Ivan the gorilla, once a local store attraction, dies at Atlanta zoo
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ATLANTA -- Ivan, a western lowland gorilla that spent decades displayed as an attraction at the B&I store in Lakewood, has died.
Zoo Atlanta says the 50-year-old gorilla never regained consciousness after he was put under general anesthesia Monday for a diagnostic assessment.
The zoo says the geriatric ape had recently lost weight, seemed to lack appetite and had a respiratory illness.
"When it became obvious that our efforts to modify his diet and his existing medication regimen were not resulting in significant improvement, it was necessary to perform a diagnostic procedure to determine the underlying causes of Ivan's condition," said Hayley Murphy, director of veterinary services.
"General anesthesia carries a degree of risk in any veterinary procedure, but these risks are compounded in an individual of Ivan's advanced age and delicate condition. We are heartbroken that this proved the case, and Ivan did not recover from the anesthesia."
Ivan had lived at Zoo Atlanta since 1994. He was born in the wild around 1962 in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Wildlife traders sold him to the owners of a department store in Lakewood, in 1964. Three years later, he was moved to an indoor cage at the store. Known as the "Shopping Mall Gorilla," Ivan had thousands of fans and visitors.
By the mid-1990s, a national movement had begun to have the solitary ape relocated. Facing pressure from zoological and animal rights communities, the store in 1994 donated Ivan to Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo. He was moved to Zoo Atlanta on permanent loan in October 1994.
Ivan was compatible with a number of female gorillas who lived in the same habitat over the years and was seen mating at least once, but he never fathered any offspring. He formed close lasting bonds with his keepers.
"This is a tremendous loss to the Zoo Atlanta family, and it is a loss that spans two coasts. It's because of the great love Ivan inspired in his years on the West Coast that the wheels were ultimately put in motion to have him join us here at Zoo Atlanta," said Raymond King, president and CEO.
Ivan was known to dislike cool or damp weather and was often seen using a burlap bag to protect his feet from dewy grass. He also seemed to enjoy painting and was known to "sign" his works with a thumbprint.
Dr. Dwight Lawson, Zoo Atlanta Deputy Director, said people from the Northwest who remembered Ivan from the Lakewood store would often come to see him in Atlanta.
"People wanted to know how he's doing and what he was up to," he said.
Gorillas are considered geriatric after the age of about 35. Ivan was one of four Zoo Atlanta gorillas who are 50 years old or older.
Zoo Atlanta says the 50-year-old gorilla never regained consciousness after he was put under general anesthesia Monday for a diagnostic assessment.
The zoo says the geriatric ape had recently lost weight, seemed to lack appetite and had a respiratory illness.
"When it became obvious that our efforts to modify his diet and his existing medication regimen were not resulting in significant improvement, it was necessary to perform a diagnostic procedure to determine the underlying causes of Ivan's condition," said Hayley Murphy, director of veterinary services.
"General anesthesia carries a degree of risk in any veterinary procedure, but these risks are compounded in an individual of Ivan's advanced age and delicate condition. We are heartbroken that this proved the case, and Ivan did not recover from the anesthesia."
Ivan had lived at Zoo Atlanta since 1994. He was born in the wild around 1962 in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Wildlife traders sold him to the owners of a department store in Lakewood, in 1964. Three years later, he was moved to an indoor cage at the store. Known as the "Shopping Mall Gorilla," Ivan had thousands of fans and visitors.
By the mid-1990s, a national movement had begun to have the solitary ape relocated. Facing pressure from zoological and animal rights communities, the store in 1994 donated Ivan to Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo. He was moved to Zoo Atlanta on permanent loan in October 1994.
Ivan was compatible with a number of female gorillas who lived in the same habitat over the years and was seen mating at least once, but he never fathered any offspring. He formed close lasting bonds with his keepers.
"This is a tremendous loss to the Zoo Atlanta family, and it is a loss that spans two coasts. It's because of the great love Ivan inspired in his years on the West Coast that the wheels were ultimately put in motion to have him join us here at Zoo Atlanta," said Raymond King, president and CEO.
Ivan was known to dislike cool or damp weather and was often seen using a burlap bag to protect his feet from dewy grass. He also seemed to enjoy painting and was known to "sign" his works with a thumbprint.
Dr. Dwight Lawson, Zoo Atlanta Deputy Director, said people from the Northwest who remembered Ivan from the Lakewood store would often come to see him in Atlanta.
"People wanted to know how he's doing and what he was up to," he said.
Gorillas are considered geriatric after the age of about 35. Ivan was one of four Zoo Atlanta gorillas who are 50 years old or older.
I will greatly miss him we celebrated are birthdays every year together
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Sad to hear. RIP Ivan.
He most likely would not have lived this long in the wild - still it is hard to hear that he lived in a cement cage for years. Ick. We've treated animals so badly for so very long and still do. At least he lived his last years in a relatively 'better' place. Now he can run wild, flirt with all the female gorillas, dance, hug, and laugh a gorilla laugh. I picture him in some place like Rainbow Bridge. His spirit lives on!
It is frustrating that we have been unable to gain the same realization for Lolita/Tokitae - another NW icon who has been alone in a small pool in Miami, performing for her food for way too many decades. Haven't we evolved beyond "accepting" that too? Let's bring Tokitae home, before she dies of old age as a circus performer, never being given the opportunity to swim in her native waters and hear the voices of her family again ~
@Susan Berta, Orca Network What can we do? Lead on!
Good boy, Ivan. What a hard life you had, by humans...who are so selfish and only think of themselves. I hope your years in a larger enclosure were somewhat more gratifying, but for certain, nothing like living with your family in the Congo, where you should have rightly remained. Still, you lived for so many years. I hope you were treated with love and dignity. Rest in peace.
At least he lived through fifty, Â most gorillas in Africa are short lived because of all the poaching, I saw Ivan 1974 when was stationed in Ft. Lewis. I always thought the BI space was too small. RIP
When I was a little kid my mom took us to some big zoo in Kansas. I remember seeing two giraffes Behind a tall fence. I was very young at the time and but I remember the feeling I had inside that it didn't seem right. How did those two big neck animals get behind that fence. I can't go to zoos or even aquariums. I cry when I see the pacing hyenas in such small cages. I tried to have an open mind and bring my children but I couldn't get through the day without feeling incredibly disgusted with humanity as a whole. To put an animal from the wild behind bars (prison essentially) for our own sick curiosity takes away all the imagination and beauty. I see their eyes and it's despair. I feel terrible for how we treat our animals but nothing shocks me, look at how we treat each other. I have a feeling if we could put some people in zoos with weird diseases and whatnot we would. Such strange creatures we are, not good fuzzy strange either!
 @alildifferent I generally feel the same about zoos until Seattle started to change the Woodland Park Zoo to be more in tune with the animals welfare rather than simply showing them off to the public. With only a few exceptions I can now enjoy a day at the zoo.
 @Furd Woodland Parks does NOT care about the welfare of their animals. Elephants need more room and should not be there. http://www.helpelephants.com/woodland_zoo.html
 @Northend While I agree that the elephants, like so many other animals, need more room I do NOT agree that the powers-that-be at Woodland Park Zoo do not care about the welfare of their animals. The elephant habitat they have now is 1,000 percent better than what it was. The northern Taiga is a huge improvement as is the African Savanna over the old menagerie. The gorilla habitat, while still small, is considered world class.
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I was deeply saddened when the voters of Seattle rejected the plan to expand the boundaries of the zoo into Lower Woodland, an area vastly underutilized by the public. It could have made the entire zoo world class. Of course I would prefer that all animals live in their natural habitat but that is impossible today. Zoos, while far from ideal, are the best that we can do to preserve the broad numbers of non-human animals.
RIP Ivan. You always deserved better.
My poor spouse probably echoes the sentiments of many natives of this area, "First JP and now Ivan? Â Another of my childhood icons gone, so sad!"
I think we should all feel terrible that his poor guy was kept in what amounted to jail for so long here in the Northwest. I'm glad he was able to get some relative freedom during his later years. It's beyond me that someone could look into his eyes and not see that people are one of great apes too...
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 @John Tits 'He enjoyed his enclosure at the B&I' What? No way you would know but he didn't have much choice. He may of gotten along with his keepers at B&I but since they were the only other living creatures he got to interact with he might of just been making the best out of a bad situation.Â
 @John Tits While Ivan may have bonded with his human companions while at the B & I he could not have been happy in the confinement. Since he was abducted as an infant he never really knew how a gorilla was supposed to live. It is the same if you confine a human to a small area for a number of years they will develop a fear of open spaces and never want to stray from their confinement.
No matter how well you know he was treated in the B&I, Ivan was not born to live his life a captive.
FREE AT LAST!
@Mick Absolutely!
"Seriously, a store had him in a cage? Only in the Puget Sound!
@Commonsense Probably not the sort of cage you are thinking. He has a huge amount of room- toys to play with, great food, people to interact with (he LOVED to run at the glass of his cage and scare people). He was happy at the B&I- but even that being said as sad as it was for him to go I am glad he got the chance to live with others.Â
 @MomOf2 It was not a "huge" cage considering how gorillas live in the wild and you have no idea of whether or not he was "happy" at the B & I.
rip gorilla
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thanks for the memories at the b and i dating back to 1972
have fun throwing poop at the other gorilla's in the sky
 @sunnysandiego LOL That's beautiful, man.Â
Amazing how the article skirts around mentioning the B&I specifically.
 @Duncan Construction "ATLANTA -- Ivan, a western lowland gorilla that spent decades displayed as an attraction at the B&I store in Lakewood, has died."
I was very happy when the news came about him moving to Atlanta... glad he was able to live his last 20Â better than the first.Â
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RIP
Thank you God for setting Ivan free...............
 @DISPATCH911 Death is freedom?Â
@bab5crusade - sure, he now gets to rest at maybe something like Rainbow Bridge and play with all the other gorillas. His spirit lives on!
Dude was born the same year as me... bummer. RIP Ivan. I wonder what ape heaven is like...
First JP Patches, and now Ivan. I feel like my childhood has died.
@Shelly That's just about how I feel. I used to see Ivan at the B&I in the 70's. I enjoyed and felt sorry for him at the same time. Glad he was able to move to a better place for the last years of his life. I hope the B&I does something to mark his passing.
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 @BlueJedi LOL it's a bad thing when you can see the B&I being a prominent fixture in the background of a lot of COPS shows taped in Lakewood.Â
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 @StevenRosenow  @John Tits I have not shopped at the B&I in years. It's a shadow of it's former self. Last time I was there-nothing, not even a whisper about Ivan's tenure. I doubt they will do anything at all. I fear for my safety when I go there-so I no longer do. That place needs to be leveled.
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 @John Tits I agree. I've been to the B&I a couple times over the past couple years and not only has it changed drastically, they've all but removed most of any sign of Ivan's tenure. Plus, every time I have gone there, I feared for my car's integrity in the parking lot as I was inside. It's nothing like it was when I was a kid. Crime-infested is right.
That video brought tears to my eyes. That this magnificent creature never had the life that he was meant to have.....
Thanks for hanging with us, Ivan!!!Made me smile & giggle countless times!!
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I was so thankful when you were moved to ATL - you def. deserved and earned better!!
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RIP
Oh, I remember Ivan! I remember the fun Almost Live! had with Ivan back in the day. Ivan was cool!
I first met Ivan in 1975. I was a soldier stationed at Fort Lewis and had heard that he lived in a nearby variety store. Over the next couple years I would stop in at the B&I to see Ivan. I felt kind of sorry for him, in a cement cage & kept from other gorillas. I was happy for him when I heard he had been donated to the Woodland Park Zoo, kind of wished that they would have kept him, but he adapted well in Atlanta and lived out his remaining days in comfort. Thanks for the memories Ivan.
Rest in peace, Ivan. While I was kinda grumpy about the move to Atlanta, I was wrong about it. I'm glad you lived your final years happy and healthy and with all the silverback honors and respect you deserved.
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Been a tough couple months for Puget Sound icons, though, hasn't it?
RIP Ivan!!!
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You were loved by all.... Enjoy your new life in Heaven!!!
RIP Ivan. You entertained many of us in Tacoma in years past. So happy you enjoyed the outdoors these last years.
As a child, I remember going to the B&I in Tacoma. Â We always wanted to see Ivan and say HELLO. Â At that time, I believe our whole society was starting to pay more attention to how we treated animals. Â As an ignorant youth I was disappointed when Ivan was transferred to a zoo, but as I got older I knew without a doubt that that was better for everyone. Â Let's keep learning.
Now you're finally free Ivan! I will always remember seeing you at the B&I which I thought then and alway will that what an awful place for you to be, never breathing fresh air or seeing the sun...now you will
Rest in peace, Ivan! I too am glad that he was able to be outside for the latter part of his life. I, too, felt sadness for him when he was kept in the glass cage at the B&I store.
I hope where ever he is now he's found happiness and freedom every creature deserves.
I remember visiting Ivan when I was a child. I'm just glad he spent his latter years with some outdoor space.
 @SheilaKA I too am glad he was able to live out his final years with a lot of room to roam and to spend it with his own kind. The cage at the B & I was woefully small for such a magnificent animal.