WINNAMAC, Ind. — It’s been a long time coming. Peaceable Primate Sanctuary welcomed its first five baboon residents this year after a more than decadelong quest to provide housing for primates that are no longer wanted or needed by research facilities, zoos and other places.
The inspiration to build the baboon-only sanctuary sparked when Scott Kublisch, president, director and founder of the sanctuary, recognized the need for better facilities to house retired baboons. The animals are commonly used in biomedical research, and some are held privately as pets, and used for entertainment. Kublisch, who for 22 years worked as a roving animal keeper at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, sought a way to take action, to protect the primates.
The project slowly but surely came to fruition when, in 2002, 39 acres of land was purchased to build housing for the primates. Through private donations and a series of efforts, the sanctuary has now expanded to 80 acres.
The sanctuary is the first place in North America that specializes in protecting baboons only. The sanctuary refers to itself as “a nonprofit retirement home for baboons that are retired from research facilities, roadside zoos or the pet industry.”