Gramma, the beloved GalĂĄpagos giant whose story is dominating US headlines, has died at the age of 141 â and with her, a remarkable chapter of American history quietly closes. News of âGramma 141-year-old tortoise diesâ quickly spread across the country, not just because she was the San Diego Zooâs oldest resident, but because her life stretched across more than a century of national change, from the era of steamships to the age of smartphones.
For more than a century, visitors to San Diego Zoo shuffled quietly up to a low stone wall, peered over the edge and whispered the same word: âGramma.â The GalĂĄpagos tortoise, believed to be around 141 years old, has died, ending a life that stretched from the age of steamships to the era of smartphones.
Zoo officials say Gramma was born in her native GalĂĄpagos habitat and arrived in California via the Bronx Zoo in the late 1920s or early 1930s, one of the founding GalĂĄpagos tortoises of the San Diego collection. She became the zooâs oldest resident and, to many keepers, its unofficial monarch â affectionately nicknamed the âQueen of the Zooâ.
Her favourite days were slow ones: long mornings spent basking, afternoons working steadily through piles of romaine lettuce and cactus fruit. In recent months, vets had been managing age-related bone problems, and staff ultimately made the decision to euthanise her on welfare grounds, describing it as a âdifficult but compassionateâ goodbye.
A witness to a changing America
If Gramma could have understood the headlines, her life would read like a living timeline of modern America. She was likely already roaming her island home before the First World War. By the time she reached San Diego, the US was between presidents Herbert Hoover and Franklin D Roosevelt, and the country was sliding into the Great Depression.
As she patrolled her enclosure, the world outside the zoo gates changed at bewildering speed: two world wars, the civil rights movement, the moon landing, the Cold War, the rise of the internet and social media. Zoo historians estimate she lived through 20 US presidencies â from Theodore Rooseveltâs final years of influence through to the present day.
Generations of schoolchildren first met a giant tortoise through Gramma. Many later returned as parents or grandparents, pointing her out as proof that some things in a restless world really do endure. Her enclosure became a quiet ritual stop in a zoo full of louder, more dramatic exhibits.
Part of a much older story
GalĂĄpagos tortoises are among the planetâs longest-lived animals, with some individuals surpassing 170 years in captivity. Conservation programmes in Ecuador and at major zoos have spent decades breeding and reintroducing them, after whaling ships, invasive species and habitat loss pushed several island populations to the brink.
San Diego Zooâs long work with GalĂĄpagos tortoises forms part of that wider effort. The organisation has detailed information on the species and its conservation on its own educational pages, and partners with scientists working in the islands to restore wild populations. Stories like Grammaâs are often used to draw visitors into that larger conservation story.
Remarkable animals have a way of slipping into public memory. Earlier this year, readers flocked to another Swikblog piece about a âheroâ dog whose bark helped save her ownerâs life , a reminder that individual animals can become unlikely anchors of human stories.
Grammaâs death closes a chapter that began before most of todayâs visitorsâ great-grandparents were born. But for thousands who once pressed their hands to the rail of her enclosure, the memory of a slow-moving, ancient tortoise â unhurried in a rushing world â will be hard to forget.
For readers who want to explore more about GalĂĄpagos tortoises and why they live so long, major institutions such as the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance and National Geographic offer accessible deep dives into their biology and conservation.















