-40%

Atlanta Zoo Bucks - Ten Dollar Willie B.

$ 79.72

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Condition: A couple small stains due to age. Still in good condition for 20+ years
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    This was received from Zoo Atlanta approx. 20+ years ago and came home and put in a drawer until just now. Bill is in very nice condition considering age. The is an area with a couple stains, please see pics.
    I've looked and it's the only one I can find and I believe it to be extremely rare and probably not to be seen again.
    If you can find one in ANY condition please let me know and we can work on price.
    Item shipped USPS First Class. US shipping only
    ------------------------------------------
    A legend in his own time, remembered fondly by generations of Atlantans, and an icon of the transformation of Zoo Atlanta, Willie B. the western lowland gorilla lived at the Zoo from 1961 until his passing in 2000 at the age of 42.
    Born in Africa, he arrived at the Zoo in 1961. He was named for former Atlanta Mayor William B. Hartsfield and quickly became the Zoo’s best-known animal. At the time, he was the Zoo’s only gorilla.
    During the first many years of Willie B.’s life, animal spaces in zoos were designed very differently than they are today. Until the age of 29, he lived in an indoor environment.
    On May13, 1988, Willie B. had his first opportunity to step outside since his babyhood with the opening of the Zoo’s Ford African Rain Forest. Around 25,000people – attendance at that time considered unprecedented for the Zoo – came to see him in his spacious new outdoor habitat.
    The Ford African Rain Forest would become the home of a new group of gorillas, some of whom became the mothers of Willie B.’s five offspring: Kudzoo, Olympia, Sukari, Willie B., Jr., and Lulu.
    Willie B. passed away in February 2000. His memorial service, where he was eulogized by Ambassador Andrew Young, was attended by more than 5,000 people.