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Tony Fitzjohn, renowned for wildlife conservation work in Kenya & Tanzania, dies at 76

May 28, 2022 By Merritt Clifton

Tony Fitzjohn, circa 1968

Tony Fitzjohn, circa 1968.  (Beth Clifton collage)

Began as a Boy Scout,  became a hippie,  hitchhiked to Africa,  & made himself useful

Tony Fitzjohn,  76,  died on May 23,  2022,  “following a prolonged fight against a malignant cancer,”  the Tony Fitzjohn-WildlifeNow George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trust announced.

Fitzjohn recounted most of his long career working on behalf of African wildlife in his 310-page memoir Born Wild,  published in 2010.

“Growing up in England,  Fitzjohn loved Scouting.  Tarzan tales enchanted him,”  summarized reviewer Debra J. White.  “As a troubled teen,  Fitzjohn landed in Outward Bound programs.  A letter Fitzjohn sent to Born Free author Joy Adamson brought Fitzjohn to Kenya,”  by hitchhiking.

George Adamson, left; Tony Fitzjohn, right.

Assistant to George Adamson

In 1971,  at age 24,  Fitzjohn became assistant to Adamson’s then-husband,  65-year-old conservationist George Adamson.

Fitzjohn,  as a full-time volunteer,  helped Adamson to rehabilitate injured or formerly captive lions,  leopards,  and African wild dogs for return to the wild.  Tracking animals post-release was among his duties,  and was considerably more difficult and dangerous than it is today because radio collars had not yet been developed.

Once,  in 1975,  “I was incredibly lucky to survive,”  Fitzjohn wrote.  “My attacker’s teeth had come within millimeters of both my carotid and jugular arteries.  There are holes in my throat that I could put a fist through,  and I did.”

After several months of recovery Fitzjohn returned to help George Adamson at his camp called Kora,  located east of Mount Kenya,  near the Tana River,  almost in the dead center of the nation.

Tony Fitzjohn

Tony Fitzjohn & friend.

Kenya “became a scary place”

Conflicts with poachers and illegal grazers at Kora intensified after a border conflict between Kenya and Somalia in 1978.  Somalia lost the war but,  Fitzjohn remembered,  “There were suddenly a lot of well-armed Somali men flooding across the border into northern Kenya.  They were bandits,  well-trained,  ruthless and armed.”

“Another camp near Kora was attacked and everything of value was looted.  Two workers were killed.  Poaching escalated,”  White wrote.

“The Kenyan government was either unwilling or unable to stop the raiding,  despite warnings that wildlife tourism could be destroyed.  Political unrest, corruption,  drought,  and tribal strife plagued Kenya for more than a decade,”  White continued.

Understated Fitzjohn,  “Kenya had suddenly become a scary place.”

Tony Fitzjohn

Tony Fitzjohn & rhino friend.

Murders brought move to Tanzania

The Kora camp site eventually became the  hub of the Kora National Reserve,  initially designated in 1973 but not added to the Kenyan national park system until 1989,  after George Adamson came to the aid of a tourist who had been robbed and gang-raped by poachers.  Adamson was murdered while racing his jeep straight at the bad guys,  who fled.

Joy Adamson had already been killed in a confrontation with an ex-employee in January 1980.

Of George Adamson’s murder,  Fitzjohn said,  “If I had been there it wouldn’t have happened.”

Fitzjohn had left,  temporarily,  to assess the prospects for restoring the huge Mkomazi Game Reserve in Tanzania,  south of Tsavo National Park in Kenya.

Having worked with Adamson for 18 years,  but at odds with himself after the murder,  Fitzjohn soon afterward moved to Mkomazi.

Mkomazi,  in Fitzjohn’s own words,  was “the perfect place for me to bury myself and reinvent myself after the events of the past few years.”

Tony & Lucy Fitzgerald’s children:  Jemima,  Tilly, Alexander,  and Imogen.

Mkomazi Game Reserve

There,  said the Tony Fitzjohn-WildlifeNow George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trust statement announcing Fitzjohn’s death,  “His main, towering achievement was the rehabilitation of Mkomazi.

“This was at the invitation of the Tanzanian Government in 1989,”  the Tony Fitzjohn-WildlifeNow George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trust continued.  “In the next thirty years,  he enlisted a formidable group of supporters,  experts and famous institutions in what became an international beacon for conservation of land and wildlife.”

Fitzjohn “created programs for endangered species,  including the African wild dog,  and one of the most successful rhino sanctuaries in Africa,  and pioneered educational programs in the local communities,”  the Tony Fitzjohn-WildlifeNow George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trust memorial statement finished.

Circa 1997 Fitzjohn met his wife Lucy,  originally of Sussex,  England.  Together they raised four children at Mkomazi:  Alexander,  Jemima,  Imogen,  and Tilly.

Beth, Merritt, elephant

Beth & Merritt Clifton, with African friend.

Frustrated by the corruption of the John Magafuli regime in Tanzania,  Fitzjohn returned management of Mkomazi to the Tanzanian government in 2020 and returned to Kenya to work on rehabilitating Kora.

Magafuli,  ironically,  who had been the most vehement COVID-19 denier in Africa,  died of COVID-19 in March 2021.

Fitzjohn was admitted to the Order of the British Empire in 2006.   He also received the Prince Bernhard Order of the Golden Ark,  the North of England Zoological Society’s Gold Medal and the Hanno Ellenbogen Citizenship Award for public service.

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Filed Under: Africa, African wildlife, Animal organizations, Animal rights & welfare, Conservation, Endangered species, Europe, Feature Home Bottom, Habitat, Humane history, Isles, Kenya, Obits & Memorials, Obituaries (human), Religion & philosophy, Sub-Saharan, Tanzania, United Kingdom, USA, Wildlife Tagged With: George Adamson, Joy Adamson, Kora, Merritt Clifton, Mkomazi Game Reserve

Comments

  1. Lorraine Chittock says

    May 28, 2022 at 5:16 am

    I just relocated to TZ four days ago, with plans to make contact with him again. I’d interviewed him some years back about Painted Dogs. He was a lovely man.

  2. Shirley Keene says

    June 6, 2022 at 6:07 pm

    So very, very sad that Tony Fitzjohn has died. What a beacon he was for the conservation and wellbeing of wild animals. Following in the footsteps of his mentor, George Adamson, Tony worked tirelessly for the benefit of, among others, lions, leopards and wild dogs; he was inspirational in everything he did, whether it was raising awareness of the plight of animals in the modern world, eliciting funds in very imaginative ways, and leading the way for like-minded people to take up and support his cause. To say he will be greatly missed is an understatement. He was a unique friend to animals and an unique human being. In gratitude and appreciation on behalf of the animals, thank you so much, Tony.

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