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Fred D Bull

Birth
Death
13 Oct 2008 (aged 29)
Wenatchee, Chelan County, Washington, USA
Burial
Cremated, Location of ashes is unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Fred Bull, beloved son, cherished husband, first time father, awesome friend and spiritual leader, died on October 13, 2008, at Central Washington Hospital in Wenatchee. Fred battled a rare, cancerous brain tumor for ten years, and at the end of his life, with well-tuned grace, courage, determination and unwavering faith, won a victory over fear, cancer’s strongest ally. Through humor, hope and everlasting love, Fred used his illness to reach out boldly to everyone he met, to encourage and lighten their load each and every day.

Fred loved to ski, mountain climb, paraglide, kayak, mountain bike and hike. He was a carpenter by trade. Fred loved to bless others by giving and helping out wherever possible. He really lived up to the phrase, “Pay it forward.”

The greatest loves of his life were his wife, Naomi and baby daughter, Eva Marie. Other loving and loved women and one girl in his immediate family are his mother, Laurel Thompson; mother-in-law, Joy Good; sisters, Audrey Gaedtke and Becki Heyl; sister-in-law, Ann Good; and niece, Savanna Heyl. Fred’s immediate family of men and two boys are his loving father and father-in-law, Dan Bull and Gary Good; his step-father, Patrick Thompson; and brothers-in-law, Joshua Gaedtke, Erick Heyl, Christian Good and Jesse Good. His nephews are Taylor Good and Trail Heyl. His maternal grandparents are Doris Baird of Cashmere and James White of San Antonio, TX. Though not a blood relative, Fred considered Doris’s husband, Jay Baird of Cashmere, to be his grandparent, mentor and a true friend. His paternal grandparents are Lorraine and Zane Bull, but Lorraine Bull preceded Fred in death, so Dawn joined Zane as prayer warrior grandparents to Fred.

There are many who now wait to meet up someday with Fred in another place apart from this world. He will always be adored and cherished by too many to mention on this page and though they cannot be listed here, his friends, acquaintances and other family members were each special to Fred. It was the people in Fred’s life who mattered to him more than anything in the world, even if it was someone he met late one night without a home.
Fred Bull, beloved son, cherished husband, first time father, awesome friend and spiritual leader, died on October 13, 2008, at Central Washington Hospital in Wenatchee. Fred battled a rare, cancerous brain tumor for ten years, and at the end of his life, with well-tuned grace, courage, determination and unwavering faith, won a victory over fear, cancer’s strongest ally. Through humor, hope and everlasting love, Fred used his illness to reach out boldly to everyone he met, to encourage and lighten their load each and every day.

Fred loved to ski, mountain climb, paraglide, kayak, mountain bike and hike. He was a carpenter by trade. Fred loved to bless others by giving and helping out wherever possible. He really lived up to the phrase, “Pay it forward.”

The greatest loves of his life were his wife, Naomi and baby daughter, Eva Marie. Other loving and loved women and one girl in his immediate family are his mother, Laurel Thompson; mother-in-law, Joy Good; sisters, Audrey Gaedtke and Becki Heyl; sister-in-law, Ann Good; and niece, Savanna Heyl. Fred’s immediate family of men and two boys are his loving father and father-in-law, Dan Bull and Gary Good; his step-father, Patrick Thompson; and brothers-in-law, Joshua Gaedtke, Erick Heyl, Christian Good and Jesse Good. His nephews are Taylor Good and Trail Heyl. His maternal grandparents are Doris Baird of Cashmere and James White of San Antonio, TX. Though not a blood relative, Fred considered Doris’s husband, Jay Baird of Cashmere, to be his grandparent, mentor and a true friend. His paternal grandparents are Lorraine and Zane Bull, but Lorraine Bull preceded Fred in death, so Dawn joined Zane as prayer warrior grandparents to Fred.

There are many who now wait to meet up someday with Fred in another place apart from this world. He will always be adored and cherished by too many to mention on this page and though they cannot be listed here, his friends, acquaintances and other family members were each special to Fred. It was the people in Fred’s life who mattered to him more than anything in the world, even if it was someone he met late one night without a home.

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