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Timothy Lincoln Barnett Obituary

Timothy Lincoln Barnett

January 11, 1940 - August 29, 2022

Timothy Lincoln Barnett Obituary

Timothy Lincoln Barnett, 1940 - 2022: Conservation Work Led to Protecting 585,000 Acres in Adirondacks

Timothy Lincoln Barnett, 82, of Saratoga Springs and Westport, N.Y., died at home in Saratoga Springs on Aug. 29, 2022, after a long illness. He is survived by his wife Elizabeth Claire Lillis Barnett, their sons Ian Kinnear Barnett and Edward MacInnes Barnett, and six grandchildren, all in Colorado; his brother Robby Barnett in Connecticut; and many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his parents, the Life Magazine editor and science writer Lincoln K. Barnett who authored The Universe and Doctor Einstein and his wife Hildegarde Harris Barnett of Westport, N.Y.

Barnett attended Westport Central School, the Riverdale Country School, and the Stockbridge School, then Middlebury College. After serving in the U.S. Army and on the Army ski patrol in Garmisch, Germany, he completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He worked for the New York City-based Louis Harris opinion polling firm where he met Claire. In 1972, the couple moved to the Adirondacks when he was invited to be the founding executive director of the Adirondack Chapter of The Nature Conservancy, an entity recommended by the Temporary Study Commission on the Future of the Adirondacks appointed by New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller. Barnett leaves a legacy written across northern New York's landscape. He deployed his arsenal of high spirits and good fellowship to create and lead a highly effective land conservation organization, bridge gaps between opponents, run back-to-back marathons, and, later, meet 25 years of physical paralysis with grace. And he attributed all his achievements to others: his Adirondack mentors, his Board of Trustees, and the people he hired, whom he considered his greatest contributions to the Adirondacks. In the late 1970s, to better conserve the Adirondacks, Barnett drew The Nature Conservancy away from its tradition of buying small parcels harboring endangered species toward land protection on a landscape scale. Seizing the moment to work with diverse private landowners and the State of New York, he negotiated the protection of tens of thousands of acres through conservation easements and outright purchase for addition to the Adirondack Forest Preserve for public use, including the iconic Camp Santanoni and Lake Lila projects which seeded the work of the Adirondack Chapter. In another bold move, he managed the merger in 1988 of the Adirondack Land Trust with The Nature Conservancy's Adirondack Chapter, the only such relationship within TNC's global organization. The resulting organization (ANC/ALT) expanded its mission to preserve the working farms and forests, shorelines, and open spaces that contribute to the intact landscape and economy of the region.

In spring 1997, having protected 240,000 acres in the Adirondacks, Barnett took a sabbatical to work with the World Bank's Tien Shen Mountains Trans-Boundary Program to help build teams in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan to manage natural areas. Part of the job entailed riding horseback into mountain villages. In a Zapovednik (State Reserve) in the remote Kyrgyz mountains, he fell from his horse and sustained a severe spinal cord injury. He attributed his survival to Yrysbek Manelov and a traveling support team; his colleague, Nigel Coulson, and his wife Christine and volunteers who orchestrated the cross-border helicopter rescue to an emergency room in Uzbekistan; the local guides who stayed by his side for the 24 hours it took the rescue team to reach him; and the medical staff at Balgrist Hospital in Zurich, Switzerland, where he spent two months recuperating after surgery. Thereafter, he credited his quality of life to the support of The Nature Conservancy, the rehabilitation specialists at Kessler Institute in West Orange, N.J., and his wife Claire, the founder of the Healthy Schools Network.

A celebration of his life will be held at a later date. The family requests that donations in his memory be made to The Adirondack Land Trust, P.O. Box 130, Keene, NY 12942, or to "The Adirondack Chapter" of the Nature Conservancy, P.O. Box 65, Keene Valley, NY 12943.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Heald Funeral Home, 7521 Court Street, Elizabethtown. To leave an online condolence please visit www.healdfuneralhomeinc.com

To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Timothy, please visit our floral store.

Timothy Lincoln Barnett, 1940 - 2022: Conservation Work Led to Protecting 585,000 Acres in Adirondacks

Timothy Lincoln Barnett, 82, of Saratoga Springs and Westport, N.Y., died at home in Saratoga Springs on Aug. 29, 2022, after a long illness. He is survived by his wife Elizabeth Claire Lillis Barnett, their sons Ian Kinnear Barnett and

Published on August 31, 2022

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