Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Boese was County Zoo director, wildlife conservati­onist

- Don Behm

Gilbert Boese, an internatio­nally known wildlife conservati­onist who studied bonobos and baboons as well as migrating birds, was a former director of the Milwaukee County Zoo who spearheade­d major expansions there.

Boese died of cancer Thursday at his home in Pewaukee. He was 80.

Boese was a biology professor before he started working for Chicago’s Brookfield Zoo in 1971. His career path included experience­s as a Maya cave explorer, educator, photograph­er, film consultant, author and leader of more than 75 natural history safaris to Africa, Belize and other nations.

His Milwaukee legacy rests on the $60 million worth of zoo remodeling and expansion projects he helped pull together after he became president of the Zoological Society, said Zoo Director Charles Wikenhause­r. The list includes the Apes of Africa exhibit, an animal health center, Big Cat Country, Aquatic Reptile Center, aviary and Giraffe Experience.

“He was the fundraiser,” Wikenhause­r said of Boese’s success with persuading donors to contribute to the capital campaigns.

“He was proud of what we accomplish­ed,” Wikenhause­r said. “It was a time to bring the zoo into the modern era and he was committed to doing that.”

Boese served as Milwaukee County Zoo director from 1980 to 1989. During his tenure, Boese oversaw new exhibits for dolphins and polar bears along with the Great Ape Escape, Wolf Woods and African Waterhole & Savannah.

“I am sad to think of the passing of such a beloved leader in our community, but I feel fortunate to experience the many contributi­ons that Dr. Boese made to the zoo and the society every day that I come to work,” Jodi Gibson, president and CEO of the Zoological Society said.

Boese married Lillian Haefeli Ramaker, then president of the Zoological Society, in 1986. Wikenhause­r was hired as zoo director in 1989 after Boese shifted to the Zoological Society, a private zoo support group.

“A zoo is a place to sensitize the public about the living creatures of the world, but it has to extend to the conservati­on of those creatures beyond that,” Boese said in an interview with former Zoological Society publicatio­ns coordinato­r Paula Brookmire.

So his life in zoos included the creation of conservati­on projects to save animals in the wild, the developmen­t of education programs to teach children to value the natural world, and using zoo space to protect endangered species such as great apes, jaguars and Guam kingfisher­s, said Brookmire, a former Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter and editor.

The Milwaukee County Zoo has sent bonobos from its group to other zoos in the world, and Boese created a Zoological Society of Milwaukee great apes conservati­on program to document the remaining population in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

In 2004, UNESCO in Paris honored Boese with its Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund Internatio­nal Achievemen­t Award for the program’s efforts to save bonobos in the Congo.

In 1988, Boese was the subject of an ethics complaint about his receipt of payments of a few thousand dollars a year from the Zoological Society while he was a county employee as zoo director. The county ethics board ultimately dropped the complaint, but the incident prompted officials to prohibit county employees from also working for the society.

In 1989, Boese became chief executive officer and president of the Zoological Society of Milwaukee after his wife stepped down from the job.

Boese retired as society president in 2005. He retired as CEO of the society in 2006 and continued working on fundraisin­g for zoo projects until 2008. He served as president of the Foundation for Wildlife Conservati­on, a nonprofit group affiliated with the society, from its founding in 1993 to 2018.

Boese was born in Chicago on June 24, 1937. He earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematic­s and chemistry from Carthage College, a master’s degree in biology from Northern Illinois University and a Ph.D. in pathology, behavior and ecology from Johns Hopkins University.

He is survived by his wife, Lillian; a son, Peter, of New Orleans; daughters Ann, of Savannah, Ga., and Sara Ramaker of Los Angeles; stepson Jay Ramaker of Springfiel­d, Mo.; grandchild­ren; and a sister Judy, of Estero, Fla.

A celebratio­n of life is planned for June.

The family suggests donations in Boese’s memory to: the Zoological Society of Milwaukee; Lewa Wildlife Conservanc­y; the Foundation for Wildlife Conservati­on; or the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

 ?? RICHARD BRODZELLER / ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF MILWAUKEE ?? Gilbert Boese, former Milwaukee County Zoo director and president emeritus of the Zoological Society of Milwaukee, died Thursday. He was 80.
RICHARD BRODZELLER / ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF MILWAUKEE Gilbert Boese, former Milwaukee County Zoo director and president emeritus of the Zoological Society of Milwaukee, died Thursday. He was 80.

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