He was the promotion manager for The Seattle Post-Intelligencer and wrote the garden column under the name Phillip Warren. He later worked at the Seattle Times in the special section department.
He was proud of his rich West Seattle heritage. He grew up in the Admiral Way area near his family's iconic Barnecut's Service Station and his lifelong childhood friends. When he married Frances, they started their life together and raised their family on Queen Anne Hill, living in the same home for 40 years and cruising the neighborhood in his 1966 red Ford Mustang convertible. He loved all his friends in that neighborhood.
George was the ultimate gentleman with dapper style, much kindness, a genuine love of people, and a great sense of humor. He was one of a kind. He will forever be in our hearts. See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/seattletimes/obituary.aspx?n=george-barnecut&pid=182992055#sthash.K0b2v9CZ.dpuf
He was the promotion manager for The Seattle Post-Intelligencer and wrote the garden column under the name Phillip Warren. He later worked at the Seattle Times in the special section department.
He was proud of his rich West Seattle heritage. He grew up in the Admiral Way area near his family's iconic Barnecut's Service Station and his lifelong childhood friends. When he married Frances, they started their life together and raised their family on Queen Anne Hill, living in the same home for 40 years and cruising the neighborhood in his 1966 red Ford Mustang convertible. He loved all his friends in that neighborhood.
George was the ultimate gentleman with dapper style, much kindness, a genuine love of people, and a great sense of humor. He was one of a kind. He will forever be in our hearts. See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/seattletimes/obituary.aspx?n=george-barnecut&pid=182992055#sthash.K0b2v9CZ.dpuf
Family Members
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Advertisement