

Älgen Stolta (in Swedish, "Älgen" means "the moose" and "Stolta" means "proud") was a moose that became known for participating in a trot racing event in Falun, Sweden, in 1907.

History

In the early 1900s, an elk cow (adult female) died, leaving her year-old calf behind. Different sources claim the cow was a killed by a passing train, others that it drowned, but they agree it happened near the Dalälven river close to Älvkarleby in Uppland. Its live female calf was taken to Johan Blad, the foreman at Älvkarleö's railway park. Blad knew a lineman called Anders Gustav Jansson who lived in Älvkarleby and had a reputation for animal husbandry, so he asked for his help with the elk which they named Stolta.[1][2] Stolta was raised like a tame horse;[3] doing forestry work, pulling carts and sleds with material, and also used to pull a sled carrying tourists between the railway station and the tourist hotel near the waterfall in Älvkarleby.[1][2]

In 1907 at a winter sports festival in Falun, Stolta won a trot race against trained trotting horses over an ice-covered lake.[1][2] Jansson was afterwards presented with a coffee service: a coffee pot and accompanying sugar bowl and coffee creamer.[1][2] The coffee pot had an inscription that read Minne av Vinteridrottsfästen i Falun 1907 för körning av elg ("Memento of Winter Sports Festival in Falun in 1907 for driving with an elk").[1][2] The park where Älgen Stolta was kept closed in 1909 as the area was marked as part of the reservoir for a hydroelectric power station.[4] Stolta was moved to the open-air museum of Skansen on the island of Djurgården in Stockholm where it was thought she could be better cared for,[4] and her name was changed to "Lotta."[4] After the 1907 race, a rule prohibiting the use of elks as draft animals was added.[5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.