Rick Reese
February 16, 1942 - January 9, 2022
Rick Reese, 79, passed away January 9, 2022. There are three things we will remember about Rick: his love for his family, his twin and best friend, Rob (Sharon), sister, Pam (Ev), and brother, John (Jan), his wife of 55 years, Mary Lee, daughter, Paige (Jeff), son, Seth (2000), and three terrific grandchildren; his enduring love of the Wasatch mountains where he grew up climbing; and Montana where he developed his advocacy for conservation and preservation of wild places.
Rick was born February 16, 1942. He grew up in Utah ingrained with a solid work ethic and enamored from a young age with a passion for the outdoors. In the 1960s, during his years as an undergraduate student (University of Utah where he met Mary Lee) and graduate student (Josef Korbel School of International Studies), Rick worked as a climbing ranger at Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park. Rick participated in many dangerous rescues over the years. He was respected for his ability to move quickly over mountain terrain, his can-do attitude, and his unflappable nature under pressure. These traits served him well in many capacities over the years.
Rick was first introduced to Montana on a flight from Salt Lake City to Glacier National Park for a mountain rescue. As the plane flew over the Madison Range, he told himself that he needed to go there. And indeed, the mountains of Montana became important to him.
After completing his college degrees, Rick and Mary Lee moved to Helena, Montana where their daughter, Paige, and son, Seth, were born. It was in Helena where Rick taught political science at Carroll College that he became committed to the protection of the environment. He arranged for his students to be interns at the Constitutional Convention where he realized the importance of advocacy and involvement to preserve areas of land, clean air and water, wildlife habitat, and wild spaces for future generations. His teaching at Carroll College inspired young people to get involved in community, government, or whatever endeavor that would make a difference. Rick has always said that the measure of a man's life is not the amount of money he can make but in his "good works". Rick's life has accomplished that.
In 1980, Rick was hired by Yellowstone National Park Superintendent John Townsley to run the Yellowstone Institute (now Yellowstone Forever), a non-profit organization dedicated to teaching people about the park. Rick and Mary Lee spent the next five years running the Institute from Mammoth Hot Springs in the winter and the Lamar Buffalo Ranch in the summer, introducing thousands of people to the wonders and wildlife of Yellowstone and creating memories for all that would last a lifetime.
While working in Yellowstone "where happiness and contentment seemed to reign in wild romantic splendor surrounded by majestic battlements which seemed to support the heavens" (Osborne Russell, 1835 journal entry), Rick began envisioning a new organization to protect Yellowstone National Park. The Greater Yellowstone Coalition (GYC) was officially incorporated on November 7, 1983, and Rick served as the founding president for the next two years. Following Rick's "official" retirement in 2004, he remained actively involved in conservation as interim executive director of GYC in 2009, on the board of Mountain Journal, and co-chair of the Bonneville Shoreline Preservation group.
Rick had numerous accomplishments and accolades, but he will be remembered most for his quick wit, his ability to turn a phrase, his commitment to environmental conservation, dedication to family, and his ability to smell chocolate chip cookies no matter where you tried to hide them.
A Celebration of Rick's Life will be held later this spring in Bozeman, Montana and in Salt Lake City, Utah. In lieu of flowers, please share your favorite story of, or memory about, Rick with his family, or consider donating to one of Rick's favorite non-profit organizations: National Parks & Conservation Association (NPCA), Save our Canyons (SOC) in Salt Lake City, Trust for Public Land, Yellowstone Forever, Future West, or Mountain Journal to name a few.
Arrangements are in the care of Dokken-Nelson Funeral Service in Bozeman. www.dokkennelson.com
To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.
Sponsored by Dokken-Nelson Funeral Service.
Holly Mullen
January 6, 2025
Rick. You left us three years ago this week. By now I am hoping you and Ted have scrambled up many new peaks. It must be amazing to find routes that no mere peak baggers and X Gamers have ever seen, let alone attempted.
I get feeling a little lost at times not to share coffee and oatmeal with you and Ted when you visit us from Bozeman. But then the incredible memories of adventure, laughter, and the two of you gently ribbing each other flood over me. And it's all OK again. Better than OK. Wonderful.
I send you love and I know you are showing Ted around the place. I'll keep talking to both of you when I look out my window every morning at Mount Olympus and Twin Peaks. XO
Julie and Hannibal
January 5, 2025
Sure miss Rick and think of you Mary Lee so often!!
Are you in Bozeman and or Gardiner? Love Hannibal and Julie
Holly Mullen and Ted Wilson
January 5, 2024
Dear Rick. Here we are again, drinking morning coffee, and remembering you. Though "remembering" seems the wrong word, because it implies we've forgotten you. We reference you nearly every day. We still have stories to share and laughs to enjoy. Wish you were here, but we know your spirit guides us.
Hope you are finding new routes and reaching every summit. We love you.
Hilarie Portell
March 8, 2023
if I may add to my message: Rick, I wish I could introduce you to my son Nico, who is now a freshman in college and interested in environmental sciences. I´ll do my best, but talking about a "Reese cutoff" is just not enough! :(
Hilarie Portell
March 8, 2023
I was recently walking with an old friend along the Bonneville Shoreline Trail for the first time, thinking about Rick. Pretty sure I saw that light by Mount Olympus, Ted. Thank you, Rick, for being a guiding light when I was just starting out. I was an am so grateful to have you as a mentor. Mary Lee, if you´re reading this, please know I´m sending you and Paige, Seth and your family my love. I would love to stay in touch.
Holly Mullen and Ted Wilson
January 5, 2023
Oh Rick. We reference you every day in some way, often over morning coffee while we watch the sun rise. When the sky pinks up over the Wasatch, we can see a spot between Mount Olympus and Twin Peak that glistens in the first light. That light, so vibrant, is you. We just know it. We will always believe it.
Rest well, dear friend. Thank you for teaching us so much--from reading the potential for avalanche in the backcountry, to guiding us to impressive beaver dams in the Wasatch, to thoughtful lobbying for political and environmental change, to how to make quick morning oatmeal, to being the best "Pompa" to grandkids.
We love you and the entire Reese family.
Holly and Ted
C Kent Thompson
January 20, 2022
I enjoyed Rick's friendship. I first got to know Rick in the National Guard. We were stationed together at Fort Hood, Texas for 10 months of active duty. I believe he was my advocate to the State Senators for getting us released from active duty after we had served 10 months of military service during the Berlin Crisis. We probably would have been there much longer were it not for Rick being as active in the political process.
Later, he served as a ranger when my family and friends took a guided tour by Rick on a trail in the Jenny Lake area. As always, he was full of energy, enthusiasm and the love of the great outdoors. Thanks Rick and family for sharing your husband and family member with us.
Admirer
January 20, 2022
Happy trails, until we meet again.
Rob MacLeod
January 17, 2022
Rick taught us how to love the outdoors, how to organize and agitate, how to measure our impact on the world. He welcomed me as a newcomer to the West (and the US) and gave me an outlet for my own need to agitate--with Jim and others for the Bonneville Shoreline Trail.
Mary Lee, Paige, and Jeff, my deepest condolences; Rick energized us all and he will not be forgotten.
Alan Reese
January 16, 2022
We will so miss Uncle Rick, his kindness and love towards me and later towards my wife and children and the rest of our family over the years was always a great blessing in our lives. I simply don´t have adequate words to describe just how amazing a person Rick was to each of us but I will always consider myself lucky to have had his influence in my life and our family will so greatly miss him. Aunt Mary Lee, Paige, Jeff, and Seth, Clara and Landon we send our deepest condolences and love from Utah, you are each in our thoughts and prayers.
Todd Graetz
January 16, 2022
From my days growing up in Helena, I have many fond and vivid memories of times in the outdoors with Rick, Paige, Seth and Mrs. Reese. I will never forget when Rick helped me as a very young airline passenger to traverse the Salt Lake City Airport between flights (I was from small town Helena and traversing SLC was a daunting task for someone not used to traveling alone). I never told him how much that meant to me. He will be missed by those that knew him and even more by those that value tireless dedication to protection of our natural resources and the timeless treasures contained....Rick will forever be associated with the majesty of Yellowstone Park and his efforts will reward us all in perpetuity.
Len & Concetta Eckel
January 16, 2022
Hi Mary Lee,
So sorry to hear of Rick´s passing. You and Rick have been wonderful partners sharing your life with so many. May you and your family find peace in the days ahead.
Chris Oakley
January 14, 2022
Never had the pleasure of meeting Rick but I shared his love of Yellowstone. My condolences to the family and his many friends. Yellowstone will live in our hearts forever because of people like you
Swithin McGrath
January 14, 2022
Our sympathies to you all. Rick was such an accomplished, gracious, generous person. His support of BSF was always so appreciated. We are sorry for your loss.
Hannibal and Julie
January 14, 2022
Rick will remain present in our landscape and close in our hearts. A magnificent human being and we are honored to have crossed paths. Our thoughts to his beautiful family
Holly Mullen and Ted Wilson
January 13, 2022
Our dear Mary Lee, Paige, Jeff, Seth, Clara, and Landon:
We see Rick (Pampa!) as we look out our kitchen window each morning at Mount Olympus. We will see him forever, all over the Wasatch Range and across the West. We love you and hold you close.
Holly and Ted
Sharon Tudor Isler
January 12, 2022
So much sympathy to you, Mary Lee. He will be missed by many. What a special man he was. Wish I could have known him better.
Showing 1 - 17 of 17 results
Funeral services provided by:
Dokken-Nelson Funeral Service113 South Willson Avenue, Bozeman, MT 59715
The nightly ceremony in Washington, D.C. will be dedicated in honor of your loved one on the day of your choosing.
Read moreWhat kind of arrangement is appropriate, where should you send it, and when should you send an alternative?
Read moreWe'll help you find the right words to comfort your family member or loved one during this difficult time.
Read moreIf you’re in charge of handling the affairs for a recently deceased loved one, this guide offers a helpful checklist.
Read moreLegacy's Linnea Crowther discusses how families talk about causes of death in the obituaries they write.
Read moreThey're not a map to follow, but simply a description of what people commonly feel.
Read moreYou may find these well-written obituary examples helpful as you write about your own family.
Read moreThese free blank templates make writing an obituary faster and easier.
Read moreSome basic help and starters when you have to write a tribute to someone you love.
Read more