Cover photo for Richard Douglas Chandler's Obituary
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1944 Rick 2025

Richard Douglas Chandler

April 13, 1944 — October 6, 2025

Bainbridge Island

Richard “Rick” or “Ricky” Chandler, 81, passed away peacefully at his home on Bainbridge Island, Washington, on October 6, 2025. Rick was a pillar of the Bainbridge Island community for decades, known most recently as the curator of the Bainbridge History Museum, where he retired in 2020 after 20 years of service, including managing the Museum’s move to its current site in 2004.

Rick was born on April 13, 1944, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and raised in Wellesley, Massachusetts. He attended Cornell University from 1962-66, earning a degree in Ornithology and Vertebrate Zoology. He went on to pursue a master’s degree at UCLA.

Rick worked for the Smithsonian Institute upon graduating from Cornell, traveling to the South Pacific to research and document birds. During this time, he earned a world record for banding over 6,000 birds in a 12-hour period. Years later, he would delight friends and family with a dance he called the “Bird-bander’s Stomp.” A self-proclaimed “bird maniac” back then, Rick was also passionate about whales. Rick worked with his friends Ken Balcomb and Dan McSweeney on the Orca Survey and the founding of the Moclips Cetalogical Society in 1976, which later became The Whale Museum in Friday Harbor.

By 1979, Rick was living on Bainbridge Island and met his future life partner and wife, Miriam “Timmie” Byers. He became a bonus dad to Timmie’s daughter Jessica and the three would go on to spend many winters in the ‘80s and ‘90s snow-birding on the Big Island of Hawaii. Rick and Timmie were married in 1983 in Lahaina, Maui, on the beachside balcony of the courthouse. They resided on Bainbridge Island, the Big Island, or in Suquamish together for over four decades, mostly living in houses that Rick designed and built himself.

Rick was involved with museums throughout his life, including the Harvard Museum of Natural History, The Whale Museum in Friday Harbor, The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, and the Bainbridge History Museum (BHM). While with BHM, Rick curated an exhibit of Ansel Adams photographs called Portraits of Manzanar, which brought national recognition to the museum. In 2016, Rick co-authored Killer Whales: Magnificent Creatures of the Salish Sea.

Rick was preceded in death by his father Doug Chandler, mother Eileen “Mimi” Parker (Ingraham), and sister Sharon Lee Chandler. He is survived by his wife Timmie, stepdaughter Jessica Merkner (Matt Benotsch), grandson Eddie Benotsch, his brother Scott Chandler and his daughters Cassandra and Christine, and Sharon’s daughters Courtney and Jessica, and his nieces’ respective families.

All remember Rick as a patient, intelligent, and good-humored husband, son, brother, stepfather, and friend. He cared deeply for his family, community, and the natural world. He gave his family a good life, traveled the world with curiosity and an adventuresome spirit, and pursued earthly and astronomical interests with a childlike wonder.

Donations to honor Rick’s memory can be made to the Bainbridge History Museum or the Center for Whale Research.

To order memorial trees in memory of Richard Douglas Chandler, please visit our tree store.

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